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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30324 ***
+
+THE PATHLESS TRAIL
+
+by
+
+ARTHUR O. FRIEL
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+New York
+Grosset & Dunlap
+Publishers
+
+Made in the United States of America
+
+THE PATHLESS TRAIL
+
+Copyright, 1922, by Harper & Brothers
+Printed in the United States of America
+
+
+
+
+ TO
+ THE MEMORY OF
+ MY FATHER
+ GEORGE WILLIAM FRIEL
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ I. SONS OF THE NORTH
+
+ II. AT SUNDOWN
+
+ III. THE VOICE OF THE WILDS
+
+ IV. THE GERMAN
+
+ V. INTO THE BUSH
+
+ VI. IN THE NIGHT WATCH
+
+ VII. COLD STEEL
+
+ VII. THE DOUBLE-CROSS
+
+ IX. FIDDLERS THREE
+
+ X. BY THE LIGHT OF STORM
+
+ XI. OUT OF THE AIR
+
+ XII. THE ARROW
+
+ XIII. THE WAY OF THE JUNGLE
+
+ XIV. A DUEL WITH DEATH
+
+ XV. THE CANNIBALS
+
+ XVI. BLACKBEARD
+
+ XVII. FEVER
+
+ XIX. FRUIT OF THE TRAP
+
+ XIX. THE RED BONES
+
+ XX. THE RAPOSA
+
+ XXI. SHADOWS OF THE NIGHT
+
+ XXII. THE SIREN OF WAR
+
+ XXIII. STRATEGY
+
+ XXIV. THE BATTLE OF THE TRIBES
+
+ XXV. THE PASSING OF SCHWANDORF
+
+ XXVI. PARTNERS
+
+
+
+
+THE PATHLESS TRAIL
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+SONS OF THE NORTH
+
+
+Three men stood ankle deep in mud on the shore of a jungle river,
+silently watching a ribbon of smoke drift and dissolve above the somber
+mass of trees to the northwest.
+
+Three men of widely different types they were, yet all cradled in the
+same far-off northern land. The tallest, lean bodied but broad
+shouldered, black of hair and gray of eye, held himself in soldierly
+fashion and gazed unmoved. His two mates--one stocky, red faced and red
+headed; the other slender, bronzed and blond--betrayed their thoughts in
+their blue eyes. The red man squinted quizzically at the smoke feather
+as if it mattered little to him where he was. The blond watched it with
+the wistfulness of one who sees the last sign of his own world fade out.
+
+Behind them, at a respectful distance, a number of swarthy individuals
+of both sexes in nondescript garments smoked and stared at the trio with
+the interest always accorded strangers by the dwellers of the Out
+Places. They eyed the uncompromising back of the tall one, the easy
+lounge of the red one, the thoughtful attitude of the light one. The
+copper-faced men peered at the rifles hanging in the right hands of the
+newcomers, their knee boots, khaki clothing, and wide hats. The women
+let their eyes rove over the boxes and bundles reposing in the mud
+beside the three.
+
+"_Ingles?_" hazarded a woman, speaking through the stem of the black
+pipe clutched in her filed teeth.
+
+"_Notre-Americano_," asserted a man, nodding toward the broad hats.
+"Englishmen would wear the round helmets of pith."
+
+"_Mercadores?_ Traders?" suggested the woman, hopefully running an eye
+again over the bundles.
+
+"_Exploradores_," the man corrected. "Explorers of the bush. Have you no
+eyes? Do you not see the guns and high boots?"
+
+The woman subsided. The others continued what seemed to be their only
+occupation--smoking.
+
+The smoke streamer in the north vanished. As if moved by the same
+impulse, the three strangers turned their heads and looked
+south-westward, upriver. The red-haired man spoke.
+
+"So we've lit at last, as the feller said when him and his airyplane
+landed in a sewer. Faith, I dunno but he was better off than us, at
+that--he wasn't two thousand miles from nowheres like we are. The
+steamer's gone, and us three pore li'l' boys are left a long ways from
+home."
+
+Then, assuming the tone of a showman, he went on:
+
+"Before ye, girls, ye see the well known Ja-va-ree River, which I never
+seen before and comes from gosh-knows-where and ends in the Ammyzon.
+Over there on t'other side the water is Peru. Yer feet are in the mud of
+Brazil. This other river to yer left is the Tickywahoo--"
+
+"Tecuahy," the blond man corrected, grinning.
+
+"Yeah. And behind ye is the last town in the world and the place that
+God forgot. What d'ye call this here, now, city?"
+
+"Remate de Males. Which means 'Culmination of Evils.'"
+
+"Yeah. It looks it. Wonder if it's anything like Hell's Kitchen, up in
+li'l' old N'Yawk."
+
+They turned and looked dubiously at the town--a row of perhaps seventy
+iron-walled and palm-roofed houses set on high palm-trunk poles, each
+with its ladder dropping from the doorway to the one muddy street. Then
+spoke the tall man.
+
+"Before you see it again, Tim, you'll think it's quite a town. Above
+here is nothing but a few rubber estates, seven hundred miles of unknown
+river, and empty jungle."
+
+"Empty, huh? Then they kidded us on the boat. From what they said it's
+fair crawlin' with snakes and jaggers and lizards and bloody vampires
+and spiders as big as yer fist. And the water is full o' man-eatin' fish
+and the bush full o' man-eatin' Injuns. If that's what ye call empty,
+Cap, don't take me no place where it's crowded."
+
+A slight smile twitched the set lips of the tall "cap."
+
+"They're all here, Tim, though maybe not so thick as you expect. Lots of
+other things too. Who's this?"
+
+Through the knot of pipe-puffing idlers came a portly coppery man in
+uniform.
+
+"Well, I'll be--Say, he's the same chap who came onto the boat in a
+police uniform. Now he's in army rig," the light-haired member of the
+trio exclaimed. "O Lordy! I've got it! He's the police force and the
+army! The whole blooming works! Ha!"
+
+Tim snickered and stepped forward.
+
+"Hullo, buddy!" he greeted. "What's on yer mind?"
+
+"_Boa dia_, senhor," responded the official, affably. With the words he
+deftly slipped an arm around Tim's waist and lifted the other hand
+toward his shoulder. But that hand stopped short, then flew wildly out
+into the air.
+
+Tim gave a grunt and a heave. The official went skidding and slithering
+six feet through the mud, clutching at nothing and contorting himself in
+a frantic effort to keep from sprawling in the muck. By a margin thin as
+an eyelash he succeeded in preserving his balance and stood where he
+stopped, amazement and anger in his face.
+
+"Lay off that stuff!" growled Tim, head forward and jaw out. "If ye want
+trouble come and git it like a man, not sneak up with a grin and then
+clinch. Don't reach for no knife, now, or I'll drill ye--"
+
+"Tim!" barked the black-haired one. "Ten-_shun_!"
+
+Automatically Tim's head snapped erect and his shoulders went back. He
+relaxed again almost at once. But in the meantime the tall man had
+stepped forward and faced the raging representative of the government of
+Brazil.
+
+"Pardon, comrade," he said with an engaging smile. "My friend is a
+stranger to Brazil and not acquainted with your manner of welcome. In
+our own country men never put the arm around one another except in
+combat. He has been a soldier. You are a soldier. So you can understand
+that a fighting man may be a little abrupt when he does not understand."
+
+The smile, the apology, and most of all the subtle flattery of being
+treated as an equal by a man whose manner betokened the North American
+army officer, mollified the aggrieved official at once. The hot gleam
+died out of his eyes. Punctiliously he saluted. The salute was as
+punctiliously returned.
+
+"It is forgotten, Capitao. As the capitao says, we soldiers are
+sometimes overquick. I come to give you welcome to Remate de Males. My
+services are at your disposal."
+
+"We thank you. Why do you call me capitao?"
+
+"My eyes know a capitao when they see him."
+
+"But this is not a military expedition, my friend. Nor are any of us
+soldiers now--though we all have been."
+
+"Once a capitao, always a capitao," the Brazilian insisted. Then he
+hinted: "If the capitao and his friends wish to call upon the
+superintendente they will find him in the intendencia, the blue building
+beyond the hotel. It will soon be closed for the day."
+
+The tall American's keen gray eyes roved down the street to the
+weather-beaten house whose peeling walls once might have been blue. He
+nodded shortly.
+
+"Better go down there," he said. "Come on, Merry. Tim, stick here and
+keep an eye on the stuff. And don't start another war while we're gone."
+
+"Right, Cap." Tim deftly swung his rifle to his right shoulder. "I'll
+walk me post in a military manner, keepin' always on the alert and
+observin' everything that takes place within sight or hearin', accordin'
+to Gin'ral Order Number Two. There won't be no war unless somebody
+starts somethin'. Hey, there, buddy, would ye smoke a God's-country
+cigarette if I give ye one?"
+
+"_Si_," grinned the soldier-policeman, all animosity gone. And as the
+other two men tramped away through the mud they also grinned, looking
+back at the North and the South American pacing side by side in
+sentry-go, blowing smoke and conversing like brothers in arms.
+
+"Tim likes to remember his 'general orders,' but he's forgotten Number
+Five," laughed the blond man.
+
+"Five? 'To talk to no one except in line of duty.' Don't need it here,
+Merry."
+
+"Nope. The _entente cordiale_ is the thing. Here's hoping nobody makes
+Tim remember his 'Gin'ral Order Number Thirteen' while we're gone, Rod."
+
+He of the black hair smiled again as his mate, mimicking Tim's gruff
+voice, quoted:
+
+"'Gin'ral Order Number Thirteen: In case o' doubt, bust the other guy
+quick.'"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+AT SUNDOWN
+
+
+Past the loungers in the street, past others in the doorways, past
+children and dogs and goats, the pair marched briskly to the faded blue
+house whence the federal superintendent ruled the town with tropic
+indolence. There they found a thin, fever-worn, gravely courteous
+gentleman awaiting them.
+
+"Sit, senhores," he urged, with a languid wave of the hand toward
+chairs. "I am honored by your visit, as is all Remate de Males. In what
+way can I serve you?"
+
+The blond answered:
+
+"We have come, sir, both for the pleasure of making your acquaintance
+and for a little information. First permit me to introduce my friend Mr.
+Roderick McKay, lately a captain in the United States army. I am
+Meredith Knowlton. There is a third member of our party, Mr. Timothy
+Ryan, who remained on the river bank to talk with--er--a soldier of
+Brazil."
+
+The federal official nodded, a slight smile in his eyes.
+
+"We are here ostensibly for exploration," Knowlton continued, candidly,
+"but actually to find a certain man. I think it quite probable that we
+shall have to do considerable exploring before finding him."
+
+"Ah," the other murmured, shrewdly. "It is a matter of police work,
+perhaps?"
+
+"No--and yes. The man we seek is not wanted by the law, and yet he is.
+He has committed no crime, and so cannot be arrested. But the law wants
+him badly because the settlement of a certain big estate hinges upon the
+question of whether he is alive or dead. If alive, he is heir to more
+than a million. If not--the money goes elsewhere."
+
+"Ah," repeated the official, thoughtfully.
+
+"I might add," McKay broke in with a touch of stiffness, "that neither I
+nor either of my companions would profit in any way by this man's death.
+Quite the contrary."
+
+"Ah," reiterated the other, his face clearing. "You are commissioned,
+perhaps, to find and produce this man."
+
+"Exactly," Knowlton nodded. "From our own financial standpoint he is
+worth much more alive than dead. On the other hand, any absolute proof
+of his death--proof which would stand in a court of law--is worth
+something also. Our task is to produce either the man himself or
+indisputable proof that he no longer lives.
+
+"The man's name is David Dawson Rand. If alive, he now is thirty-three
+years old. Height five feet nine. Weight about one hundred sixty. Hair
+dark, though not black. Eyes grayish green. Chief distinguishing marks
+are the green eyes, a broken nose--caused by being struck in the face by
+a baseball--and a patch of snow-white hair the size of a thumb ball, two
+inches above the left ear. Accustomed to having his own way, not at all
+considerate of others. Yet not a bad fellow as men go--merely a man
+spoiled by too much mothering in boyhood and by the fact that he never
+had to work. This is he."
+
+From a breast pocket he drew a small grain-leather notebook, from which
+he extracted an unmounted photograph. The superintendent looked into the
+pictured face of a full-cheeked, wide-mouthed, square-jawed man with a
+slightly blasé expression and a half-cynical smile. After studying it a
+minute he nodded and handed it back.
+
+"As you say, senhor, a man who never has had to work."
+
+"Exactly. For five years this man has been regarded as dead. It was his
+habit to start off suddenly for any place where his whims drew him,
+notifying nobody of his departure. But a few days later he would always
+write, cable, or telegraph his relatives, so that his general
+whereabouts would soon become known. On his last trip he sent a radio
+message from a steamer, out at sea, saying he was bound for Rio Janeiro.
+That was the last ever heard from him."
+
+"Rio is far from here," suggested the Brazilian.
+
+"Just so. We look for Rand at the headwaters of the Amazon, instead of
+in Rio, because Rio yields no clew and because of one other thing which
+I shall speak of presently.
+
+"It has been learned that he reached Rio safely, but there his trail
+ended. As he had several thousand dollars on his person, it was
+concluded that he was murdered for his money and his body disposed of.
+This belief has been held until quite recently, when a new book of
+travel was published--_The Mother of Waters_, by Dwight Dexter, an
+explorer of considerable reputation."
+
+The Brazilian's brows lifted.
+
+"Senhor Dexter? I remember Senhor Dexter. He stopped here for a short
+time, ill with fever. So he has published a book?"
+
+"Yes. It deals mainly with his travels and observations in Peru, along
+the Marañon, Huallaga, and Ucayali. But it includes a short chapter
+regarding the Javary, and in that chapter occurs the following, which I
+have copied verbatim."
+
+From the notebook he read:
+
+"'It falls to the lot of the explorer at times to meet not only hitherto
+unclassified species of fauna and flora, but also strange specimens of
+the _genus homo_. Such a creature came suddenly upon my camp one day
+just before a serious and well-nigh fatal attack of fever compelled me
+to relinquish my intention to proceed farther up the Javary.
+
+"'While my Indian cook was preparing the afternoon meal, out from the
+dense jungle strode a bearded, shaggy-haired, painted white man, totally
+nude save for a narrow breechclout and a quiver containing several long
+hunting arrows. In one hand he carried a strong bow of really excellent
+workmanship. This was his only weapon. He wore no ornament, unless
+streaks of brilliant red paint be considered ornaments. He was wild and
+savage in appearance and manner as any cannibal Indian. Yet he was
+indubitably white.
+
+"'To my somewhat startled greeting he made no response. Neither did he
+speak at any time during his unceremonious visit. Bolt upright, he stood
+beside my crude table until the Indian stolidly brought in my food.
+Then, without a by-your-leave, the wild man rapidly wolfed down the
+entire meal, feeding himself with one hand and holding his bow ready in
+the other. Though I questioned him and sought to draw him into
+conversation, he honored me with not so much as a grunt or a gesture.
+When the table was bare he stalked out again and vanished into the dim
+forest.
+
+"'After he had gone my Indian urged that we leave the place at once. The
+man, he said, was "The Raposa"--a word which denotes a species of wild
+dog sometimes found on the upper Amazon. He knew nothing of this
+"Raposa" except that he apparently belonged to a wild tribe living far
+back in the forest, perhaps allied with the cannibal Mayorunas, who were
+very fierce; and that he appeared sometimes at Indian settlements,
+where, without ever speaking, he would help himself to the best food and
+then leave. My man seemed to fear that now some great misfortune would
+come to us unless we shifted our base. When the fever came upon me soon
+afterward, the superstitious fellow was convinced that the illness was
+attributable directly to the visit of the human "wild dog."
+
+"'Aside from the nudity and barbarism of the mysterious stranger,
+certain personal peculiarities struck me. One was that his eyes were
+green. Another was a streak of snow-white hair above one ear.
+Furthermore, the red paint on his body outlined his skeleton. His ribs,
+spine, arm- and leg-bones all were portrayed on his tanned skin by those
+brilliant red streaks. In this connection my Indian asserted that in the
+tribe to which "The Raposa" probably belonged it was the custom to
+preserve the bones of the dead and to paint them with this same red dye,
+after which the bones were hung up in the huts of the deceased instead
+of being given burial. Beyond this my informant knew nothing of the "Red
+Bone" people, except that to enter their country was death.'"
+
+Knowlton returned the book to his pocket and carefully buttoned the
+flap.
+
+"When that appeared," he continued, "efforts were made to get hold of
+Dexter, with the idea of showing him the photograph of the missing man
+and learning any additional details. Unfortunately, by the time the book
+was published Dexter had gone to Africa to seek a race of dwarfs said to
+exist in the Igidi Desert, and thus was totally out of reach. Then we
+were called upon to follow up this clew and find the Raposa if possible.
+Men with green eyes and patches of white hair above one ear are not
+common. So, though our knowledge of this strange wild man is confined to
+those few words of Dexter's, we are here to learn more of him and to get
+him if we can."
+
+He looked expectantly at the official. The latter, after staring out
+through the doorway for a time, shook his head slightly.
+
+"Something of this Raposa and of those red-streaked people has come to
+my ears, senhores, but only as rumors," he said, slowly. "And one does
+not place great faith in rumors. Yet I have repeatedly been surprised to
+learn, after dismissing a story as an empty Indian tale, that the tale
+was true.
+
+"Of the Mayorunas more is known. They are eaters of human flesh,
+inhabiting both sides of the Javary, deadly when angered, and very
+easily angered. Their country is not many days distant from here, but as
+they never attack us we do not attack them. It is an armed neutrality,
+as you senhores would say. True, we have to be careful in drinking
+water, for they sometimes poison the streams against real or imaginary
+enemies, and the poisoned waters flow down to us, causing those who
+drink it to die of a fever like the typhoid. Yet," and he smiled, "there
+is a saying, is there not, that water is made not to drink, but to bathe
+in?"
+
+Knowlton laughed. McKay's eyes twinkled.
+
+"I'm sorry to say that water's about all a fellow can get to drink in
+the States now," the blond man said, ruefully. "That is, of course,
+unless a man knows where to go."
+
+"_Si._ It is a pity. But here in Brazil one need not drink water unless
+he wishes, and often it is better not to. Of the Mayorunas, senhor--you
+do not intend to go among them, seeking this wild man of the red bones?
+If you should do so it would be a matter of regret to me."
+
+"Meaning that we should not come out again? That's a risk we have to
+face. We go wherever it is necessary."
+
+"I am sorry. I regret also that I can give you no definite information.
+Yet I wish you all success, senhores, and a safe return. This much I can
+do and gladly will do: I can send word to another white man who now is
+in the town and who knows much of the upper river. He may be able to
+assist you, and without doubt will be eager to do so. He is staying at
+the hotel, just below here--Senhor Schwandorf."
+
+The eyes of the two Americans narrowed. The official coughed.
+
+"Senhor McKay has been a soldier. And Senhor Knowlton--"
+
+"I was a lieutenant."
+
+"Ah! But the war has passed, senhores. Senhor Schwandorf was not a
+soldier of Germany--he has been in Brazil for more than six years."
+
+"War's over. That's right," McKay agreed. "But don't bother to send
+word. We'll find him if he's at the hotel. Going there ourselves. Glad
+to have met you, sir. Good luck!"
+
+"And to you also luck, Capitao and Tenente," smiled the official. McKay
+and Knowlton strode out.
+
+"Guess this is the hotel," hazarded McKay, glancing at a house which
+rose slightly above the others. "I'll go in and charter rooms. You get
+Tim and have somebody rustle our impedimenta up here."
+
+He turned aside. Knowlton trudged on through the glare of sunset to the
+river bank where Tim and the army of Remate de Males still loafed up and
+down, the admired of all beholders.
+
+"All right, Tim. We're moving to the hotel. No more war, I see."
+
+"Lord love ye, no," grinned Tim. "Me and this feller are gittin' on
+fine. He's Joey--I forgit the rest of his names; he's got about a dozen
+more and they sound like stones rattlin' around inside a can. But Joey's
+a right guy. After me tour o' duty ends he's goin' to buy me a drink and
+maybe introjuce me to a lady friend o' his. Want to join the party,
+Looey?"
+
+"Not unless the ladies are better looking than these," laughed the
+ex-lieutenant, moving his head toward the pipe-smoking females.
+
+"Faith, I was thinkin' that same meself. Unless he can dig up somethin'
+fancier 'n what I see so far, I'd as soon have Mademoiselle."
+
+"Who?"
+
+"Mademoiselle of Armentières. Sure, ye know that one, Looey. Goes to the
+tune o' 'Parley-Voo.'"
+
+Wherewith he lifted up a foghorn voice and, much to the edification of
+"Joey" (whose name really was Joao) and the rest of Remate de Males,
+burst into song:
+
+ "Mademoiselle of Armenteers,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ She smoked our butts and bummed our beers,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ She had cockeyes and jackass ears
+ And she hadn't been kissed for forty years,
+ Rinkydinky-parley-voo!"
+
+As his musical effort ended, out from the dense jungle hemming in the
+town burst a hideous roaring howl. Again and again it sounded in a
+horrible crash of noise.
+
+"Holy Saint Pat!" gasped Tim, throwing his rifle to port and bracing his
+feet. "Now look what I went and done! Is that the echo, or a couple
+dozen jaggers all fightin' to oncet?"
+
+"Guariba, Senhor Ree-ann," snickered Joao. "Not jaguars--no. Only one
+little guariba monkey. The howler."
+
+"G'wan! Ye're kiddin'!"
+
+"But no, _amigo_. It is as I tell you. One monkey. It is sunset, and the
+jungle awakes."
+
+"My gosh! I'll say it does. Sounds like a Sat'day night row in a Second
+Av'noo saloon, except there ain't no shootin'. Guess you boys have some
+night life, too, even if ye are away back in the bush."
+
+"Time for us to move, Tim," laughed Knowlton. "It'll be dark in no time.
+Joao, will you have our baggage moved to the hotel?"
+
+"_Si_, senhor. _Immediatamente._ Antonio--Jorge--Rosario! And you, too,
+Meldo--_vem cà_! Carry the bundles of the gentlemen to the hotel,
+presto! Proceed, senhores. I, Joao d'Almeida Magalhaes Nabuco Pestana da
+Fonseca, will remain here on guard until all your possessions have been
+transported. Proceed without fear."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE VOICE OF THE WILDS
+
+
+McKay, eyes twinkling again, awaited them at the top of the hotel's
+street ladder.
+
+"Rooms any good, Rod?" hailed Knowlton.
+
+"Best in the house, Merry."
+
+"See any insects in the beds?"
+
+"Nary a bug--in the beds." The twinkle grew. "Didn't look in the bureaus
+or behind the mirrors. Come look 'em over."
+
+Entering a sizable room evidently used for dining--for its chief
+articles of furniture were two tables made from planed palm
+trunks--McKay waved a hand toward a row of four doorways on the right.
+
+"First three are ours," he explained. "Only vacancies here. Eight rooms
+in this hotel--the other four over there." He pointed across the room,
+on the other side of which opened four similar doors. "They're occupied
+by two sick men, one drunk--hear him snore?--and one she-goat which is
+kidding."
+
+"Huh?" Tim snorted, suspiciously. "I think ye're the one that's kiddin',
+Cap."
+
+"Not a bit. I looked. The last room on this side is the Dutchman's, and
+these are ours. Take your pick. They're all alike."
+
+Knowlton stepped to the nearest and looked in. For a moment he said no
+word. Then he softly muttered:
+
+"Well, I'll be spread-eagled!"
+
+"Me, too," seconded Tim, who had been craning his neck.
+
+The room was absolutely empty. No bed, no chair, no bureau, no
+rug--nothing at all was in it except two iron hooks. Its floor consisted
+of split palm logs, round side up, between which opened inch-wide
+spaces. Its walls were rusty corrugated iron, guiltless of mirrors or
+pictures, which did not reach to the roof.
+
+"Observe the excellent ventilation," grinned McKay. "Wind blows up
+through the floor--if there is any wind--and then loops over the
+partition into the next fellow's room."
+
+"Yeah. And I'll say any guy that drops his collar button is out o' luck.
+It goes plunk into the mud, seven foot down under the house. But say,
+Cap, how the heck do we sleep? Hang ourselves up on them hooks?"
+
+"Exactly."
+
+"Kind o' rough on a feller's shirt, ain't it? And the shirt would likely
+pull off over yer head before mornin'."
+
+"Yes, probably would. But the secret is this--you're supposed to hang
+your hammock on those hooks. You provide the hammock. The hotel provides
+the hooks. What more can you ask of a modern hotel?"
+
+"Huh! And if a guy wants a bath, there's the river, all full o' 'gators
+and cattawampuses and things. And if ye eat, I s'pose ye rustle yer own
+grub and pay for eatin' it off that slab table there. There's jest one
+thing ye can say for this dump--a feller can spit on the floor. But with
+all them cracks in it he might not hit it, at that. Mother of mine! To
+think Missus Ryan's li'l' boy should ever git caught stayin' in a hole
+like this, along o' drunks and skiddin' she-goats and--did ye say a
+Dutchman?"
+
+"German. Chap named Schwandorf."
+
+"Yeah?" Tim's tone was sinister. "Say, Cap, gimme the room next that
+guy. And if ye hear anybody yowlin' before mornin' don't git worried. It
+won't be me."
+
+"None of that, Tim," warned Knowlton. "The war's over--"
+
+"Since when? There wasn't no peace treaty signed when we left the
+States."
+
+"Er--ahum! Well, technically you're right. But this fellow may be useful
+to us. He knows the upper river, they say."
+
+"Aw, well, if ye can use him I'll lay off him. Where is he?"
+
+"Out somewhere," answered McKay. "I haven't seen him yet. Want this
+first room, Merry?"
+
+"Just to play safe, I'll take the one next the German. And if I hear any
+war in the night, Tim, I'm coming over the top with both hands going."
+
+"Grrrumph!" growled Tim.
+
+"That goes, Tim," warned McKay. "I'll take this room and you can have
+the one between us. Here comes the baggage train with our stuff. In
+here, men!"
+
+Puffing and grunting, Antonio and Jorge and Rosario and Meldo shuffled
+in with the boxes and bundles. Under the directions of McKay and
+Knowlton, these were stowed in the bare rooms. Then the four shuffled
+out again, grinning happily over a small roll of Brazilian paper reis
+which McKay had peeled from a much larger roll and handed to them.
+Immediately following their departure, in came a youth carrying three
+new hammocks.
+
+"Our beds," McKay explained. "I sent this lad to a trader's store for
+them. He's the proprietor's son. Thank you, Thomaz. Tell your father to
+put these on our bill, and take for yourself this small token of our
+appreciation."
+
+More reis changed hands. The young Brazilian, with a flash of teeth,
+informed them that the evening meal would soon be ready and disappeared
+through a rear door.
+
+"Do they really feed us at this here, now, hotel?" Tim demanded. "Then
+the goat's safe."
+
+"Meaning?" puzzled Knowlton.
+
+"Meanin' I didn't know but we had to kill our supper, and I was goin' to
+git the cap'n's goat. That is, the goat the cap'n's kiddin'--I mean the
+goat that's kiddin' the cap--the skiddin' she-goat--Aw, rats! ye know
+what I'm drivin' at. Me tongue so dry it don't work right."
+
+Wherewith Tim retreated in disorder to his room and began wrestling with
+his new hammock and the iron hooks.
+
+Swift darkness filled the rooms. The sun had slid down below the bulge
+of the fast-rolling world. Thomaz re-entered, lit candles stuck in empty
+bottles, and, with a bow, placed one of these crude illuminants at the
+door of each of the strangers. By the flickering lights McKay and
+Knowlton disposed their effects according to their individual desires,
+bearing in mind Tim's observation that any small article dropped on the
+floor would land in the mud under the house, whence sounded the grunts
+of pigs. Their work was soon completed, and they sauntered together to
+the small piazza.
+
+"Nice quiet little place," commented Knowlton. "Make a good sanitarium
+for nervous folks."
+
+The comment was made in a tone which, in the daytime, would carry half a
+mile. McKay nodded to save a similar effort. The outbreak of the howling
+monkey which so startled Tim had been only the first note of the night
+concert of the jungle. Now that the sun was gone the chorus was in full
+swing.
+
+Beasts of the village, the jungle, the river, all hurled their voices
+into the uproar. From the gloom around the houses rose the bellowing of
+cows and calves, the howls and yelps of dogs, the yowling of cats, the
+grunts and squeals of hogs. In the black river, flowing past within a
+stone's throw of the hotel door, sounded the loud snorts of dolphins and
+the hideous night call of the foul beast of the mud--the alligator. Out
+from the matted tangle of trees and brush and great snakelike vines
+behind the town rolled the appalling roars of guaribas, raucous bird
+calls, dismal hoots, sudden scattered screams. And over all, whelming
+all other sound by the sheer might of its penetrating power, throbbed
+the rapid-fire hammering of millions of frogs.
+
+"Frogs sound like a machine-gun barrage," the blond man added.
+
+"Or thousands of riveting hammers pounding steel."
+
+"Queer how much worse it is when you're right in it. We've heard it all
+the way up two thousand miles of Amazon, but--"
+
+"But you're right beside the orchestra now. Position is everything in
+life."
+
+The double-edged jest made Knowlton glance sidelong at his mate. Of the
+tall, eagle-faced Scot's past he knew little beyond what he had seen of
+him in war, where he had met him and learned to respect him
+whole-heartedly. From occasional remarks he had learned that McKay had
+been in all sorts of places between Buenos Aires and Nome; and from a
+few intangible hints he suspected that his "position in life" had once
+been much higher socially than at present. But he asked no questions.
+
+"Some orchestra, all right," he responded, casually. "Plenty of jazz.
+It'll quiet down after a while."
+
+For a time they stood leaning against the wall, staring abstractedly out
+at the dark. One by one the domestic animals ceased their clamor and
+settled themselves for the night. The jungle din, too, seemed to
+diminish, though perhaps this was because the ears of the men had become
+accustomed to it. At length through the discordant symphony boomed the
+voice of Tim.
+
+"By cripes! I know now what folks mean when they talk about a howlin'
+wilderness. Always thought 'twas one o' them figgers o' speech, but I'll
+tell the world it ain't no joke! Gosh! Think of all the things that's
+layin' out there and bellerin' and waitin' for us pore li'l' fellers to
+come in amongst 'em and git et up."
+
+"You'll find the same things in the cities up home," said Knowlton, a
+bit cynically. "Different bodies and different methods of attack, but
+the same merciless animals under the skin. Snakes in silk
+suits--foul-mouthed alligators in dinner jackets--hunting-cats and
+vampires, painted and powdered--and all the rest of it."
+
+"Yeah. Ye said a mouthful, Looey. But say, Tommy's shovin' some grub on
+the table. Mebbe we better hop to it before the flies git it all."
+
+After a glance at the vicious attack already begun by the aforesaid
+flies, the pair adopted Tim's suggestion and hopped to it. Manfully they
+assailed the rubbery jerked beef, black beans, rice, farinha, and thick,
+black, unsweetened coffee which comprised the meal. All three were
+wrestling with chunks of the meat when Tim, facing the door, stopped
+chewing long enough to mutter:
+
+"Dutchland overalls. Here's the goose stepper."
+
+The heads of the other two involuntarily moved a little. Then their
+necks stiffened and they continued eating. Tim alone stared straight at
+a burly, black-whiskered Teuton who had halted in the outer doorway. And
+Tim alone saw the ugly look crossing the newcomer's visage as he gazed
+at the khaki shirts, the broad shoulders under them, and the
+unmistakably Irish--and hostile--face of Tim himself.
+
+Catching the hard stare of the red-haired man, he of the black beard
+advanced at once, his eyes veering to the door of his own room. Straight
+to that room he marched with heavy tread. He opened the door with a
+kick, shut it behind him with a slam. The three at the table glanced at
+one another.
+
+"Say what ye like," grumbled Tim, "but me and that guy don't hold no
+mush party. I don't like his map. I don't like his manners. And he looks
+too much like the Fritz that shot me in the back with a kamerad gun
+after surrenderin'. I was in hospital three months. D'ye mind that time,
+Looey?"
+
+Knowlton nodded. He remembered also that Tim, shot down from behind and
+almost killed, had reeled up to his feet and bayoneted his man before
+falling the second time. Wherefore he replied:
+
+"He isn't the same one, Tim."
+
+"Nope," grimly. "That one won't never come back. All the same, if you
+gents want to chew the fat with this feller I'm goin' slummin' with me
+friend Joey Mouthgargle Nabisco Whoozis. Then I won't be round here to
+make no sour-caustic remarks and gum up yer party."
+
+"Might be a good idea," McKay conceded.
+
+"There he is now, the li'l' darlin'! Hullo, Joey, old sock! Stick around
+a minute while I scoop a few more beans. Be with ye toot
+sweet--vite--presto--P.D.Q."
+
+Wherewith he demolished the rest of his meal with military dispatch,
+proceeded doorward, smote the grinning army of Remate de Males a buffet
+on the shoulder, and vanished into the night. A moment later his
+stentorian voice rolled back through the nocturnal racket in an
+impromptu paraphrase of an old and highly improper army song:
+
+ "We're in the jungle now,
+ We ain't behind the plow;
+ We'll never git rich,
+ We'll die with the itch.
+ We're in the jungle now!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE GERMAN
+
+
+The door of the German's room opened. The German came out and marched to
+the table. Two paces away he halted and faced the Americans, ready to
+speak if spoken to, equally ready to sit and ignore them if not greeted.
+McKay and Knowlton rose.
+
+"Herr von Schwandorf?" inquired Knowlton.
+
+"Schwandorf. Neither Herr nor von. Plain Schwandorf."
+
+The reply came in excellent English, though with a slight throaty
+accent.
+
+"Knowlton is my name. Mr. McKay. The third member of our party, Mr.
+Ryan, has just left."
+
+Schwandorf bowed stiffly from the waist.
+
+"It is a pleasure to meet you. White men are all too few here."
+
+Seating himself at a place beyond that just vacated by Tim, he
+continued, "You stay here for a time?"
+
+"Not long." They reseated themselves. "We go up the river as soon as we
+can arrange transportation."
+
+The black brows lifted slightly.
+
+"It is a dangerous river. You would do well to travel elsewhere unless
+you have some pressing reason to explore this stream."
+
+With an accustomed sweep of the hand he shooed the flies from the bean
+dish and helped himself to a big portion. Over the legumes he poured
+farinha in the Brazilian fashion.
+
+"We have. We are seeking a tribe of people who paint their bones red."
+
+Schwandorf's hand, conveying the first mouthful of beans upward, stopped
+in air. His black eyes fixed the Americans with an astounded stare. He
+lowered the beans, stabbed absently at a chunk of beef, sawed it apart,
+popped a piece of it into his mouth, and sat for a time chewing. When
+the meat was down he spoke bluntly:
+
+"Are there not ways enough to kill yourselves at home instead of
+traveling to this place to do it?"
+
+McKay smiled. The directness of the man amused him.
+
+"As bad as that?" asked Knowlton.
+
+"As bad as that. Blow your head off if you like. Cut your throat. Take
+poison. Jump into the river among the alligators. Step on a snake. But
+keep away from the Red Bones."
+
+"Why?" shot McKay.
+
+"Cannibals--and worse."
+
+"Worse?"
+
+"Truly. Most of the Brazilian savages do not torture. The Red Bones do."
+
+"Pleasant prospect."
+
+"Very. Nothing to be gained among them, either. If you're hunting gold,
+try the hills over west of the Huallaga. None here."
+
+Knowlton filled and lit a pipe. McKay slowly drank the last of his
+syrupy coffee and rolled a cigarette. Schwandorf continued shoveling
+food into his capacious mouth.
+
+"Know anything about the Raposa?" Knowlton asked.
+
+The Teuton's eyelashes flickered. He ground another chunk of meat
+between his jaws before answering.
+
+"Of course," he said then. "Wild dog. Sharp snout, gray hair, bushy
+tail. I've shot a couple of them."
+
+"This one is a man. Green eyes, streak of white hair over the left ear.
+Paints himself like the Red Bones, as you call them, but is a white
+man."
+
+"Oh! That one? Heard of him, yes. Wild man of the jungle. Want to catch
+him and put him in a circus?"
+
+"Maybe. We'd like to see him, anyhow. Heard about him awhile ago. Any
+way to get him that you know of?"
+
+"Might try a steel trap," the German suggested, callously. "But I don't
+know where you'd set it. Best way to get a wild dog is to shoot him, and
+he isn't much good dead. Or would this one be worth something--dead?" A
+swift sidelong glance accompanied the question.
+
+"Not a cent!" snapped McKay.
+
+"And perhaps he'd be worth nothing alive," added Knowlton. "But we have
+a healthy curiosity to look him over. Guess the Red Bone country would
+be the likeliest place. How far is it from here?"
+
+"Keep out of it," was the stubborn reply.
+
+The Americans rose.
+
+"We are not going to keep out of it," Knowlton declared, coldly. "We are
+going straight into it. Thank you for your assistance."
+
+"Not so fast," Schwandorf protested. "If you are determined to go I will
+help you if I can. Shall we sit on the piazza with a small bottle to aid
+digestion? So! Thomaz! Bring from my stock the kümmel. Or would you
+prefer whisky, gentlemen?"
+
+"Ginger-ale highballs are my favorite fruit," admitted Knowlton. "Can
+ginger ale be bought here?"
+
+"Indeed yes. At one milrei a bottle."
+
+"Cheap enough. Thomaz, three bottles of ginger ale and one of North
+American whisky--the best. Cigars also. Out on the piazza."
+
+"Si, senhores."
+
+Schwandorf got up.
+
+"If you will pardon me, I will drink my kümmel. Frankly, I do not like
+whisky."
+
+"And frankly, we do not like kümmel. All a matter of taste."
+
+"Truly. So let each of us drink his own preference. I will join you in a
+moment."
+
+The Americans sauntered to the door, while the German strode into his
+room.
+
+"Blunt sort of cuss," Knowlton commented.
+
+"Ay, blunt. But not candid. Knows more than he's telling."
+
+Disposing themselves comfortably, they sat watching the lights of the
+town and the jungle--the first pouring from windows and open doors, the
+latter streaking across the darkness where the big fire beetles of the
+tropics winged their way. As Knowlton had predicted, the night noise of
+forest and stream had diminished; but now from the village itself rose a
+new discord--a babel of vocal and instrumental efforts at music
+emanating from the badly worn records of dozens of cheap phonographs
+grinding away in the stilt-poled huts.
+
+"Good Lord!" groaned McKay. "Even here at the end of the world one can't
+get away from those beastly instruments."
+
+A throaty chuckle from the doorway followed the words. Schwandorf
+emerged, carrying a big bottle.
+
+"Yet there is one thing to be thankful for, gentlemen," he said. "In all
+this town there is not one man who attempts to play a trombone."
+
+The others laughed. Thomaz appeared with bottles and thick cups. Corks
+were drawn, liquids gurgled, matches flared, cigars glowed. Without
+warning Schwandorf shot a question through the gloom:
+
+"Have you seen Cabral--the superintendent?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Ask him about the wild man?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Get any information?"
+
+"Nothing definite. He suggested that we see you."
+
+"So."
+
+A pause, while Schwandorf's cigar end glowed like a flaming eye.
+
+"The Red Bones live well up the river," he began, abruptly. "Twenty-four
+days by canoe, five days through the bush on the east shore. That would
+bring you to their main settlement--if you were not wiped out before
+then. They're a big tribe, as tribes go. Ever been here before?"
+
+"No. Not here," Knowlton told him. "I've been in Rio, and McKay here has
+knocked around in--"
+
+A stealthy kick from McKay halted him an instant. Then, deftly shifting
+the sentence, he concluded, "--in a number of places."
+
+"So." Another pause. "Then I should explain about tribes. Tribes here
+generally consist of from fifty to five hundred or more persons living
+in big houses called '_malocas_.' Unless the tribe is very big, one
+house holds them all. There may be any number of _malocas_, the
+inhabitants of which are all of the same racial stock; yet each _maloca_
+is, as far as government is concerned, a tribe to itself, controlled by
+a chief. No _maloca_ owes any duty to any other _maloca_. There is no
+supreme ruler over all, nor even a federation among them. They live
+merely as neighbors--distant neighbors. At times they fight like
+neighbors. You understand."
+
+"'When Greek meets Greek--'" quoted McKay.
+
+"Just so. When I say, then, that the Red Bones are a big tribe, I mean
+that there are about five hundred--maybe more--individuals in their main
+settlement. They live in huts, not in one big tribe-house like the
+Mayorunas. They are not Mayorunas, in fact; they paint differently, are
+darker of skin, and more cruel.
+
+"The Mayorunas, by the way, are not so debased as you might think.
+Though cannibals, they do not kill for the sake of eating 'long pig,'
+like the cannibals of the South Seas. Neither do they eat the whole
+body. Only the hands and feet of their dead enemies are devoured. These
+are carefully cooked and eaten as delicacies along with monkey meat,
+birds, fish, and other things prepared for a feast in honor of a
+victory. The eating of human flesh seems to be symbolism rather than
+savagery. Furthermore, they do not range the jungle hunting for victims.
+They eat only those who come against them as enemies.
+
+"So it is quite possible, you see, that strangers might go among them
+and escape death. It would depend largely on the ability of the
+strangers to convince the savages that they were friends. The difficulty
+is that the savages consider all strangers to be enemies until
+friendship is proved."
+
+"A sizable difficulty," McKay remarked.
+
+"Almost insurmountable. Yet it might be done. Mind, I speak now of the
+Mayorunas, not of the Red Bones. I tell you again that the Red Bone
+country is closed."
+
+"And where is the Mayoruna region?"
+
+"In the same general section. The Mayorunas are much more widely
+distributed. They are on both banks of the Javary and extend as far west
+as the Ucayali.
+
+"Now if I sought to enter the Red Bone region--and again I say I would
+not--this would be my way of going at it. I would go first among the
+Mayorunas near the Red Bones and seek to convince them that I was their
+friend. I would make the Mayoruna chief as friendly to me as possible. I
+might even take a Mayoruna woman for a time--some of them are handsome,
+and such a step would make me almost a Mayoruna myself in their eyes.
+Then I would persuade the chief to send messengers to the Red Bones with
+word of me and a request that I be allowed to visit their settlement.
+The request, coming from the Mayoruna chief, probably would be granted.
+I would then go in with a bodyguard of Mayorunas, do my business, and
+come out via the Mayoruna route."
+
+A thoughtful silence ensued. Bottle necks clinked against the cups.
+
+"Something in that idea," conceded Knowlton. "A good deal in it. Barring
+the woman part, of course."
+
+"Ay," spoke McKay, his tone casual as ever. "When you came out what
+would you do with your woman, _mein Herr_?"
+
+Schwandorf, tongue loosened a bit by his kümmel, chuckled.
+
+"Ho-ho! The woman? Leave her, of course, when she had served my purpose.
+Why bother about a woman here and there?"
+
+"I see." McKay's face, indistinct in the gloom, was unreadable, but his
+tone had a caustic edge.
+
+Schwandorf laughed again. "You are fresh from the woman-worshiping
+United States and you disapprove. But this is the jungle, and all is
+different. '_Cada terra com seu uso_,' as these Brazilians say--each
+land with its own ways. Perhaps when you have met the Mayoruna women,
+looked on their handsome faces and shapely forms--they wear no clothing,
+by the way--you will change your ideas. More than one man along this
+border has risked his life to win one of those women. But that rests
+with you. And now if you will excuse me, gentlemen, I have an engagement
+with a man at the other end of town."
+
+"Certainly. We are indebted to you for your interest."
+
+"It is nothing. Remember that I strongly advise you not to go. But if
+you will go, I shall gladly do whatever lies in my power to aid you in
+preparing for the trip. Do not hesitate to call on me."
+
+He passed into the house, returning almost at once.
+
+"By the way," he added, "one of you has the room next mine?"
+
+"I have it," said Knowlton.
+
+"Yes. Are you a good sleeper? I sometimes snore most atrociously, I am
+told. So perhaps--"
+
+"Don't worry. I can sleep in the middle of a bombardment."
+
+"You are fortunate. Good evening, gentlemen."
+
+When he was gone they sat for a time smoking, sipping now and then at
+their highballs. At length McKay said, "Humph!"
+
+"Amen. Pretty square sort of chap, though, don't you think?"
+
+"I'm not saying," was the Scot's cautious answer. "Seems to be trying to
+discourage us and egg us on at the same time. Something up his sleeve,
+perhaps."
+
+"Can't tell. But his line of talk rings true so far. Checks up all right
+with what we've heard about the Mayorunas and so on. And that scheme of
+working in through the Mayoruna country sounds about as sensible as
+anything. Desperate chance and all that, but it might work. Say, why did
+you kick me when I was going to tell him you'd been in British Guiana?"
+
+"Don't know exactly. Had a hunch. Seems to me I've seen that fellow
+before somewhere, but I can't place him. None of his business where I've
+been, anyhow. We're boobs from the States hunting for a wild man. That's
+all he needs to know."
+
+But it was not enough for Schwandorf to know. At that very moment he was
+on his way to the home of Superintendent Cabral, with whom he had no
+engagement whatever, to learn all he could concerning the business of
+these military-appearing strangers; also to impress on that official the
+fact that he had sought to dissuade them from starting on their mad
+quest.
+
+And much later that night, when Knowlton was making good his boast that
+he was a sound sleeper, a black-bearded face rose silently above the
+iron partition between his room and that of the German. A hand gripping
+a small electric flashlight followed. A white ray searched the room,
+halting on the khaki shirt lying over a box. A tough withe with a barb
+at one end came over like a slender tentacle, hooked the shirt neatly,
+drew it stealthily up to the top. Shirt, stick, lamp, hand, face all
+dissolved into darkness.
+
+After a time they reappeared. The shirt came down, swung slowly back and
+forth, was dropped deftly where it had previously lain. The breast
+pocket holding the grain-leather notebook and the photograph of David
+Dawson Rand was buttoned as it had been, and the notebook bulged the
+cloth slightly as before. But the contents of that book and the pictured
+face of Rand now were stamped on the brain of Schwandorf. A sneering,
+snarling smile curled the heavy mouth of Schwandorf. And softly, so
+softly that none could hear it but himself, sounded the ironical
+benediction of Schwandorf:
+
+"Sleep well, _offizier americanisch_! Dream on, poor fool! In time you
+will wake up. _Ja_, you will wake up!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+INTO THE BUSH
+
+
+Sleepy eyed and frowzy haired, with shirt unbuttoned and breeches and
+boots unlaced, Tim emerged from his iron-walled cell into the
+cool-shadowed main room, blinked at McKay and Knowlton lounging over
+their morning coffee and cigarettes, stretched his hairy arms, and
+advanced sluggishly to the table.
+
+"Yow-oo-hum!" he yawned. "Ain't they cute! All dressed and shaved like
+they was goin' to visit the C. O. And here's pore Timmy Ryan lookin'
+like a 'drunk and dirty' jest throwed into the guardhouse, and feelin'
+worse. Top o' the mornin' to ye, gents!"
+
+"Same to you, Tim," McKay nodded.
+
+"Who hit you?" asked Knowlton, squinting at bumps and scratches on Tim's
+forehead.
+
+"Nobody. Couple fellers tried to, but they was out o' luck. Oh, I see
+what ye mean! I done that meself while I was gittin' to bed."
+
+"Waves must have been running high on the ocean last night. Better drink
+some coffee. Thomaz, another cup--big and black."
+
+"Thanks, Looey. 'Twas kind of an active night, at that."
+
+"I heard you come in," vouchsafed McKay. "Were you trying some high
+diving in your room?"
+
+"Faith, I done some divin' without tryin', but 'twas ragged work--I
+pulled a belly smacker every time. I got to tame that hammick o' mine.
+It throwed me four times hand-running and the only way I could hold it
+down was to unhook it and lay it on the floor."
+
+"Sleep well then?"
+
+"I did not. Cap, I thought I knowed somethin' about cooties, but I take
+it back--I never knowed nothin' about them insecks till last night.
+Where they come from I dunno, but I'll tell the world they come, and if
+they wasn't half an inch long I'll eat 'em. They darn near dragged me
+off whole, and all the sleep I got ye could stick in a flea's eye.
+Lookit here."
+
+He extended an arm dotted with swollen red spots.
+
+"Ants!" said McKay, after one glance. "Ants, not cooties. They're
+everywhere. Especially under the floor. That's one reason why folks
+sleep in hammocks down here. Even then they're likely to come down the
+hammock cords and drive you out."
+
+"Ants, hey? Never thought o' that. And I'd sooner spend another night
+fightin' all the man-eatin' jaggers in the jungle than them bugs. It's
+the little things that count, as the feller said when his wife give him
+his fourteenth baby."
+
+He downed the thick coffee brought by Thomaz, demanded another cup,
+accepted cigarette and light from Knowlton, and sighed heavily.
+
+"Who tried to hit you?" Knowlton persisted.
+
+"Aw, I dunno. Two-three fellers took swipes at me with bottles and
+things. Me and Joey went to a place where they's card games and so
+on--only place in town where the village sports can git action. Joey
+offers to buy, and does. Stuff tastes kind o' moldy to me, so I asks
+have they got any American beer. They have. It's bottled and warm, but
+it's beer and tastes like home. It goes down so slick I buy another
+round, and then one more, lettin' in a thirsty-lookin' stranger on the
+third round. That makes seven bottles altogether. Then I think mebbe I
+better pay up now before I lose track. Looey, guess what them seven
+bottles o' suds come to in American money."
+
+"M-m-m! Well, say about three and a half or four dollars."
+
+"That's what I figgered," mourned Tim. "But them highbinders want
+thirty-two dollars and twenty cents, American gold."
+
+"What!"
+
+"Sad but true. Seems the stuff sells here for four bucks and sixty cents
+a bottle. Thinkin' I'm gittin' rooked because I'm a tenderfoot, I raise
+a row to oncet and start to climb the guy. Other folks mix in and things
+git lively right off. But after I've dropped a couple o' fellers Joey
+winds himself round me and begs me not to make him arrest me, and also
+tells me I'm all wrong--that's the regular price. So o'course that makes
+me out a cheap skate unless I come acrost, and I do the right thing."
+
+"Lucky you had the money on you," said McKay, eying him a bit oddly.
+
+"I didn't," chuckled Tim. "All the dough I had was one pore lonesome
+ten-spot--the one I got from ye yesterday, Cap. But I don't tell 'em
+that. I jest wave my hand like thirty-two plunks wasn't nothin' in my
+young life, and start to work meself out o' the hole. After the two guys
+on the floor are brought back to their senses I order up drinks for all
+hands and git popular again. Then I git out the bones."
+
+"Oh! I see!" McKay laughed silently.
+
+"Sure. Remember they told us on the boat that these guys will gamble on
+anything? And that a feller without shoes on may be some rubber worker
+packin' a roll that would choke a horse? Wal, I make a few passes with
+them dice o' mine and their eyes light up like somebody had switched on
+the current. Then I scrabble me hand around in me pants pocket, like I
+was peelin' a bill off a roll so big I didn't want to flash the whole
+wad, and haul out that pore li'l' ten and ask would anybody like to play
+a man's game.
+
+"They would. I'll say they would. And they got the coin to back up their
+play, too. Before I come home I was buyin' beer by the case instead o'
+the bottle. And it's all paid for, and I got more 'n a hundred dollars
+left, besides givin' Joey a fistful o' money jest for bein' a good
+feller. This ain't a bad town at all, gents. Outside o' that
+buckin'-broncho hammick and the man-eatin' ants I had a lovely evenin'."
+
+"How about Joao's lady friend?" quizzed Knowlton.
+
+"Huh? Oh, I didn't git to see her. When bones and beer are rollin' high
+and handsome I got no time for women. Besides, I found out she was
+mostly Injun and fat as a hog. Nothin' like that for li'l' Timmy Ryan.
+Oh, say, before I forgit it--I asked Joey about this Dutchman here, and
+he says--"
+
+McKay scowled, shook his head, pointed toward the closed door of
+Schwandorf. Tim lifted his brows, winked understanding, and went on with
+a break: "--that this guy Sworn-off is a reg'lar feller and knows this
+river like a book. Says he's one fine guy and a man from hair to heels."
+
+Following which he grimaced as if something smelled bad, adding in a
+barely audible whisper, "And that's the worst lie I ever told."
+
+"We met Mr. Schwandorf last night after you went," Knowlton said,
+easily, drawing down one eyelid. "Very likable sort of chap. He's going
+to help us get started upriver."
+
+"Uh-huh. When do we go? To-day?"
+
+"If possible."
+
+"Glad of it. This big-town sportin' life would be the ruination of a
+simple country kid like me. Yo-hum! Wonder how all our neighbors are
+this mornin'--the goat and the drunk and the two sick fellers. Kind o'
+quiet over that side o' the room."
+
+Thomaz entered just then with more coffee. Knowlton turned to him.
+
+"Are the sick men better to-day, Thomaz?"
+
+"Much better, senhor," the lad said, carelessly. "They are dead."
+
+"Huh?" Tim grunted, explosively.
+
+"Dead," the youth repeated. "They were taken out at dawn. Do not be
+alarmed. It was the swamp fever, which is not--what you say?--catching."
+
+"Humph! Sort of a reg'lar thing to die of fever here, hey?"
+
+Thomaz shrugged as if hearing a foolish question.
+
+"_Si._ Swamp fever, yellow fever, smallpox, beriberi--to-day we live,
+to-morrow we are dead."
+
+"True for ye. They's allays somethin' hidin' round the corner waitin' to
+jump ye, no matter where ye are. If 'tain't one thing, it's another."
+
+Despite his philosophical answer, however, Tim fell silent, his eyes
+going to the doors of the rooms where Death had stalked last night while
+he was gambling. Like most men in whose veins red blood runs bold and
+free, he had no fear of the sort of death befitting a fighter--sudden
+and violent--but a deep repugnance for those two assassins against which
+a victim could not fight back--disease and poison. The Brazilian youth's
+nonchalant fatalism aroused him to the fact that here both those forms
+of death were very near him; the one in the air, the other on the
+ground--fever and snakes.
+
+For the moment he was depressed. Then curiosity awoke.
+
+"If this here, now, Javary fever ain't catchin', how does a feller git
+it?"
+
+"Mosquitoes," McKay enlightened him. "The _anopheles_. It bites a man
+who has fever, then bites a well man and leaves the fever in him. Inside
+of ten days he's sick, unless he takes a huge dose of quinine right
+away. Mosquito attacks perpendicular to the skin. That is, it stands on
+its head. If you ever notice one of them biting that way get busy with
+the quinine."
+
+"Huh! Fat chance a feller's got o' seein' just how all these bugs bite
+him. And one muskeeter standin' on its head does all that, hey?"
+
+"So they say. Also they say it's only the female that bites."
+
+"Yeah. I believe it. I been stung more 'n once by females before now.
+How about the yeller fever? Git that the same way?"
+
+"Same way, only a different mosquito--the _stegomyia_. When you begin to
+vomit black you're gone. And if you get beriberi you're gone, too. First
+symptoms of that are numbness of the fingers and toes. Muscular
+paralysis goes on until your heart stops."
+
+"Uh-huh. Nice cheerful place to die in, this Ammyzon jungle. Aw well,
+what's the odds?"
+
+Wherewith he inhaled more coffee, flipped his cigarette butt at a small
+lizard on the floor not far away, yawned once more, and swaggered out to
+the piazza, bawling:
+
+ "And when I die
+ Don't bury me a-tall,
+ But pickle me bones
+ In alky-hawl--"
+
+When his roar had subsided and the two former officers had sat silent a
+moment, smiling over his nocturnal adventures, the door of Schwandorf's
+room opened abruptly and the German stepped out.
+
+"_Morgen_," he grunted, striding to the table. "Thomaz!"
+
+"_Si_, Senhor Sssondoff." The youth faded away into the kitchen
+quarters.
+
+"Always feel grumpy until I eat," grumbled the blackbeard. "None of this
+coffee-cigarette breakfast for me. A real meal, coffee with gin in it, a
+cigar--then I feel human. Sleep well?"
+
+His bold gaze never flickered as it encountered Knowlton's.
+
+"Fine. If you snored I didn't know it. Didn't hear the bodies taken out
+this morning, either."
+
+"Bodies! Oh! Those fellows dead?" He tilted his head toward the doors
+behind which the sick men had lain. "Glad of it. Best for them and
+everybody else. Hate to have sick people in the place."
+
+The Americans said nothing. They lit new cigarettes and waited for the
+other to become "human." And when his substantial breakfast was down,
+his gin-flavored coffee had disappeared, and his big cigar was aglow, he
+did.
+
+"Well, gentlemen, have you decided to take good advice and let your
+Raposa alone?" he asked, affably.
+
+"Who ever follows good advice?" Knowlton countered. Schwandorf chuckled.
+
+"_Niemand._ Nobody. So you will go." He shook his head solemnly. "I have
+said all I can without offense. But if you persist I can only help you
+to start. If possible I should like to go with you up the river to the
+place where you will take to the bush; but I must go to Iquitos, in
+Peru, on the monthly launch which is due in a day or two, so all my
+business is in the other direction. If now I can aid in the matter of a
+crew--"
+
+"That is what we were about to ask of you."
+
+"So. Then let us be about it. I have been thinking, since you showed
+your determination last night, and have made inquiries about men. There
+are now in Nazareth, the little Peruvian town across the river, several
+men from whom you can pick an excellent crew. Men of the river and the
+bush, not worthless loafers like these townsmen here. Men who are not
+afraid of hell or high water, as the saying is. Not remarkable for
+either beauty or brains, but good men for your work--by far the best you
+can obtain. I would suggest a large canoe and six or eight of those men
+as crew."
+
+The others smoked thoughtfully. Then McKay said, "We should prefer
+Brazilians."
+
+"Not if you knew the people hereabouts as well as I. It, of course,
+makes no personal difference to me what sort of crew you get, but I tell
+you that these men are best. What does it matter which side of the river
+they come from? Men are men."
+
+"True," McKay conceded.
+
+"Can't be too fussy here," Knowlton added. "Let's see the men."
+
+All rose. But then Schwandorf suggested:
+
+"No need of your going to Nazareth. Better stay here, unless you want to
+go through a great deal of ceremonious foolishness over there. It's
+Peruvian ground and the barefooted ignoramuses of officials may insist
+on showing their importance by demanding your papers and all that. I can
+go across, get the men, and be back here before you'd be half through
+the preliminaries. Saves time."
+
+"All right, if it's not too much trouble."
+
+"A good deal less trouble than if you went, to be frank. I'm known, and
+I can go straight about the business. So sit down and wait. Thomaz! My
+hat!"
+
+Out he tramped to the piazza, where he paused a moment to run a swift
+eye over the disheveled figure of Tim, who had fallen sound asleep in a
+chair. Then, without a further word or glance, he descended the ladder
+and swung away down the street. The Americans, watching him from the
+doorway, observed that children in his path hastened to get out of it,
+and that he spoke to nobody.
+
+"Prussian," rasped McKay.
+
+"M-hm! Done time in the Kaiser's army, too, even if he has been here
+since before the war. But he's treating us pretty white."
+
+The captain made no answer. Their eyes followed the big figure until
+they saw it go sliding away toward Peru in a canoe propelled by two
+languid townsmen. Then McKay dropped a hand on Tim's shoulder. The
+red-lashed eyes flew open instantly.
+
+Briefly, quietly, Knowlton told of what had passed while he napped, then
+asked what information he had gleaned from Joao.
+
+"He says," answered Tim, "this guy is a queer duck. Been around here
+quite a while, but Joey don't know what's his game. He goes off on trips
+upriver, stays quite a while, comes back unexpected, and nobody knows
+where he's been or why. He don't use Brazilian boatmen--gits his men on
+the other side. And the Peru boys themselves dunno where he goes, or,
+anyways, they say they don't.
+
+"Two of 'em come over here awhile back and got drunk, and Joey tried to
+pump 'em, but all the dope he got was that this here Fritz goes away
+upstream to a li'l' camp, and from there he goes off into the bush
+alone, and the Peru guys jest hang around the camp till he gits back.
+Sounds kind o' fishy to me, and Joey says it does to him, too, but he
+couldn't work nothin' more out o' the drunks because about that time
+Sworn-off himself comes buttin' in and asks these guys what they think
+they're doin' on this side the river, and they beat it back to Peru toot
+sweet. He's got their goat, all right, and I wouldn't wonder if he's got
+Joey's, too. Anyways, Joey tells me he's off this geezer and advises me
+to lay off him, too, though he can't name a thing against him."
+
+"Queer," said Knowlton, looking again at the canoe out on the water.
+
+"Gun running?" suggested McKay.
+
+"Nope," Tim contradicted. "I thought o' that, but Joey says they's
+nothin' to it; they watched this sourkrout close, and he don't never git
+no guns from nowheres. Besides, they's nobody up there to run guns to
+but Injuns, and them Injuns are so wild they don't want no guns; they
+stick to the bow and arrer and such stuff, which they sure know how to
+use. Whatever his game is, he plays a lone hand as far's this town
+knows. Got no pals here, and nobody wants to walk on his corns."
+
+"May be perfectly all right, too," mused Knowlton. "A little gold cache
+or something--though he said there was none in this region. Oh, well,
+what do we care? We have our hands full with our own business, and all
+assistance is appreciated."
+
+An hour drifted past. Men of the town lounged by, looking curiously at
+the strangers, some nodding and voicing a friendly, "_Boa dia._" Women,
+too, watched them from windows and doors, and children slyly peeped
+around corners until something more important--such as a cat, a goat, or
+a gorgeous butterfly--came their way. Tim went inside and slicked up a
+bit by buttoning and lacing his clothes and combing his rebellious hair.
+At length a long boat put out from the farther shore and came surging
+across the sun-gleaming river.
+
+"Handle themselves well," McKay approved, noting the easy grace of the
+crew. In the bow a tall, slender fellow stood with arms folded,
+balancing himself to the sway of the rather clumsy craft and watching
+the water ahead. In the stern, on a little platform whence he could look
+over the heads of the others and catch any signal from the lookout, a
+squat, dark-faced steersman lounged against his crude rudder. Between
+these two the paddlers stood, each with one foot on the bottom of the
+long dugout and the other on the gunwale, swinging in nonchalant unison
+as their blades moved fore and aft. Under the curving roof of a
+rough-and-ready cabin, open at the sides to allow free play of air,
+Schwandorf lolled like some old-time barbarian king.
+
+Down to the landing place trudged the three Americans, and there the
+employers and the prospective employees looked one another over with
+interest. Eight men had come with Schwandorf, and a hard gang they were.
+The bowman, hawk nosed, slant eyed, black mustached, with hairy chest
+showing under his unbuttoned cotton shirt, had the face and bearing of a
+buccaneer chieftain; and the effect was intensified by a flaring red
+handkerchief around his head and the haft of a knife protruding from his
+waistband. The rowers behind him, though of varying degrees of
+swarthiness and height, all had the same sinewy build, the same bold
+stare, the same devil-may-care insolence of manner; and though none but
+the lookout wore the piratical red around his brow, more than one knife
+hilt showed at their waists. The steersman, whose copper-brown skin and
+flat face betokened a heavy strain of Indian blood, gazed stolidly at
+the Americans with the unwinking, expressionless eyes of a snake. Back
+into the minds of McKay and Knowlton came Schwandorf's words, "Men not
+afraid of hell or high water." They looked it.
+
+"Here they are," announced the German, stepping ashore deliberately.
+"José, the _puntero_"--his hand indicated the lookout--"Francisco, the
+_popero_"--pointing to the steersman--"and six _bogas_. Good men."
+
+McKay ran a cold eye along the line of faces, his gaze plumbing each.
+Under that chill scrutiny the third man's stare wavered and dropped.
+That of the next also veered aside. The rest fronted him eye to eye.
+
+"Two of them will not do," he asserted, in the brusque tone of a captain
+inspecting his company. "Numbers Three and Four--fall out!"
+
+Literal obedience would have put Three and Four into the river,
+wherefore they stood fast. But, though they did not quite understand the
+meaning of the words, they grasped the fact that they were not wanted.
+One laughed impudently, the other slid a poisonous glance at the
+bleak-faced officer. The squat Francisco scowled. So did Schwandorf.
+
+"No man who cannot look me in the eye is needed on this trip," McKay
+declared. "Also, six men are enough. If necessary we will bear a hand at
+the paddles ourselves. José, you have been told by Senhor Schwandorf
+what we want?"
+
+"_Si._"
+
+"You can start at once?"
+
+"_Si._"
+
+"What pay?"
+
+"We leave that to you."
+
+"Um! A dollar a day for each man?"
+
+"Money or goods?"
+
+"American gold."
+
+"_Si. Bueno._"
+
+"Very well. Take those two men back to Nazareth, get what belongings you
+need, return here, and report to me at the hotel. I am captain.
+Understand?"
+
+"_Si_--Capitan."
+
+"All right. On your way!"
+
+As the boat drew out the two rejected men bade the Americans an ironical
+"_adios_," and one spat in the stream. In the faces of the others,
+however, showed something like respect for the crisp-spoken captain, and
+José snarled something at the ill-mannered Three and Four.
+
+"You might need those men," mumbled Schwandorf.
+
+"Guess not," McKay answered, serenely, turning toward the hotel. "Come
+on, boys. Let's get our stuff ready to ride."
+
+Less than two hours later their rooms were vacant, their duffle was
+stowed in the long dugout, the Peruvian crew stood arrogantly eying the
+Brazilians who had gathered to witness the departure, and the Americans
+were bidding good-by to Remate de Males in general and its German
+resident in particular.
+
+"Mr. Schwandorf, we thank you for your efficient aid," said Knowlton,
+extending a hearty hand. "You have helped us to get going with all
+dispatch, and we trust that we can repay the favor soon."
+
+"You owe me no thanks," was the curt reply. "I would expect you to do as
+much for me if our positions were reversed. I wish you luck."
+
+"Get aboard, Tim!" McKay ordered, setting the example himself. Tim
+obeyed, first giving the important Joao d'Almeida Magalhaes Nabuco
+Pestana da Fonseca a real American handgrip and getting in return a
+double embrace from that worthy official. Whereafter he winked and
+grinned expansively at several women garbed in violent hues of red,
+yellow, and green, frowned slightly at Schwandorf, lit the last cigar he
+was to smoke for many a long day, and, as the dugout began to move,
+erupted into a more or less musical farewell to the females of the
+species:
+
+ "The Yanks are goin' away,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ They're movin' on to-day,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ The Yanks are goin' away, they say,
+ Leavin' the girls in a heartless way,
+ Rinkydinky-parley-voo!"
+
+With one final wave of his cigar to the gesticulating Joao and the
+grinning women he turned his back on the town and faced the little-known
+river and the inscrutable jungle. But neither his eyes nor his thoughts
+traveled beyond the bow of the boat. Through narrowed lids he studied
+the swaying paddlers and the piratical José. And in his mind echoed the
+whispered warning of Joao, delivered during the effusive embrace at
+parting:
+
+"Comrade, watch those _bastardos Peruanos_."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+IN THE NIGHT WATCH
+
+
+Day by day the long canoe crawled into the vast unknown. Day by day the
+down-flowing jungle river pushed steadily, sullenly against its prow, as
+if striving to repel the invasion of its secret places by the
+fair-skinned men of another continent. Day by day it slid past in
+resentful impotence, conquered by the swinging blades of the Peruvian
+_bogas_. And day by day the close companionship of canoe and camp seemed
+to weld the voyagers into one compact unit.
+
+Through hours of blazing sun, when the mercury of the thermometer which
+Knowlton had hung inside the shady _toldo_ cabin fluctuated well above
+100 degrees, the hardy crew forged on. Through drenching rains they
+still hung doggedly to their work, suspending it only when the water
+fell in such drowning quantities that they were forced to tie up hastily
+to shore and seek cover in order to breathe. When sunset neared they
+picked with unerring eye a spot fit for camping, attacked the bush with
+whirling machetes, cleared a space, threw up pole frameworks, swiftly
+thatched them with great palm leaves, and thus created from the jungle
+two crude but efficient huts--one for themselves and one for their
+_patrones_. When night had shut down and all hands squatted around the
+fire in a nightly smoke talk they regaled their employers with wild
+tales of adventures in bush and town, some of which were not at all
+polite, but all of which were mightily interesting. And despite all
+discomforts, fatigue, and the minor incidents and accidents which often
+lead fellow travelers in the wilderness to bickering and bitterness, no
+friction developed between the men of the north and the men of the
+south.
+
+Not that the Peruvians were at all obsequious or servile. They were a
+reckless, lawless, Godless gang, perpetually bearing themselves with the
+careless insolence which had characterized them at first, blasphemous of
+speech toward one another--but never toward the North Americans.
+Disputes arose among them with volcanic suddenness, and more than once
+knives were half drawn, only to be slipped back under the tongue-lashing
+of the hawk-nosed _puntero_, José, who damned the disputants completely
+and promised to cut out the bowels of any man daring to lift his
+blade clear of its sheath. Five minutes afterward the fire eaters
+would be on as good terms as ever, shrugging and grinning at their
+passengers--particularly Tim, who, shaking his head disgustedly, would
+grumble:
+
+"Aw, pickles! Another frog fight gone bust!"
+
+Yet Tim, for all his disparagement of these abortive spats, knew full
+well that any one of them held the makings of a deadly duel and that
+José's lurid threats were no mere Latin hyperbole. He realized that the
+red-crowned bowman ruled his crew exactly as any of the old-time
+buccaneers whom he resembled had governed their free-booting gangs--by
+the iron hand; and that, though these men sailed no Spanish Main and
+flew no black flag, the iron-hand government was needed. He saw also
+that the rough-and-ready courtesy of this crowd toward their passengers
+was due largely to the attitude of Captain McKay, who had enforced their
+respect at the start by his soldierly bearing and retained it ever since
+by his military management.
+
+For the captain, experienced in directing men, conducted himself at all
+times as a commanding officer should: he saw all, said little, treated
+José as a subordinate officer, and left the handling of the crew
+entirely to him. His aloofness forestalled any of that familiarity
+which, with such a gang, would have led to contempt. On the other hand,
+his avoidance of any assumption of meddlesome authority prevented the
+irritation and dislike which free men inevitably feel for the
+self-important type of leader. Thus he cannily steered himself and his
+mates between the two rocks which might have wrecked the expedition
+before it was well started. And Knowlton, ex-lieutenant, and Tim,
+ex-sergeant, seeing and understanding, followed his example.
+
+So the days and nights rolled by, the miles of never-ending jungle shore
+fell away behind, and, save for the occasional outbreaks between members
+of the crew, all was serene. To all appearances the Peruvians were
+whole-heartedly interested in serving their employers faithfully, and
+the North Americans were gliding onward with no thought of insecurity.
+Yet appearances frequently are deceptive.
+
+In the heat of the day--in fact, before the broiling sun neared the
+zenith--Tim and Knowlton habitually fell asleep inside the _toldo_, not
+to awake until two hours before sunset, when, according to the routine
+agreed upon, the night's camping place would be sought and two or three
+of the Peruvians would go into the bush with rifles, seeking fresh meat.
+McKay never slept during the day's traverse. Nothing escaped his eye
+from the time when he emerged from his mosquito net in the misty morning
+until he entered it again by firelight. The men in the boat; the
+floating alligators and wading birds of the water; the flashing parrots,
+jacamars, toucans, trogons, and hummers of the air; the yard-long
+lizards and nervous spider monkeys of the tangled tree branches
+alongshore--all these he watched quietly as the boat forged on. And the
+sinister Francisco, watching him in turn, and the paddlers throwing
+occasional glances his way, came to regard him as the only alert member
+of the trio. Wherein they erred.
+
+The truth was that every one of the three adventurers was on his guard.
+Tim had not forgotten the last words of his boon companion, Joao, and at
+the first opportunity he had quietly passed on that warning. Moreover,
+McKay and Knowlton, without discussing the matter, had meditated on the
+unexpected assistance of Schwandorf, the speed with which the crew had
+been obtained, the promptness of José to accept the first payment
+offered, and other things. Wherefore it had come about that at no hour
+of the twenty-four was every eye and ear closed. And the real reason why
+red Tim and blond Knowlton slept by day was that they thus made up the
+slumber lost at night.
+
+Not that either of them patrolled the camp in sentry go. So far as the
+Peruvians knew, they slept as soundly as McKay. But, lying in their
+hammocks, they divided the night watches between them on a schedule as
+regular as that of a military camp, though the shifts necessarily were
+longer. As sunset came always at six o'clock and all hands sought their
+hanging beds two hours later, Tim's "tour of duty" lasted until one in
+the morning. When the phosphorescent hands of his watch pointed to that
+hour he stealthily reached out and jabbed Knowlton, sleeping beside him.
+When a barely audible "All right" reached his ears he was officially
+relieved.
+
+Night followed night, became a week, lengthened into a fortnight. Still,
+so far as the crew was concerned, nothing happened. A little rough
+banter among them as they smoked their last cigarettes, then sleep and
+snores; and that was all until morning. Men less experienced in night
+vigils than the ex-soldiers would have abandoned their watches long
+before this--if, indeed, they had ever adopted them. But these three
+were schooled in patience. Moreover, neither Tim nor Knowlton had ever
+before penetrated the jungle, and at times the light of the waxing moon
+revealed to their eyes strange things which they never would have seen
+by day. So the tedium of the long hours of wakefulness might be broken
+at any moment.
+
+Once they camped close to a conical hillock of compact earth, some four
+feet high and almost stone hard, from which radiated narrow covered
+galleries--the citadel and viaducts of a community of termites. Tim,
+still harboring vivid recollections of his ant battle at Remate de
+Males--though by this time he had trained himself to sleep in his
+hammock, where he was comparatively safe--looked askance at it when told
+what it was, and was only partly reassured by the information that
+termites were eaters of wood rather than of flesh. After sleep had
+embraced the rest of the camp he still was uneasy, lifting his net at
+long intervals and squinting at the moonlit mound as if expecting a
+horde of pincer-jawed insects to erupt from it and charge him. And
+during one of these inspections he saw something totally unexpected.
+
+From the black shadows of the forest had emerged another shadow, so
+grotesque and misshapen that it seemed a figment of indigestion and
+weird dreams--a thing from whose shaggy body protruded what appeared to
+be only a long tubular snout where a head should be, and which looked to
+be overbalanced at the other end by a great mass of hair. It stood stone
+still, and for the moment Tim could not decide which end of it was head
+and which was tail, or even whether it were not double-tailed and
+headless. Then, slowly, the apparition moved.
+
+Into that hard-packed earth it dug huge hooked claws, and from its
+tapering muzzle a wormlike tongue licked about, gathering the outrushing
+white ants into its gullet. For minutes Tim lay blinking at it,
+wondering if he really saw it.
+
+Then, picking up his rifle, he slipped outside his net and advanced on
+the creature.
+
+The animal turned, sat back on its great tail, lifted its terrible
+claws, and waited. Six feet away, just out of its reach, Tim stopped and
+stared anew. Then he grinned.
+
+"You win, feller," he informed the beast. "What ye are I dunno, but any
+critter that's got the guts to ramble right into camp and offer to gimme
+a battle is too good a sport for me to shoot. Help yourself to all the
+ants in the world, for all o' me. I'm goin' back to bed. Bon sewer,
+monseer."
+
+Wherewith, still grinning, but warily watching, he backed until sure the
+big invader would not spring at him. Knowing nothing of ant bears, he
+did not know it was hardly a springing animal.
+
+Its claws looked sufficiently formidable to disembowel a man--as,
+indeed, they were, if the man came near enough. But when Tim had
+withdrawn and the sluggish brute had decided that it would not need to
+defend itself, it sank to all-fours and passed stiffly away into the
+shades whence it had come.
+
+On another night, when Tim slept, Knowlton detected a creeping,
+slithering sound which made him slip off the safety catch of his
+heavy-bulleted pistol and peer at the hut where slept the crew. No man
+was moving there. Still the sound persisted. Lifting his net, he spied
+beyond the hut of the Peruvians a moving mass on the ground--a
+cylindrical bulk which looked to be two feet thick, and which glided
+past like a solid stream of dark water flowing along above the dirt. Its
+beginning and end were hidden in the bush, and not until it tapered into
+nothing and was gone did he realize fully that he had been gazing at an
+enormous anaconda. Then he kicked himself for not shooting it. But
+before long he congratulated himself for letting it go.
+
+Perhaps an hour later the startled forest resounded with an agonized
+scream, so piercing and so appallingly human that all the camp sprang
+awake. The outcry came but once, sounding from some place not far off,
+near the water's edge, and in the direction toward which the huge
+serpent had disappeared. Before the watcher had time to tell the others
+of what he had seen, one of the boatmen discovered the rut left in the
+soft ground by the reptile. Thereafter Knowlton kept his own counsel,
+listening to the excited curses of the men and observing their pallor
+and their nervous scanning of the shadows. José said the screech
+undoubtedly was the death shriek of some animal caught and crushed in
+the snake's tremendous coil. McKay concurred with a nod. And when
+Knowlton casually said it was tough that nobody had been awake to shoot
+the thing as it passed the camp, José emphatically disagreed.
+
+A bullet fired into that fiendish giant, he averred, would have meant
+death to one or more men; for the serpent's writhing coils and lashing
+tail would have knocked down the sleeping-hut and shattered the spines
+of any men they struck. No, let Señor Knowlton thank the saints that the
+awful master of the swamps had gone its way unmolested. For the rest of
+that night Knowlton kept his watch openly, accompanied by José and three
+of the paddlers, who refused to sleep again until they should be miles
+away from the vicinity of that dread monster.
+
+Two nights afterward the camp was aroused again. Tim alone saw the start
+of the disturbance, and he kept mum about it because he did not choose
+to let the Peruvians know he had been on the alert. Out from the gloom
+and straight past the huts a thick-bodied, curve-snouted animal came
+charging madly for the river, carrying on its back a ferocious cat
+creature whose fangs were buried deep in its steed's neck--a tapir
+attacked by a jaguar. With a resounding plunge the elephantine quarry
+struck the water and was gone. The tiger cat, forced to relinquish its
+hold or drown, swam hurriedly back to the bank below the encampment,
+where it roared and spat and squalled in a blood-chilling paroxysm of
+baffled fury. And though every man was awakened, not one left the flimsy
+shelter of his net. Nor did anyone so much as speak until Tim, wearying
+of the noise, announced his intention to "go bust that critter in the
+nose and give him somethin' to yowl about."
+
+The proposal met with instant and peremptory veto.
+
+"As you were!" snapped McKay. "Let him alone! You wouldn't have a
+Chinaman's chance in that black bush. A jaguar is bad all the time, and
+when he's mad he's deadly. Never fool with one of those beasts, Tim.
+I've met them before and I know what they can do."
+
+To which José agreed with many picturesque oaths, declaring that a
+jaguar was no mere beast--it was a devil. Tim, grumbling, obeyed orders.
+The jaguar, hearing their voices, stopped its noise and probably
+reconnoitered the camp. But no man saw the brute, and its next roar
+sounded from some spot far off in the jungle.
+
+Other things, too, passed within Tim's range of vision from time to time
+in the moonlit hours: a queer bony creature which he took for some new
+kind of turtle, but which really was an armadillo; a monstrous hairy
+spider which slid like a streak up his net, hung there for a time,
+decided to go elsewhere, and departed with such speed that the man
+inside rubbed his eyes and wondered if he was "seein' things that
+ain't"; a couple of vampires which flitted in from nowhere like ghoulish
+ghosts, wheeled and floated silently on wide wings, seeking an exposed
+foot protruding from the hammocks, found none, rested a moment on the
+roof poles, chirping hoarsely, and veered out again into the night.
+
+To Knowlton's watch came a strange owl-faced little monkey with great
+staring eyes and face ringed with pale fur--one of those night apes
+seldom seen by man; a small troop of kinkajous, slender, long-tailed
+animals which looked to be monkeys, but were not, and which leaped
+deftly among the branches like frolicsome little devils let loose to
+play under the jungle moon; a big scaly iguana, its back ridged with saw
+teeth and its pendulous throat pouch dangling grotesquely under its jaw;
+and more than one deadly snake and huge alligator, the first gliding
+past with venomous head raised and cold eye glinting, the second lying
+quiescent except for occasional openings of horrific jaws.
+
+To the ears of both the hammock sentinels came the mournful sounds of
+living things unseen. From the depths beyond drifted the weird plaint of
+the sloth, crying in the night, "Oh me, poor sloth, oh-oh-oh-oh!" Goat
+suckers repeated by the hour their monotonous refrains, "Quao quao," or
+"Cho-co-co-cao," while a third earnestly exhorted, "Joao corta pao!"
+("John, cut wood!"). Tree frogs and crickets clacked and drummed and
+hoo-hooed, guaribas poured their awful discord into the air, and on one
+bright breathless night there sounded over and over a call freighted
+with wretchedness and despair--the wail of that lonely owl known to the
+bushmen as "the mother of the moon," whose dreadful cry portends evil to
+those who hear it.
+
+Sometimes the air shook with the thunderous concussion of some great
+falling tree which, long since bled to death by parasitical plant
+growths, now at last toppled crashing back into the dank soil whence it
+had forced its way up into a place in the sun. Other noises, infrequent
+and unexplainable, also drifted at long intervals from the mysterious
+blackness. And in all the medley of night sounds not one was cheerful.
+The burden of the jungle's cacophonic cantanta ever was the
+same--despair, disaster, death.
+
+Then came the fifteenth day. It dawned red, the sun fighting an
+ensanguined battle with the heavy morning mists and throwing on the
+faces of the early-rising travelers a sinister crimson hue. Before that
+sun should rise again some of those faces were to be stained a deeper
+red.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+COLD STEEL
+
+
+Some two hours after the start, while Knowlton and Tim loafed at the
+fore end of the cabin, enjoying the comparative coolness of the early
+day, another boat hove in sight up ahead--a longish craft manned by
+eight paddlers and without a cabin.
+
+As it came into view its bowman tossed his paddle in greeting. The
+Peruvians ignored the salutation. The bowman, after shading his eyes and
+peering at the flamboyant figure of José, resumed paddling without
+further ceremony, evidently intending to pass in silence. But then McKay
+arose, waved a hand, and told José to steer for the newcomers. José,
+with a slightly sour look, gave the signal to Francisco, and the course
+changed.
+
+The other canoe slowed and waited. Its men watched the tall figure of
+McKay. Tim and Knowlton scanned the bronzed faces of those men and liked
+them at once. The paddlers evidently were Brazilians, but of a different
+type from the sluggish townsmen of Remate de Males--alert,
+active-looking fellows, steady of eye, honest of face, muscular of
+arm--in all, a more clean-cut set of men than the Peruvians. All three
+of the Americans noticed that no word was exchanged between the two
+crews.
+
+"_Boa dia, amigos!_" spoke McKay. "Who are you and whence do you come?"
+
+"We are rubber workers of Coronel Nunes, senhor," the bowman answered,
+civilly. "We go to make a new camp. This land is a part of the
+_seringel_ of the coronel, and we left his headquarters yesterday."
+
+"Ah! Then the headquarters is above here?"
+
+"One more day's journey," the man nodded.
+
+"I thank you. Good fortune go with you."
+
+"And with you, senhor. May God protect you."
+
+With the words the Brazilian glanced along the line of Peruvian faces
+and his eyes narrowed. Though his words were only a respectful farewell,
+his expressive face indicated that McKay might be badly in need of
+divine protection at no distant date. As his paddle dipped and his men
+nodded their leave-taking, Francisco, the _popero_; sneered raucously:
+
+"Hah! Mere _caucheros_! Workers! Slaves!"
+
+And he spat at the Brazilian boat.
+
+Fire shot into the eyes of the bowman and his comrades. Their muscles
+tensed.
+
+"Better be slaves--better be dogs--than Peruvian cutthroats!" one
+retorted. "Go your way, and keep to your own side of the river."
+
+"We go where we will, and no misborn Brazilians can stop us," snarled
+Francisco. To which he added obscene epithets directed against
+Brazilians in general and the men of Coronel Nunes in particular.
+
+The unprovoked insults angered the Americans as well as the Brazilians.
+Knowlton leaped through the _toldo_ and confronted Francisco.
+
+"Shut your dirty mouth!" he blazed.
+
+For reply, the evil-eyed steersman spat at him the vilest name known to
+man.
+
+An instant later, his lips split, he sprawled dazedly on his platform,
+perilously close to the edge. Knowlton, the knuckles of his left fist
+bleeding from impact with the other's teeth, stood over him in white
+fury. Francisco's right hand fumbled for his knife. Knowlton promptly
+stamped on that hand with a heavy boot heel.
+
+"Good eye, Looey!" rumbled Tim's voice at his back. "Boot him some more
+for luck. Hey, you! Back up or I'll drill ye for keeps!" This to a pair
+of the Peruvian paddlers who had come scrambling through the cabin.
+
+After one searching stare into Tim's hard blue eyes and a glance at his
+fist curled around the butt of his belt gun, the _bogas_ backed up. A
+moment later they were thrown boldly into their own part of the boat by
+José, who blistered them with the profanity of three languages at once.
+Then McKay came through and took charge.
+
+"That'll do, Tim! Same goes for you, Merry! José, I'll handle this. You,
+Francisco! Get up!"
+
+The curt commands struck like blows. Every man obeyed. And when the
+squat steersman again stood up McKay went after him roughshod. In the
+colloquial Spanish of Mexico and the Argentine, in the man talk of
+American army camps, he flayed that offender alive. José himself,
+efficient man handler though he was, stared at his captain in awe. And
+Francisco, though not given to cringing, skulked like a beaten dog when
+the verbal flagellation was finished.
+
+Turning then to the Brazilians, McKay formally apologized for the
+insults to them.
+
+"It is nothing, senhor," coolly answered the bowman--though his glance
+at the Peruvians said plainly that it would have been something but for
+the swift punishment by the Americans. "Again I say--may God protect
+you! Adeos!"
+
+The Brazilian boat glided away. The Peruvian craft crawled on upstream
+in silence.
+
+When the next camp was made all apparently had forgotten the affair. The
+men badgered one another as usual, though none mentioned Francisco's
+split mouth; and Francisco, himself, albeit sulky, betrayed no sign of
+enmity. After nightfall the regular camp-fire meeting was held and at
+the usual time all turned in. One more night of listening to the sounds
+of the tropical wilderness seemed all that lay ahead of the secret
+sentinels.
+
+Sleep enveloped the huts. Snores and gurgles rose and fell. Tim himself,
+for the sake of effect, snored heartily at intervals, though his eyes
+never closed. Through his mosquito bar he could see only vaguely, but he
+knew any man walking from the crew's quarters must cast a very visible
+shadow across that net, and to him the shadow would be as good a warning
+as a clear view of the substance. But the hours crept on and no shadow
+came.
+
+At length, however, a small sound reached his alert ear--a sound
+different from the regular noises of the bush--a stealthy, creeping
+noise like that of a big snake or a huge lizard. It came from the ground
+a few feet away, and it seemed to be gradually advancing toward his own
+hammock. Whatever the creature was that made it, its method of progress
+was not human, but reptilian. Puzzled, suspicious, yet doubtful, Tim
+lifted the rear side of his net, on which no moonlight fell. Head out,
+he watched for the crawling thing to come close.
+
+It came, and for an instant he was in doubt as to its character, for
+around it lay the deep shadow of some treetops which at that point
+blocked off the moon. It inched along on its stomach, its black head
+seeming round and minus a face, its body broad but flat--a thing that
+looked to be a man but not a man. Then, pausing, it raised its head and
+peered toward the hammock of Knowlton. With that movement Tim's doubts
+vanished. The lifting of the head showed the face--the face of
+Francisco, the face of murder. In its teeth was clamped a bare knife.
+
+Forthwith Tim applied General Order Number Thirteen.
+
+In one bound he was outside his net, colliding with Knowlton, who awoke
+instantly. In another he was beside the assassin, who, with a lightning
+grab at the knife in his mouth, had started to spring up. Tim wasted no
+time in grappling or clinching. He kicked.
+
+His heavy boot, backed by the power of a hundred and ninety pounds of
+brawn, thudded into the Indian's chest. Francisco was hurled over
+sidewise on his back. Another kick crashed against his head above the
+ear. He went limp.
+
+"Ye lousy snake!" grated Tim. "Crawlin' on yer belly to knife a sleepin'
+man, hey? Blast yer rotten heart--"
+
+"What's up?" barked McKay from his hammock.
+
+"Night attack, Cap. If ye're comin' out bring along yer gat. Hey, Looey,
+got yer gun on? Some o' these other guys might git gay. They're comin'
+now."
+
+True enough, the Peruvian gang was jumping from its hut. With another
+glance at the prostrate Francisco to make sure he was unconscious, Tim
+whirled to meet them, fist on gun.
+
+"Halt!" he roared. "First guy passin' this corner post gits shot. Back
+up!"
+
+The impact of his voice, the menace of his ready gun hand, the sight of
+Knowlton and McKay leaping out with pistols drawn, stopped the rush at
+the designated post. But swift hands dropped, and when they rose again
+the moonlight glinted on cold steel.
+
+"Capitan, what happens here?" demanded José, ominously quiet.
+
+"Knife work," McKay replied, curtly. "Your man Francisco attempted to
+creep in and murder Señor Knowlton. If you and the rest have similar
+intentions, now's your time to try. If not, put away those knives."
+
+"Knives! _Por Dios_, what do you mean?"
+
+"Look behind you."
+
+José looked. At once he snarled curses and commands. Slowly the knives
+slipped out of sight. The paddlers edged backward to their own shack,
+leaving their _puntero_ alone.
+
+"The capitan has it wrong," asserted José. "We awake to find our
+_popero_ being kicked in the head. We want to know why. If Francisco has
+done what you say I will deal with him. That I may be sure, allow me to
+look."
+
+"Very well. Look."
+
+José advanced, stooped, studied the ground, the position of Francisco's
+body, the knife still clutched in the nerveless hand. Tim growlingly
+vouchsafed a brief explanation of the incident. When José straightened
+up, his mouth was a hard line and his eyes hot coals.
+
+"_Si. Es verdad._ To-morrow we shall have a new _popero_."
+
+With which he stooped again, grasped the prone man by the hair, dragged
+him into the moonlit space between the huts, and flung him down. "Juan,
+bring water!" he ordered.
+
+One of the paddlers, looking queerly at him, did so. José deluged the
+senseless man. Francisco, reviving, sat up and scowled about him. His
+eyes rested on the three Americans standing grimly ready, shoulder to
+shoulder, before their hut; veered to his mates bunched in sinister
+silence beside their own quarters; shifted again to meet the baleful
+glare of José. His hand stole to his empty sheath.
+
+"Your knife, Francisco _mio_?" queried José, a menacing purr in his
+tone. "I have it. It seems that you are in haste to use it. Too much
+haste, Francisco. But if you will stand instead of crawling as before,
+you may have your knife again--and use it, too."
+
+Francisco, staring sullenly up, seemed to read in the words more than
+was evident to the Americans. He lurched to his feet, staggered, caught
+his balance, braced himself, stood waiting.
+
+"You know who commands here," José went on. "You disobey. You seek to
+stab in the night--"
+
+"Now or later--what is the difference?"
+
+"--and now the boat is too small for both of us." José ignored the
+interruption. "Here is your knife. Now use it!"
+
+He flipped the weapon at the other, who caught it deftly. José dropped
+his right hand to his waist. An instant later naked steel licked out at
+Francisco's throat.
+
+The steersman's knife flashed up, caught the reaching blade, knocked it
+with a scraping clink. For a few seconds the two weapons seemed welded
+together, their owners each striving to bear down the other's wrist.
+Then they parted as the combatants sprang back.
+
+José side-stepped twice to his right. Francisco, turning to preserve his
+guard, now had the light full in his face. But the moon rode so high
+that the steersman's disadvantage was negligible, and the next assault
+of the _puntero_ was blocked as before. And this time the wrist of the
+_popero_ proved a bit the better; he threw the attacking steel aside and
+struck in a slashing sweep at his antagonist's stomach.
+
+A convulsive inward movement of the bowman's middle, coupled with a
+swift back-step, made the slash miss by a hair's breadth. With the
+quickness of light José was in again. His knife hand, still outstretched
+sidewise, stopped with a light smack of flesh on flesh. Then it jerked
+outward. His steel now was red to the hilt.
+
+One more rapid step back, a keen glance at his opponent, and José stood
+at ease. From Francisco burst a bubbling groan. He staggered. His knife
+dropped. His hands rose fumblingly toward his neck. Suddenly his knees
+gave way and he toppled backward to the ground. The silvery moonlight
+disclosed a dark flood welling from his severed jugular.
+
+With the utmost coolness José ran two fingers down his wet blade,
+snapped the fingers in air, and spoke to his crew:
+
+"As I said, we shall have a new _popero_. To-morrow, Julio, you will
+take the platform."
+
+A rumble ran among the men. Their eyes lifted from Francisco to the
+Americans, and in them shone a wolfish gleam. The bowman turned sharply
+and faced them.
+
+"Who growls?" he rasped. "You, Julio?"
+
+"_Si, yo soy_," Julio answered, harshly, fingering his knife. "I will be
+steersman, but I steer downstream, not up. Francisco spoke the truth.
+Now or later--what is the difference? Let it be now!"
+
+A louder growl from the others followed his words. One stepped back into
+the shadow of the hut.
+
+"_Perros amarillos!_ Yellow dogs! You go upstream, fools! The Americans
+must be taken--"
+
+A raucous sneer from Julio interrupted him. Simultaneously the paddler's
+hand leaped upward, poising a knife.
+
+"The gringos stay here--and you, too, you Yanqui cur!"
+
+The poised knife hissed through the air at José.
+
+Out from the crew house shot a streak of fire and a smashing rifle
+report.
+
+José dodged, staggered, screeched in feline fury, the knife buried in
+his left arm.
+
+McKay grunted suddenly, fell, lay still.
+
+"God!" yelled Tim. "Cap's gone! Clean 'em, Looey!"
+
+With the words he leaped aside and pulled his pistol, just as another
+rifle flare stabbed out from the other hut and a bullet whisked through
+the space where he had stood. An instant later he was pouring a stream
+of lead at the spot whence the burning powder had leaped.
+
+Knives flashing, teeth gleaming, the other paddlers charged across the
+ten-foot space between the huts.
+
+José, his left arm helpless, but his deadly right hand still gripping
+his knife, hurled himself on Julio, who had seized a machete from
+somewhere.
+
+Knowlton slammed a bullet between the eyes of the foremost _boga_, who
+pitched headlong. He swung the muzzle to the other man's chest--yanked
+at the trigger--got no response. The gun was jammed.
+
+With a triumphant snarl the blood-crazed Peruvian closed in, slashing
+for the throat. Knowlton slipped aside, evaded the thrust, swung the
+pistol down hard on his assailant's head. The man reeled, thrust again
+blindly, missed. Knowlton crashed his dumb gun down again. It struck
+fair on the temple. The man collapsed.
+
+Tim was charging across the open at the crew house. José and Julio were
+locked in a death grapple. No other living man, except Knowlton, still
+stood upright. Stooping, he peered into the red-dyed face of McKay. Then
+he laid a hand on the captain's chest. Faint but regular, he felt the
+heart beating.
+
+"Thank God!" he breathed. With a wary eye on the battling Peruvians he
+swiftly raised the captain and put him into Tim's hammock. As he turned
+back to the fight Tim emerged from the other hut, carrying a body, which
+he dropped and swiftly inspected. At the same moment the fight of José
+and Julio ended.
+
+With a choked scream Julio dropped, writhed, doubled up. Then he lay
+still. José, his face ghastly, stared around him. His mouth stretched in
+a terrible smile.
+
+"So this ends it," he croaked, his gaze dropping to Julio. "_Adios_,
+Julio! The machete is not--so good as the knife--unless one has--room
+to--swing it--"
+
+He chuckled hoarsely and sank down.
+
+For an instant Knowlton hesitated, his glance going back and forth
+between McKay and José. Swiftly then he ran his finger tips over McKay's
+head. With a murmur of satisfaction he turned from his comrade and
+hurried to the motionless bowman, over whom Tim now bent.
+
+"Bleedin' to death, Looey," informed Tim. "Ain't cut bad excep' that
+arm. That flyin' knife must have got an artery. Can we pull him through?
+He's a good skate."
+
+"I'll try. You look after Cap. He's only knocked out--bullet creased
+him--"
+
+"Glory be! He's all right, huh? Sure I'll fix him up. Everybody else
+dead? I got that guy in the bunk house--drilled him three times."
+
+"Look out for that fellow over there. Maybe I brained him, but I'm not
+sure."
+
+Knowlton was already down on his knees beside José, working fast to loop
+a tourniquet and stop the flow from the pierced arm. With a handkerchief
+and his pistol barrel he shut off the pulsating stream.
+
+"Yeah, he's done," judged Tim, rising from the man whom Knowlton had
+downed at last. "Skull's caved in. What 'd ye paste him with?"
+
+"Gun. Cursed thing stuck."
+
+"Uh-huh. Them automats are cranky. Say, lookit the mess Hozy made o'
+that guy Hooley-o."
+
+Knowlton glanced at Julio and whistled. José's oft-repeated threat to
+disembowel a refractory member of the crew had at last been literally
+fulfilled.
+
+But the lieutenant had seen worse sights in the shell-torn trenches of
+France, and now he kept his mind on his work. Wedging the gun to hold
+the tourniquet tight, he lifted his patient from the red-smeared mud and
+bore him to the nearest hammock in the crew quarters. Striding back, he
+found Tim alternately bathing McKay's head and giving him brandy. In a
+moment the captain's eyes opened.
+
+"Some bean ye got, Cap," congratulated Tim, vastly relieved at sight of
+McKay's gray stare. "Bullet bounced right off. Here, take another
+swaller. Attaboy! Hey, Looey, we better pack this crease o' Cap's, huh?
+She keeps leakin'."
+
+"Yep. Dip up the surgical kit. And give José a drink. I'll have to tie
+his artery, too. How do you feel, old chap?"
+
+"Dizzy," McKay confessed. "What's happened?"
+
+"Lost our crew," was the laconic answer. "All gone west but José, and
+he's bled white. We'll have to paddle our own canoe now."
+
+For a time after his head was bandaged McKay lay quiet, staring out at
+the tiny battlefield and at his two mates working silently on the
+wounded arm of José. When they came back he spoke one word.
+
+"Schwandorf."
+
+"Yeah! He's the nigger in the woodpile, I bet my shirt. But why? What's
+his lay, d'ye s'pose?"
+
+"Perhaps José knows," suggested Knowlton. "But he's in no shape to talk
+now. Let's see. Schwandorf said he was going to Iquitos?"
+
+"Yes, but that doesn't mean anything."
+
+"Probably not. Well, maybe José can explain."
+
+There were some things, however, which José could not have told if he
+would, for he himself did not know them. One was that Schwandorf really
+had gone to Iquitos, where was a radio station. Another was that from
+that radio station to Puerto Bermudez, thence over the Andes to the
+coast, and northward to a New York address memorized from Knowlton's
+notebook, already had gone this message:
+
+ McKay expedition killed by Indians. Rand search most dangerous, but
+ if empowered I attempt locate him for fifty thousand gold payable
+ on safe delivery Rand at Manaos. Reply soon a possible.
+
+ KARL SCHWANDORF.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE DOUBLE-CROSS
+
+
+Noon, sweltering hot. A blazing sun pouring vertical rays down on a
+blinding river. A long canoe wearily creeping up the glaring waters,
+minus a lookout, heedless of the ever-present danger of sunken tree
+trunks; propelled by three sun-blistered white men, one of whom wore a
+bandage around his head; steered perfunctorily by a pallid pirate whose
+left arm hung in a sling. Atop the right bank an unbroken, endless
+tangle of jungle growth. Ahead, on the left shore, a gap gouged out of
+the forest and a number of boats at the water's edge.
+
+"Guess that's it," panted Knowlton, shielding his eyes and squinting at
+the clearing. "One more day's journey, the Brazilian chap said. We've
+been two and a half."
+
+"One day's journey for six hardened rivermen, señor," corrected José.
+"Not for three men doing six men's work and hampered by a cripple."
+
+"Aw, ye're no crip, Hozy," dissented Tim. "Any guy that can steer a tub
+like this here one-handed after losin' a couple gallons o' juice is in
+good shape yet, I'll say. If ye had both legs shot off and yer arms
+broke and yer head stove in, now, ye might call yourself sort o'
+helpless. Ease her over to the left a li'l' more, so's we'll hit the
+bank right at the corner o' that gap. Me, I don't want to take one
+stroke more 'n I have to. Every muscle in me is so sore it squeaks."
+
+"Same here," admitted Knowlton. "I'm one solid ache."
+
+José nodded. The clumsy craft veered a bit. The three put a little more
+punch into their lagging strokes, noting, as they neared the steep bank,
+that a couple of men had appeared at its top and were staring at them.
+Gradually the long dugout worked in to the muddy shore, where the
+paddlers stabbed their blades into the clay and held it firm.
+
+"Ahoy, up there! This the Nunes _seringal_?"
+
+From the edge, some thirty feet above, the taller of the two watchers
+answered:
+
+"_Si_, senhor. The headquarters of the coronel. Do you come to visit
+him?"
+
+"Right."
+
+"Then permit me to help you. The path is a little ahead. Pull up and tie
+to this stake."
+
+The tall fellow came dropping swiftly downward. At the same time the
+other Brazilian stepped back and was gone.
+
+With a dexterous twist the man of Nunes moored the boat to the
+designated stake. Then he reached a hand toward Tim to help him out.
+
+"I ain't no old woman, feller," Tim refused, and hopped aground
+unassisted. McKay and Knowlton followed. But José, after moving
+languidly forward and contemplating the sharp slope, hesitated and then
+shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"I am tired, señores," he said. "And perhaps it would be well for one to
+stay here and watch."
+
+The tall Brazilian's eyes narrowed.
+
+"There is no danger of loss," he asserted, with dignity. "We men of the
+coronel are not thieves."
+
+The slight emphasis of his last sentence might have been taken as an
+intimation that some one else not far away would bear watching. José's
+mouth tightened. For a moment Brazilian and Peruvian eyed each other in
+obvious dislike. Then, with a glance at his crippled arm, José shrugged
+again.
+
+"Better come along, José," McKay said. "Stuff's safe enough."
+
+"As you will, Capitan."
+
+He lounged to the edge, hesitated, wavered slightly. At once the
+Brazilian darted out a hand and gave him support. And while the four
+clambered up the slope he retained a grip on the Peruvian's arm, aiding
+him to the top. When they emerged on the level, however, he dropped his
+hand immediately. José gave him a half-mocking bow of thanks, to which
+he replied with a short nod. Then he stepped back and let the Peruvian
+precede him toward a number of substantial pole-supported houses a
+hundred yards away.
+
+"No love lost between them two," thought Tim, who had watched it all.
+"Good skate, though, this new feller. Ready to help a guy that needs it,
+whether he likes him or not; ready to knock his block off, too, if he
+needs that. Bet he'd be a hellion in a scrap. Dang good-lookin' lad,
+too."
+
+Wherewith he introduced himself.
+
+"Don't git sore because I growled at ye down below," he said, with a
+friendly grin. "Sounded rough, mebbe, but that's my style. I'm Tim Ryan,
+from the States. I bark more 'n I bite."
+
+The overture met with instant response--a quick smile and a twinkle in
+the warm eyes.
+
+"It is not words that give offense, senhor, but the way they are
+spoken--and the man who speaks them. One man may growl, but you like
+him. Another may speak smoothly, but you itch to strike him. Is it not
+so? I am Pedro Andrada, a _seringueiro_ who should be tapping trees
+instead of loafing here. But my partner and I have just come in from a
+long trip into the _sertao_--wilderness--and are resting."
+
+"Yeah? Was that yer buddy I seen with ye?"
+
+"My--ah--buddee? Partner? Yes, that was he--Lourenço Moraes, the best
+comrade one ever had. He has gone to tell the coronel of your arrival.
+Have you met with an accident downriver?"
+
+He moved a thumb meaningly toward the only remaining member of the crew.
+
+"Yeah," grimly. "Bad accident."
+
+Tim tapped his pistol significently, raised five fingers, winked, and
+twitched his head toward the Peruvian. Pedro lifted his brows, nodded
+quick understanding, pointed to the bad arm of José, and made motions as
+if pulling a trigger. Tim shook his head and enacted the pantomime of
+drawing and throwing a knife. Whereat the Brazilian, aware that José was
+not a prisoner and probably knowing that North Americans were not knife
+throwers, looked much puzzled. But their sign manual went no farther,
+for they now approached the house which evidently formed the dwelling
+and office of Coronel Nunes.
+
+At the foot of the ladder stood a broad-shouldered, square-jawed,
+thick-muscled, deeply tanned man, who, without speaking, pointed a thumb
+upward. Above, in the doorway, waited an elderly Brazilian of medium
+height and spare figure, standing with soldierly erectness and garbed in
+white duck of semimilitary cut. He beamed down at McKay and Knowlton,
+but as his black eyes encountered those of José they seemed suddenly to
+become very sharp. Then his gaze rested on Tim's broad face and he
+smiled again.
+
+"Enter, gentlemen," he invited. "_Esta casa e a suas ordenes_--this
+house is at your disposal."
+
+McKay, with a bow, climbed the ladder, followed by Knowlton. José, with
+a swaggering stare at the wide-shouldered man, who stared straight back
+without facial change, also went up. Tim came fourth and last, for Pedro
+stopped beside his countryman, who evidently was Lourenço.
+
+The travelers found themselves in a room which, in view of its distance
+from civilization, seemed palatial. Its floor was tight, its furniture
+modern, its walls decorated with a few excellent pictures, of which the
+largest was a superb view of the rugged harbor of Rio de Janeiro.
+Comfortable chairs were ranged along the walls, and the middle of the
+room was occupied by a massive square-cornered table on which lay a
+jumble of hand-written business papers, a number of books, a high-grade
+violin and bow. Beyond the table stood a swivel chair, evidently the
+usual seat of the coronel. Table and chair were so arranged that the
+master of this house sat always with his back to a wall and his face
+toward the door. And on a couple of hooks on that wall, ready for
+instant service, hung a high-power rifle.
+
+On their way up the river the Americans had passed, at long intervals, a
+few small rubber estates, whose headquarters consisted mainly of a crude
+shack or two, hardly better than the dingy houses of Remate de Males.
+This place was more imposing. They had observed, while crossing the
+cleared space, that it was at least half a mile square; that its
+warehouse for supplies was big and solid; that a goodly number of
+_barracaos_, or rubber workers' huts, surrounded the house of the master
+at a respectful distance; and that the owner's home was no one-room
+cabin, but big enough to contain six or eight rooms. This well-appointed
+reception room and the formal yet sincere courtesy of its owner showed
+that Coronel Nunes was no mere native of the frontier. Later they were
+to learn that he was a gentleman of Rio who, exiling himself from the
+capital after the death of his wife, had carved from this forbidding
+jungle a fortune in the rubber trade.
+
+With the correct touch of Latin punctilio McKay spoke the introductions
+and stated that they were on their way upriver to explore the
+hinterland. With equal politeness the coronel bowed and begged his
+illustrious guests to be seated. Then he touched a small bell. A door at
+one side opened and a white-suited negro appeared.
+
+"Café," the coronel ordered. As speedily as if these visitors had been
+long expected, the servant brought in a tray bearing cups of syrupy
+coffee. Each of the guests accepted one. Whereafter the decorum of the
+occasion was shattered by Tim, who, at the imminent risk of scalding
+himself, gulped his refreshment and vociferated his satisfaction.
+
+"O-o-oh boy! That hits right where I live! Gimme another one, feller,
+and make it man's size!"
+
+The black fellow struggled with his quick mirth and then laughed
+outright--the throaty, infectious laugh of his race. The coronel's eyes
+twinkled. And when Tim fished a damp cigarette from his shirt,
+nonchalantly scraped a match on his host's table, blew a cloud of smoke,
+and sprawled back with one leg dangling over a chair arm, formality went
+a-glimmering.
+
+"_A quem madruga Deus ajuda_," laughed the coronel. "Or, as you North
+Americans put it, 'God helps those who help themselves.' Let us not be
+ceremonious, gentlemen. 'Tonio, bring more coffee. And cigars. And--"
+
+Down behind his table, where only the servant saw the motion, he
+twitched a finger as if pulling a cork. 'Tonio, his ebony countenance
+split by a grin, ducked his head and vanished into the other room.
+
+"How is the rubber market, sir?" asked Knowlton, seeking to divert
+attention from Tim.
+
+"Not so good," the old gentleman replied, with a deprecatory gesture.
+"In truth, it is very poor since the war--so poor that soon I shall
+abandon this _seringal_ and go out to spend the rest of my life on the
+coast. With rubber selling at a mere five hundred dollars a ton in New
+York and the artificial plantations of the Far East growing greater
+yearly, there is no longer much profit in bleeding the wild trees of our
+jungle. I really do not know why I stay here now, unless it is because I
+have become so much accustomed to this life."
+
+"Why, I understood that there was much money in rubber!"
+
+"You speak truth--there was. Now there is not. The world moves and times
+change. Years ago foreigners came into Brazil, helped themselves to the
+seed of our wild trees, and planted it in Ceylon and the Malay region.
+That seed now bears such fruit that the world is flooded with rubber.
+Ten years ago, senhores, a ton sold for six thousand five hundred
+dollars. Now, in this year nineteen-twenty, the price is only
+one-thirteenth of what it was in those days. It scarcely pays for the
+gathering. I hope you have not come expecting to make fortunes in
+rubber."
+
+"No. We are here to find a race of men known as Red Bones."
+
+The coronel's brows lifted. They kept on lifting, and he opened his lips
+twice without speaking. After a long stare at Knowlton he looked at
+McKay, at Tim, and finally at José. A frown grew on his face. And the
+Americans, following his look at the Peruvian, were surprised to see
+that José himself was staring blankly at the speaker.
+
+"José Martinez!" snapped the coronel, leveling a finger pistollike at
+the _puntero_. "What devil's game are you working now?"
+
+José recovered himself and lifted his coffee cup.
+
+"I do not understand you, Nunes," he replied, languidly. "I am but the
+humble _puntero_ of the crew engaged by these señores. My only work has
+been to earn my pay. And you may ask _el capitan_ whether I have earned
+it."
+
+"Ay, he has," corroborated McKay. "Killed two of his own crew in our
+defense."
+
+The coronel's jaw dropped. He blinked as if disbelieving his ears.
+
+"He--José? Not possible!" he stuttered. "José--this man--defended you
+against his companions?"
+
+"Exactly."
+
+The Brazilian slowly shook his head. Then suddenly he nodded as if an
+illuminating thought had crossed his mind.
+
+"I see. José is very well paid."
+
+"One dollar a day," was McKay's dry retort.
+
+At that moment 'Tonio re-entered with a larger tray than before, bearing
+more coffee, long cigars, and squat glasses in which glowed a golden
+liquid. Tim sat up with a grunt and helped himself with both hands. When
+the coronel's turn came he disregarded the drinks, but lit the cigar as
+if he needed it.
+
+"_De noite todos os gatos sao pardos_," he said. "At night all cats are
+gray. I am much in the dark, gentlemen. If you would be so good as to
+enlighten me--"
+
+He paused, looking sidewise again at José as if the _puntero_ had
+suddenly grown wings or horns.
+
+"All right," nodded Knowlton, biting and lighting his cigar. "We are
+somewhat in the dark ourselves as to why José has been so zealous, for
+he has been very taciturn since the recent fight at our camp. Perhaps
+José also is a bit hazy about our expedition--he looked rather surprised
+just now. So here is the situation."
+
+Briefly then he outlined the object of the search, stating that the
+identity of the mysterious Raposa was a matter of some concern to
+certain persons in the United States and that the expedition had been
+formed with the view of settling the question. From the time of the
+landing at Remate de Males, however, he narrated events more fully,
+giving complete details of Schwandorf's activities, Francisco's offense,
+and the final attack by the crew. While he talked the coronel's frown
+deepened. Also, José gradually assumed the expression of a thundercloud.
+And when the tale was done the _puntero_ exploded.
+
+"_Sangre de Cristo!_" he yelled. "_El Aleman_--the German--he told you
+we would go among the cannibals? We? Peruvians? _Madre de Dios!_ If ever
+I get within knife length of him! Nunes, you see, do you not?"
+
+The coronel nodded grimly.
+
+"I see that he planned to have all of you destroyed. Senhor Knowlton,
+that black-bearded and black-hearted man suggested that you take
+Mayoruna women? He told you they were shapely of body and tried to put
+into your minds the thought of making them your paramours? The snake!
+
+"He did not tell you, then, that the Mayoruna men allow no trifling with
+their women; that any alien man attempting to embrace one of them would
+be killed. But it is true. If you should succeed in establishing
+friendly relations with the men--which is not at all likely--you would
+forfeit all friendship, and your lives as well, by the slightest
+dalliance with any of the women.
+
+"He told you that more than one man has risked his life to win a
+Mayoruna woman? That is true. But he gave you a false impression as to
+the way in which the risk was incurred. He did not tell you that
+Peruvian _caucheros_ have sometimes raided small isolated _melocas_ of
+the Mayorunas, shooting down the men and carrying off the girls to be
+victims of their bestial lust. He did not tell you that for this reason
+any Peruvian is considered their enemy and is killed without mercy
+wherever found. Yet he tried to send you with Peruvian guides into their
+country. He knew the Peruvians would be killed on sight--and you with
+them."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+FIDDLERS THREE
+
+
+Black looks passed among the men as the duplicity of Schwandorf lay
+plain before their eyes. Tim growled. José hissed curses. The coronel
+whirled to him.
+
+"José! What was his object in trying to destroy you and your crew? You
+have been his man. You know much about him. He wanted to stop your
+mouth, yes? Dead men tell no tales."
+
+The _puntero's_ eyes glittered. For a moment the others thought he was
+about to reveal important secrets. Then his face changed.
+
+"I know no reason why we should be killed," he declared.
+
+"I do not believe you," the coronel declared, bluntly.
+
+José shrugged, calmly drank the coronel's wine, lighted the coronel's
+cigar, leaned back in the coronel's chair, and eyed the coronel with
+imperturbable insolence.
+
+"See here, José," demanded McKay, "you've had something up your sleeve
+all along. Now come clean! What is it?"
+
+José puffed airily at the cigar, saying nothing.
+
+"What orders did Schwandorf give you?"
+
+This time the reply came readily enough.
+
+"To take you twenty-four days up the river and put you ashore. To
+prevent any trouble before that time."
+
+"Ah! And after that?"
+
+"Nothing. At least, nothing to me. What may have been said to the other
+men I do not know. Schwandorf came to me last, after he had picked all
+the others."
+
+"And what do you know about Schwandorf?"
+
+"What is between me and Schwandorf will be settled between me and
+Schwandorf. My duty to you señores lies only in handling the crew. Now
+that there is no crew my duty ends. Also, Capitan, I would like my pay
+now."
+
+"You quit?"
+
+"Why not? I have done my best. I can do no more. I am crippled. I am of
+no further use to you. Give me my pay, a little food, a small canoe, and
+I go."
+
+"It is possible, Senhor José," spoke the coronel, with ironic
+politeness, "that you may not go so soon. You have killed two men
+recently. You refuse to reveal some things which should be known about
+the German. Perhaps the law--"
+
+José burst into a jeering laugh.
+
+"Law? You speak of law? There is no law up the river but the law of the
+gun and the knife. And if there were, señor, what then? I killed in a
+fair fight. I killed men who would do murder. I killed on the west bank
+of the river--Peru. Neither you nor any other Brazilian can lay hand on
+me. And though I now have only one good arm, it will not be well for
+anyone to try to hold me. My knife and my right hand still are ready."
+
+"By cripes! the lad's right!" Tim blurted, impulsively. "And I'll tell
+the world I'm for him. He's got a right to keep his mouth shut if he
+wants to. He don't owe us nothin'. Mebbe he's got somethin' up his
+sleeve, at that; but he stuck with us in the pinch, and--"
+
+"And we'll give him a square deal, of course," Knowlton cut in. "José,
+your own wages to this point, at a dollar a day, are eighteen dollars.
+The wages of the five other men to the place where they--quit--would
+aggregate seventy-five dollars. Grand total, ninety-three. The others
+chose to take their pay in lead instead of gold, so their account is
+closed. Therefore I suggest that their pay go to you as _puntero_,
+_popero_, and good sport. What say, Rod?"
+
+"Make it a hundred flat," McKay agreed.
+
+"Right. A hundred in gold. Satisfy you, José?"
+
+"Indeed yes, señor. I did not expect such generosity."
+
+"That's all right, then. We'll fix you up before we move on, and--Say!
+Are you in Schwandorf's pay, too?"
+
+José hesitated. Then he replied:
+
+"Since you mention it, I will admit that _el Aleman_ offered me certain
+inducements to make this journey. I now see that he had no intention of
+meeting his promises. But you can leave it to me to collect from him
+whatever may be due."
+
+Even the coronel nodded at this. The gleam in the Peruvian's eyes
+presaged unpleasantness for Schwandorf.
+
+"You gentlemen, of course, will not attempt to continue your journey for
+the present," the coronel suggested. "You are fatigued and I shall
+greatly appreciate the pleasure of your companionship. New arrangements
+also will be necessary in the matter of a boat and men."
+
+"We've been wondering about getting another boat and a new crew,"
+Knowlton said, frankly. "The canoe we have is too big for three men to
+handle, and I'll admit we're tired. José, too, is in no shape to travel
+yet--"
+
+"José, of course, is my guest also," the old gentleman interrupted. "The
+question of new men can be solved. But there is time for everything, and
+now is the time for all of you to rest. As our proverb has it, '_Devagar
+se vae ao longe_'--he goes far who goes slowly."
+
+McKay arose, glass in hand.
+
+"To our host," he bowed. The toast was drunk standing. Whereafter the
+host tapped the bell twice and 'Tonio reappeared with a tray of fresh
+glasses. A toast to the United States by the coronel followed, and as
+soon as the black man arrived with a third round the Republic of Brazil
+was pledged. Then the coronel directed the servant:
+
+"'Tonio, if Pedro and Lourenço are outside, ask them to move the
+belongings of the gentlemen from the canoe. And make ready rooms for the
+guests."
+
+'Tonio disappeared down the ladder. The coronel raised the violin,
+tendered it to the others, accepted their pleas to play it himself, and
+for the next half hour acquitted himself with no mean ability. Snatches
+of long-forgotten operas and improvisations of his own flowed from the
+strings in smooth harmony, hinting at bygone years amid far different
+surroundings for which his soul now hungered and to which he would
+return. Pedro and Lourenço, transporting the equipment, passed in and
+out soft-footed and almost unnoticed. At length the player, with a
+deprecatory smile and a half apology for "boring his guests," extended
+the instrument again toward the visitors. And McKay, silent McKay, took
+it.
+
+Sweet and low, out welled the haunting melody of "Annie Laurie." Tim,
+who had listened with casual interest to the coronel's music, now
+grinned happily. And when the plaintive Scotch song became "Kathleen
+Mavourneen" he closed his eyes and lay back in pure enjoyment. "The
+River Shannon" flowed into "The Suwanee River," and this in turn blended
+into other heart-tugging airs of Dixieland. When the last strain died
+and the captain reached for his half-smoked cigar the room was silent
+for minutes.
+
+Then, to the astonishment of all, José spoke:
+
+"Señores, there was a time when I, too, could draw music from the
+violin. If I may--" His eyes rested longingly on the instrument.
+
+"_Certamente_, if you can use the arm," the coronel acquiesced. With a
+little difficulty José drew his arm from the sling, balanced his left
+elbow on the chair arm, and poised the violin. A half smile showed in
+the eyes of the coronel as he glanced at his guests. He, and they as
+well, expected a discordant, uncouth attempt to scrape out some obscene
+ditty of the frontier.
+
+But as José, after jockeying a bit, began drifting the bow across the
+strings, the suppressed smiles faded and eyes opened. Here was a man
+who, as he said, once could play. And he wasted no time on airs composed
+by others and known to half the world. Under his touch the mellow wood
+began to talk, and in the minds of the listeners grew pictures.
+
+City streets, blank-walled houses, patios, the rattle of the hoofs of
+burros over cobbles, the shuffle of human feet, the toll of bells from a
+convent tower. Gay little bits of music, laughter, flashing eyes, a
+voluptuous love song repeated over and over. A sudden wild outbreak,
+fighting men, shots, the clash of steel--again a tolling bell and a
+requiem for the dead. A horse galloping in the night. Mountain winds
+crooning mournfully, rising to the scream of tempest and the crash of
+thunder. Dreary uplands, the hiss of rain, the sough of drifting snow,
+the patient plod of a mule along a perilous trail. And then the jungle:
+its discordant uproar, its hammering of frogs, its hoots and howls, the
+dismal swash of flood waters. A monotonous ebb and flow of life,
+punctuated by sudden flares of fight. Then a long, mournful wail--and
+silence.
+
+His bow still on the strings, José sat for a minute like a stone image,
+his eyes straight ahead, his pale face drawn, his red kerchief glowing
+dully in the semishadow like a cap of blood. For once his face was empty
+of all insolence, changed by a pathetic wistfulness that made it tragic.
+Then, wordless, he lowered the violin, held it out to the coronel,
+fumbled absently at his sling, and slowly incased his wounded arm. When
+he looked up his old mocking expression had come back and he once more
+looked the reckless buccaneer.
+
+For a time no one spoke. Each felt that he had glimpsed something of
+this man's past; felt, too, that he who now was a bloody-handed borderer
+had once been a _caballero_, moving in a much higher circle. Certainly
+he could not play like this unless he had been of the upper class in his
+youth. The coronel's face was thoughtful as he took back the violin.
+When at length he began to talk, however, it was on a topic as remote as
+possible from music and present personalities--the reconstruction of
+Europe as the result of the World War.
+
+With this and kindred subjects, aided by the attentive ministrations of
+'Tonio, the afternoon passed swiftly. Dinner proved a feast, the _pièce
+de résistance_ being tender, well-cooked meat which the Americans took
+for roast beef, but which really was roast tapir. More cigars, coupled
+with the fatigue of the past two days of paddling, eventually caused the
+visitors to seek their rooms, where McKay and Knowlton paired off and
+Tim took José as his "bunkie."
+
+When Tim awoke the next morning he found himself deserted.
+
+To Knowlton, who drew from the small gold-chest the hundred dollars
+allotted to José and handed it to him before redressing his wound, the
+_puntero_ quietly revealed his intention to go before sunrise.
+
+"Say nothing, señor," he requested. "You need know nothing of it, if you
+like. I am here to-night--I am gone to-morrow--that is all. I am of no
+further use to you, I am unwelcome in this house of Nunes, and I go. Oh,
+have no fear for me! I have my gun, my knife, and my good right arm, and
+I can take care of myself very well. No doubt the coronel will be
+astonished to find that on leaving to-night I have neither cut anyone's
+throat nor stolen anything--ha! I have a black name on this river, and
+it is well earned, perhaps. Yet few men are as bad as those who dislike
+them think they are. I may borrow a small canoe, but any Indian would do
+the same. An unoccupied canoe is any man's property.
+
+"Before our ways part, señor, let me say that as José Martinez never
+forgets his enemies, so he never forgets friends. Where some men would
+have turned me loose like a sick dog with my eighteen dollars, you and
+Señor McKay give me a hundred. And far more than that, you saved my life
+at a time when many men would have said, 'Bah! let the bloody one die!
+He is nothing but scum of the border and leader of that murdering crew.'
+You had only to let me lie a few minutes longer and you would be rid of
+me. No, José does not forget.
+
+"That is all, except--if you will, in parting, take the hand of a man
+known as a killer and other things--"
+
+Knowlton gripped that hand with swift heartiness. He would have
+protested against such a departure, but the other's steady gaze
+betokened inflexible purpose. So he merely said:
+
+"Then good luck, old chap! And if you meet Schwandorf give him our
+affectionate regards."
+
+"_Si_, señor," was the sardonic answer. "I will do that thing. And here
+is something that may be of interest to you. I happen to know that
+before we left Remate de Males a swift one-man canoe left Nazareth, and
+that the man in it was an Indian who is in the German's control. It went
+upstream while we were loading your supplies, and it has not returned.
+By this time it must be many hours above this place. I do not know what
+message that Indian carries, nor where he goes. But he is a short man,
+and his left leg is crooked. If you meet such a one make him talk.
+Good-by, señor."
+
+Just how and when the _puntero_ cat-footed his way out that night none
+ever knew but himself. But before the next dawn he had vanished from the
+Brazilian shore.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+BY THE LIGHT OF STORM
+
+
+"One thing I can't understand," Knowlton said, toying with his coffee
+cup the next morning, "is why Schwandorf should double-cross us. We
+never did anything to him. Another thing I don't quite get is how he
+expected to have the Peruvians wiped out when he knew blamed well they
+were aware of the enmity of the cannibals. They'd hardly be likely to go
+into the bush with us under those circumstances."
+
+"My guess is this," McKay replied. "He set a trap. He is on a friendly
+footing with some of the savages above here, no doubt. He dispatched
+that Indian messenger to stir them up with some false tale and bring
+them to some place where they'd be pretty sure to get us. He primed the
+crew to jump us at the same place, perhaps. Then the crew would kill us
+or we'd kill them, and whichever side won would be smeared by the
+Indians. Sort of a trap within a trap. Why he did it doesn't matter
+much. He double-crossed us, he double-crossed the crew, he
+double-crossed José. First thing he knows he'll find he's double-crossed
+himself."
+
+"Yeah," Tim grunted. "He better beat it before we git back!"
+
+"He wanted no killing before we reached the cannibal country," McKay
+went on, "because then it would all be blamed on the savages and he
+could show clean hands. Francisco's vengefulness tipped over his cart."
+
+"Still, he might have known we'd stop here for a call on the coronel,
+and that there was a big chance for us to be warned here about the feud
+between Mayorunas and Peruvians."
+
+"That probably was provided for. Crew doubtless had orders to prevent
+any such visit, by lying to us or in other ways. We probably would have
+gone surging past here at top speed."
+
+"Wal, it don't git us nothin' to talk about things that 'ain't
+happened," interposed the practical Tim. "Question is, where do we go
+from here? And how?"
+
+All eyes went to the coronel, who sat languidly smoking his morning
+cigar.
+
+"Coronel, we are in your hands," McKay said, bluntly. "Your men, I
+presume, are all out at work in various parts of the bush. We want a
+crew and, if possible, guides. Can you help us?"
+
+The coronel flicked off an ash and spoke slowly:
+
+"I have two men, senhores, who have no peers as bushmen. They are the
+two whom you saw yesterday. Frankly, they are most valuable to me, and I
+hesitate about sending them on so dangerous a mission as yours. Yet they
+might succeed where most men would fail, for they have repeatedly gone
+into the bush on risky journeys and returned unharmed. Their adventures
+would fill books.
+
+"The older of these two, Lourenço Moraes, has been more than once among
+the cannibals of this region, and so he knows something of them.
+Naturally he did not live long among them; he left them as soon as he
+could. But he has the faculty of extricating himself from hopeless
+positions--or perhaps it would be better to say that his cool head and
+good fortune together have preserved him thus far. '_Tanta vez vae o
+cantaro a fonte ate gue um dia la fica_'--the pitcher may go often to
+the spring, but some day it remains there.
+
+"Pedro Andrada, the younger, is not so steady and cool-headed as
+Lourenço. Yet he is a most capable man, and the two together--they are
+always together--make a very efficient team."
+
+"I bet they do," Tim concurred, heartily. "I like that Pedro lad fine."
+
+"So do I," the coronel smiled. "Now, gentlemen, I will not order these
+men to go with you. If they go it must be of their own choice. They have
+only recently returned from a hazardous mission and they are entitled to
+rest. Yet I have little doubt that they will jump at the chance to risk
+their lives in a new venture. If they choose to go, I suggest that you
+place yourselves entirely in their hands and give them free rein. You
+would look far for better men."
+
+"And we're lucky to get them," Knowlton acquiesced. "To them and to you
+we shall be greatly indebted."
+
+"Not to me, senhor," the coronel demurred "I do nothing but bring you
+men together. Theirs is the risk. 'Tonio! Find Pedro and Lourenço. Shall
+we go into the office, gentlemen?"
+
+Chairs scraped back and an exodus from the dining room ensued. Outside,
+the lusty voice of the negro bawled. Soon he was back, and at his heels
+strode the lithe Pedro and the quiet Lourenço. They ran their eyes over
+the group, then stood looking inquiringly at their employer.
+
+"Be seated, men. Roll cigarettes if you like," said the coronel. Coolly
+they did both. Pedro, catching Tim's friendly grin, flashed a quick
+smile in return. Lourenço, unsmiling, looked squarely into each man's
+face in turn and seemed satisfied with what he saw. Both then glanced
+around as if missing some one.
+
+"Your friend José has left us," the coronel informed them, dryly,
+interpreting the look. "He disappeared in the night."
+
+"Ah! That is why one of our canoes is gone," said Pedro. "We are ready
+to start."
+
+"You mistake," the old gentleman laughed. "We do not want him back.
+Nothing else is missing."
+
+Whereat Pedro looked slightly surprised. Lourenço's lips curved in a
+faint grin. Neither made any further comment.
+
+The coronel plunged at once into the business for which they had been
+summoned. Succinctly he stated the purpose of the North Americans in
+coming here, pointed out their need of guides--and stopped there. He
+said nothing of the dangers ahead, mentioned no reward, did not even ask
+the men whether they would go. He merely lit a fresh cigar and leaned
+back in his chair.
+
+A silence followed. Again Lourenço looked searchingly into the face of
+each American. Pedro contemplated the opposite wall, taking occasional
+puffs from his cigarette. At length Knowlton suggested, tentatively:
+
+"We will pay well--"
+
+Both the bushmen frowned. The coronel spoke in a tone of mild reproof:
+
+"Senhor, it is not a matter of pay. These men can make plenty of money
+as _seringueiros_."
+
+"Pardon," said Knowlton, and thereafter held his tongue.
+
+Deliberately Lourenço finished his smoke, pinched the coal between a
+hard thumb and forefinger, and spoke for the first time.
+
+"May I ask, senhor, if you are the commander?" His gaze rested on McKay.
+
+"I am."
+
+"And do I understand that we shall at all times be subject to your
+orders?"
+
+"In case any orders are necessary--yes. But I assume that you will not
+need commands."
+
+A quiet smile showed in the bushman's eyes. He glanced at Pedro. The
+latter met the look from the corner of his eye, without wink, nod, or
+other sign. But when Lourenço turned again to McKay he spoke as if all
+were arranged.
+
+"When do we start, Capitao?"
+
+Tim slapped his leg and cackled.
+
+"By cripes! there ain't no lost motion with these guys. Hey, Cap?"
+
+McKay smiled approvingly.
+
+"We shall get on together" he said. "Lourenço and Pedro, this is not a
+one-man party. We are three comrades, who now become five. If at any
+time one man needs to command, I, as senior officer, will take that
+command. Otherwise we are all on an equal footing."
+
+"Just so," Lourenço agreed. "If it were otherwise you would still be
+three men--not five. Since that is plain, let me say frankly that your
+big canoe had best stay here, also everything you do not need in the
+bush. Two light canoes are faster, easier to handle and to hide. Pedro
+and I have our own canoe and will provide our own supplies. We will pick
+out a three-man boat for you and load it with what you select from your
+equipment. After that every man swings his own paddle."
+
+"_Cada qual por si e Deus por todos._ Each for himself and God for us
+all," Pedro summarized.
+
+"That's the dope," applauded Tim. "Now say, Renzo, old feller, what d'ye
+know about these here, now, Red Bones up above here? And have ye got
+anything on that Raposy guy?"
+
+Lourenço shook his head.
+
+"I know little of the Red Bone people, for I have never met them. That
+is one reason why I now should like to meet them. I have heard of them,
+yes; and the things I have heard are not pleasant. Yet it may be that
+the tales are worse than the people. I have also heard terrible stories
+of the light-skinned cannibals, the Mayorunas; yet I have been among the
+cannibals and found them not so bad--though it is true that they eat the
+flesh of their enemies; I have seen it done. But it makes a very great
+difference how they are approached and who the men are who approach
+them. It is possible that we may go unharmed among even _los Ossos
+Vermelhos_--the Red Bones. We shall see.
+
+"Of the Raposa I think I do know something. I have seen him."
+
+Everyone except Pedro sat up with a start.
+
+"You have seen him?" exclaimed the coronel. "When? Where? How? Why have
+you not spoken of it?"
+
+"Because, Coronel, I forgot it until now. It meant nothing to us--yes,
+Pedro was with me--except that it was one more queer thing in the bush.
+In time I might have remembered it and told you. But you know we have
+been busy."
+
+"True. But go on."
+
+"It was only a little time ago. We were returning from the scouting trip
+on which you sent us to locate new rubber trees. We were
+seven--eight--seven--"
+
+"Eight days' journey from here," prompted Pedro.
+
+"_Si._ We were in our canoe when a sudden storm broke and we got
+ashore to wait until it was over. The place was on an _ygarapé_--a
+creek--about two days away from the river. The trees were large and the
+ground free from bush. In a flash of lightning we saw a man peering out
+at us from a hollow tree.
+
+"He was naked and streaked with paint--that was all we saw in the
+flashes that came and went. The rain was heavy, and we stayed where we
+were until it ended. Then we ordered that man to come out.
+
+"He came, and he held bow and arrow ready to shoot. We, too, were ready
+to shoot, but we held back our bullets and he held back his arrow. We
+saw that his paint was red and that it traced his bones; that his skin
+was that of a tanned white man and his hair was dark with a white streak
+over one ear. No, we did not notice the color of his eyes--the light was
+not good and he stood well away from us.
+
+"We looked around for other men, but saw none. We asked him who he was
+and what he wanted, but he gave no answer. He looked at us for a long
+time, and we at him. Then he began walking away sidewise, watching us
+steadily, holding his arrow always ready. Finally he disappeared among
+the trees and we saw him no more. But we heard him, senhores; twice
+before we lost sight of him he spoke out in a queer voice like that of a
+parrot. And the thing he said was, 'Poor Davey!'"
+
+McKay thumped a fist on his chair.
+
+"Davey! David Rand!"
+
+"Perhaps so, Capitao. I do not know. But he spoke English."
+
+"By thunder! David Rand! Merry, where's that picture?"
+
+Knowlton was already unbuttoning his pocket flap. Quickly he produced
+the photograph.
+
+"That the fellow?"
+
+Lourenço studied the face. The eagerly anticipated affirmative did not
+come.
+
+"I cannot say surely. This is a full-faced, clean-shaven man with hair
+close trimmed. That one's face was gaunt, covered partly with beard and
+partly by long hair, and we were not close to him, as I have said. I
+would not say the two were the same until I could have a better look at
+the wild man."
+
+"You didn't follow him?"
+
+"No. Why should we? He had done nothing to us and we let him go his way.
+We did look at his hollow tree, though. But it was only an empty tree,
+not his home; a place where he had stepped in out of the storm. We had
+other things to do, so we got into our canoe again and paddled off."
+
+"You can find the place again?"
+
+"Yes. But I much doubt if we shall find him there."
+
+"Never mind. We've something to start with now, and that's worth a lot.
+Get busy with your boats and supplies, boys, right away. Tim and Merry,
+let's dig out our essentials and start. We're on a hot trail at last.
+Let's go!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+OUT OF THE AIR
+
+
+Again the sun fought the mists of a new day, casting a pallid, watery
+light on the livid green roof of the limitless jungle. High up under
+that roof, more than a hundred feet above the ground, the morning alarm
+clock went off with a scream, the sudden chorus of monkeys and macaws
+awaking after a few hours of silence. Down on the eastern shore of the
+river, in a little natural port where the shadows still lay thick, men
+stirred under their black mosquito nets, yawned, and waited for more
+light before starting another day's journey.
+
+To three of the five men housed under those flimsy coverings the somber
+hue of their nets was new. On leaving Remate de Males the insect bars
+had been clean white; and though they had grown somewhat soiled from
+daily handling, they never had approached the drab dinginess of the
+barriers draping the hammocks of the Peruvian rivermen. In fact, their
+owners had been at some pains to keep them as clean as possible, folding
+them each morning with military precision and stowing them carefully.
+Wherefore they were somewhat taken aback when informed that nice white
+nets were decidedly not the thing in this part of the world.
+
+"Up to this place, senhores, they have done no harm," Pedro said, before
+leaving the coronel's grounds. "But from here on they will not do at
+all. The weakest moonlight--yes, even starlight--would make them stand
+out in the darkness like tombstones. A few days more and we shall be in
+the cannibal country. And it is an old trick of those eaters of men to
+skulk along the shore by night, watching a camp until all are asleep,
+and then sneak up with spears ready. A rush and a swift stab of the
+spears into those white nets, and you are dead or dying from the
+poisoned points. I would no more sleep under a white net than I would
+lie in my hammock and blow a horn to show where I was. Your light nets
+must stay here. We will find dark ones for you."
+
+Thus the voyagers learned another of those little things on which
+sometimes hinges life or death. Even McKay, with his experience of other
+jungles, had never thought it necessary to drape himself in invisibility
+at night. But when his attention was called to it he recognized its
+value at once, and the white nets were forthwith abandoned.
+
+Now, on the first morning out from the Nunes place, the three Americans
+stretched themselves in lazy enjoyment after a night passed without a
+sentinel. The stretching evoked sundry grunts due to the discovery that
+their muscles still were lame. The long steamer journey from their own
+land, followed by the daily confinement of the Peruvian canoe, had
+afforded scant opportunity for keeping themselves fit, and the sudden
+necessity for doing their own paddling had found every man soft. But
+they now were hardening fast, and the steady swing of the paddles was
+proving a physical joy. These were men ill accustomed to sitting in
+enforced idleness for weeks on end.
+
+Matches flared under the nets and cigarette smoke drifted into the air,
+rousing to fresh activity the mosquitoes humming hungrily outside.
+Gradually the shadows paled and the weak light reflecting from the
+fog-shrouded water beyond grew into day. The nets lifted and the
+bloodthirsty insects swooped in vicious triumph on the emerging men. But
+again matches blazed, flame licked up among kindlings, a fire grew, and
+in its smoke screen the voyagers found some surcease from the bug
+hordes. Soon the fragrance of coffee floated into the air.
+
+Tim yawned, coughed explosively, and swore.
+
+"Fellers can't even take a gape for himself without gittin' these cussed
+bugs down his throat," he complained, and coughed again. "Gimme some
+coffee! I got one skeeter the size of a devil's darnin' needle stuck in
+me windpipe."
+
+"A devil's darning needle? What is that, Senhor Tim?" inquired Pedro,
+passing him a cup of hot coffee. When the liquid--and the "skeeter"--had
+passed into Tim's stomach he enlightened the inquirer.
+
+"Ye dunno what's a devil's darnin' needle? Gosh! I'm s'prised at ye. I
+seen lots of 'em right on this here river. He's a bug about so long"--he
+stuck out a finger--"and he's got jaws like a crab and a long limber
+tail a with reg'lar needle in the end, and inside him is a roll o' tough
+silk--tough as spider web. And he's death on liars. Any time a feller
+tells a lie he's got to look out, or all to oncet one o' them bugs'll
+come scootin' at him and grab him by the nose with them jaws. Then he'll
+curl up his tail--the bug, I mean--and run his needle and thread right
+through the feller's lips and sew his mouth up tight. Then he flies off
+lookin' for another liar."
+
+"_Por Deus!_ And the liar starves to death?"
+
+"Wal, no. O' course he can git somebody to cut the stitches. But the
+needle is a good thick one and it leaves a row o' holes all along the
+feller's lips. Any time ye see a guy with li'l' round scars around his
+mouth, Pedro, ye'll know he's such an awful liar the devil bug got him."
+
+McKay coughed. Knowlton blew his nose into a big handkerchief. Lourenço
+squinted sidewise at Tim, who was solemn as an owl. Pedro, his eyes
+twinkling, bent forward and scrutinized Tim's mouth.
+
+"You have been fortunate, senhor," he said, simply--and stepped around
+to the other side of the fire.
+
+"Huh? Say, lookit here, ye long-legged gorilla--"
+
+Knowlton exploded. McKay and Lourenço snickered.
+
+"It's on you, Tim!" vociferated Knowlton. "You dug the hole yourself.
+Now crawl in and pull it in after you."
+
+Tim snorted wrathfully, but his eyes laughed.
+
+"Aw, what's the use o' trying to educate you guys?"
+
+"You swallowed a mosquito just now, but I cannot swallow that devil
+bug," Pedro grinned.
+
+Tim rumbled something, solaced himself with a cigarette, then squatted
+and joined the others in their frugal breakfast of coffee and
+_chibeh_--a handful of farinha mixed with water in a gourd. When it was
+finished McKay, who never smoked in the morning until he had eaten,
+filled a pipe and suggested:
+
+"Guess we'd better plan our campaign. We didn't take time yesterday. In
+case we find no trace of the Raposa at the place where you fellows saw
+him, what's your idea?"
+
+Lourenço, puffing thoughtfully, stared into the fire.
+
+"There will be time enough to decide that, Capitao, after we have
+visited that place," he said, slowly. "Still, perhaps it is best to make
+some plan; it can be changed at any time."
+
+For a moment longer he looked at the dying flame. Then, dropping his
+cigarette stub into it, he continued:
+
+"If I were going alone to find a man among the Red Bones, I should go
+first to the Mayorunas and work through them to make sure of a friendly
+reception by the other people. I would--"
+
+"Why, that's the very thing Schwandorf suggested!"
+
+"Yes? I have not heard what he said. Tell me."
+
+McKay did so. Lourenço smiled.
+
+"Sometimes, Capitao, the devil puts into the hands of men a weapon which
+is turned against himself. So it is now. That _Allemao_, Schwandorf,
+never expected you to reach the people you seek, but the plan is good.
+It would not be good if you followed it exactly as he laid it out, but
+things have changed; and what you could not do with Peruvian companions,
+or alone, you perhaps can do with us. I will show you.
+
+"It happens that I have been twice among the cannibals living in a
+certain _maloca_ which I can find again. Perhaps you know that those
+people live in scattered _malocas_, each ruled by its own chief--"
+
+"Yes, we know about that."
+
+"Good. Now if we went to any _maloca_ where we were not known we might
+be killed at once. But at that _maloca_ of which I speak I am known to
+the chief and all his fighting men, for I once led them on a raid into
+Peru. So they will remember me--"
+
+"What's that?" Knowlton interrupted, in amazement. "You led a cannibal
+tribe on the warpath?"
+
+"Just so, senhor. It is a long story, but these are the facts:
+
+"There was in Peru a gang of killers, robbers--and worse--who called
+themselves the Peccaries. They raided one of the coronel's camps where I
+was in charge, killed all my gang except myself and one other, and used
+us two as slaves and beasts of burden.
+
+"The other man died from poison. I lived only to revenge myself on those
+foul outlaws. There was much rubber of the coronel's, worth much money
+at that time, in the camp they had raided. So, after driving me like a
+beast to their stronghold in the hills of Peru, they came back with
+boats and Indian porters to get out that rubber.
+
+"On that return journey I tried to kill the leader, who was called El
+Amarillo--yellow-skinned. I failed, and he had me nailed with long
+thorns to a tree where I might hang in torment for days, dying slowly.
+See. Here are the marks."
+
+All three of the Americans had noticed on the previous day that each of
+Lourenço's hands was disfigured by a scar which looked as if a spike had
+been driven through. Now he held those hands forward for their
+inspection. Then he pulled off his loose shirt and rolled up his
+trousers. They saw other scars in the big muscles before the armpits, in
+the soft flesh under the ribs, in the thighs and calves.
+
+"The dirty Hun!" Tim grated.
+
+"That was not all, Senhor Tim. They also put fire ants on me, which bit
+so cruelly that I nearly lost my mind from pain. Then they went on,
+intending to have more sport with me when they came back with the
+rubber. But after they left me two hunters of the cannibal tribe who had
+been following a tapir's track found me and took me down from the tree.
+
+"Now the Peccaries before this had stolen some women from a Mayoruna
+_maloca_ and were treating them like dogs--I saw one of those women
+brutally murdered while I was captive in the outlaw camp. I managed to
+tell the two hunters I could lead them to the Peccary stronghold and
+give them revenge. They carried me to their _maloca_--I could not
+walk--and told their chief what I had said. The chief caused my hurts to
+be cured, and then I kept my promise.
+
+"I guided the savages to the outlaw camp; they surrounded it, and in the
+fight that followed every Peccary was killed except their leader. Now
+that cannibal chief has not forgotten me--"
+
+"Wait a minute," protested Knowlton. "Did that Peccary leader escape?"
+
+"No. He was kept alive until a big herd of peccaries was met. Then,
+because he called himself 'King of the Peccaries,' he was nailed to a
+tree, as I had been, and told to make the peccaries take out the thorns.
+The wild pigs tore him into ribbons with their tusks."
+
+Calmly he donned his shirt again. Tim, staring at him, twitched his
+shoulders as if a chill had gone down his back.
+
+"Ugh!" muttered Knowlton.
+
+"So now," Lourenço resumed, "if I can find that chief again--he may have
+been killed in some tribal fight before now--he may be friendly to all
+of us. Or he may not. Savages cannot be relied on with much certainty.
+But if any of the Mayorunas will help us, he will. It is worth trying."
+
+"And if he is not friendly--" Knowlton paused.
+
+"We do not come back," Pedro finished. "Have you a better plan?"
+
+All shook their heads.
+
+"Laurenco's idea is excellent," said McKay. "I was thinking along the
+same line, though I did not know he had any such friendly relations with
+a chief. That makes it all the more advisable to try it, unless we find
+the Raposa first. We, of course, will not land at the place where
+Schwandorf told us to go ashore, seven days from here."
+
+"By no means," Lourenço concurred. "In five days we leave the river and
+travel along the _ygarapé_. If we go to the _maloca_ it will be from
+another direction than the river."
+
+He began preparing to travel. The others also went about the work of
+breaking camp. By the time the canoes were loaded the mists had lifted
+and the river lay open and empty before them. In the bush around and
+beyond, gloom still lay thick and the forest life yelped, howled,
+clattered, and wailed. But out on the water it was broad day, and far
+overhead sounded the harsh cries of unseen parrots flying two by two in
+the sunlight above the matted branches. The world of the pathless tropic
+wilderness, ever dying, ever living, was about its daily business. The
+five invaders were about theirs.
+
+As the paddlers dipped, however, Knowlton held back.
+
+"Say, Rod, we didn't tell these fellows about Schwandorf's Indian. Hold
+up a second, men."
+
+While all rested on their paddles he spoke of the mysterious messenger
+dispatched from Nazareth. Pedro and Lourenço contemplated the river,
+then frowned.
+
+"That may be of importance, senhores," said Lourenço. "It may change
+everything for us. We saw a lone Indian go past the coronel's place,
+traveling fast, three days before you came. I would give much to know
+where he is now and what word he carries. A short man with a bad left
+leg, you say. We shall keep watch for such a man. Perhaps we may meet
+him."
+
+Wherein he predicted more accurately than he knew.
+
+The canoes swung out and the paddlers settled into the steady stroke to
+which they were growing accustomed. Hour after hour they forged on, the
+Brazilians adjusting their speed to that of the Americans, who had not
+yet attained the muscular ease of habitual canoemen. The miles flowed
+slowly but surely behind them, the sun rolled higher and hotter, the
+silence of approaching noon crept over the jungle on either side. Then,
+as the time drew near when they would land for a more hearty meal than
+that of the morning, Pedro pointed ahead.
+
+Up out of the bush on the Peruvian shore rose a vulture. It flapped
+sullenly away as if disappointed. The bushmen, quick to note anything
+that might be a sign, paid no attention to the bird's flight, but marked
+with unerring eye the spot whence it had taken wing.
+
+"Let us cross, comrades, and see what we may see," Pedro called. "If
+nothing is there, we can eat."
+
+But something was there. All saw it before they landed--the stern of a
+small, speedy canoe almost concealed in a narrow rift at the bottom of
+the bank. In the soil of the rising slope were the prints of bare feet.
+And Pedro, scanning the tracks narrowly after he and the others reached
+shore, asserted, "These were not made to-day."
+
+Up the bank they climbed, silent and watchful. At the top Lourenço took
+the lead. In under big trees the five passed in file. A short distance
+from the edge Lourenço stopped, looking at the ground. The others spread
+out and stared at the thing he had found.
+
+Between the buttress roots of a tall tree was a crude shelter of palm
+leaves. Before this lay the scattered bones of a man. The skull had been
+crushed by a mighty blow.
+
+The bones were picked clean--had been stripped and torn asunder days
+before, and the vulture which had just left had gotten nothing for its
+belated visit. Among them were remnants of cloth, a belt and a machete,
+and strands of coarse black hair. A few feet away lay a cheap "trade"
+gun. Lourenço inspected the weapon and laid it back.
+
+"Did he shoot before he was downed?" asked Knowlton.
+
+"No. The gun is loaded. His death came from above." The bushman ran his
+eye up the towering tree, then pointed to a large dark object on the
+ground near by.
+
+"Castanha--Brazil-nut tree," he explained. "That heavy nut fell and
+smashed the Indian's skull like an egg. Indian, yes. His gun, his
+shelter, and his hair show that. And"--stooping and pointing at one of
+the bones--"that bone shows who he was. See, Capitao."
+
+McKay looked down on a leg bone. At some time the leg had been broken
+and badly set, if set at all. The bone was crooked.
+
+"A short Indian with a crooked leg. Schwandorf's messenger!"
+
+"_Si._ No man will ever receive the message he bore. He camped here days
+ago. Now he camps here forever."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE ARROW
+
+
+Slowly, silently, two canoes glided along the still, dark water of a
+gloomy creek over-arched by the interlaced limbs of lofty trees.
+
+The first, propelled by the slow-dipping blades of two Brazilian
+bushmen, seemed to be seeking something; for it nosed along with
+frequent pauses of the paddles, during which it drifted almost to a stop
+while its crew searched the solemn jungle depths reaching away from the
+right-hand shore. The second, carrying three bronzed and bearded men of
+another continent, was only trailing the leader. It moved and paused
+like the first, but the recurrent scrutiny of the farther gloom by its
+paddlers was that of men who saw only a meaningless, monotonous bulk of
+buttresses and trunks and tangle of looping lianas. In this dimness and
+bewildering chaos the trio might as well have been blind. The eyes of
+the tiny fleet were in the first boat.
+
+The progress of the dugouts was almost stealthy. Not a paddle thumped or
+splashed, not a voice spoke. They moved with the alert caution born not
+of fear, but of wary readiness for any sudden event--like prowling
+jungle creatures which, themselves seeking quarry, must be ever on guard
+lest they become the hunted instead of the hunters.
+
+For the past two days they had moved thus. The last fresh meat had been
+shot miles down the river, where a well-placed bullet from the rifle of
+McKay had downed a fat swamp deer. Since that day not a gun had been
+fired. The rations now were tough jerked beef and monkey meat, slabs of
+salt pirarucu fish, and farinha, varied by tinned delicacies from the
+stores of the Americans. Henceforth gunfire was taboo unless it should
+become necessary in self-defense.
+
+At length the fore canoe halted with an abruptness that told of back
+strokes of the blades hidden under water. McKay, bowman of the trailing
+craft, also backed water, while his mates held their paddles rigid. The
+two boats drifted together.
+
+"This is the place," Lourenço said, speaking low.
+
+The Americans, scanning the shore, saw nothing to differentiate the spot
+from the rest of the wilderness growth. Yet Lourenço's tone was sure.
+Pedro's face also showed recognition of his surroundings. With no
+apparent motion of the paddles--though the wrists of the paddlers moved
+almost imperceptibly--the canoe of the bushmen floated to the bank. They
+picked up their rifles, twitched their bow up on land, and turned their
+faces to the forest.
+
+"Stay here," was Pedro's subdued command, "until you hear the bird-call
+which we taught you down the river."
+
+He and Lourenço faded into the dimness and were gone.
+
+"Beats me how them guys find their way 'round," muttered Tim. "I could
+land here twenty times hand-runnin', but if I went away and then come
+back I'd never know the place."
+
+"It's all in the feel of it," was McKay's low-toned explanation. "They
+find places and travel the bush as an Indian does--by a sixth sense.
+Take them to New York City, guide them around, then turn them loose--and
+they'd be hopelessly lost in ten minutes."
+
+The others nodded agreement and sat watching. In the shadows no creature
+moved. Afar off some bird cried mournfully like a lost soul condemned to
+wander forever alone in the grim green solitudes. No other sound came to
+the listeners save the ever-present hum of the big forest mosquitoes, to
+which they now had become indifferent. For all they could see or hear of
+their two guides, they might as well have been alone. Yet they knew the
+Brazilians were not far away, threading the maze with sure step and
+scouting hawk-eyed for any sign of danger.
+
+At length a long soft whistle sounded in the bush ahead. Any Indian
+hunter hearing that sound would straightway have begun scanning the high
+branches, for the liquid call was that of the mutum, or curassow turkey.
+But the waiting trio knew it for Pedro's signal that all was clear. At
+once they slid their canoe to shore, lifted its bow to a firm grip on
+the clay, and, after plumbing the shadows, quietly advanced in squad
+column.
+
+A few steps, and they halted suddenly and whirled. A voice had spoken
+just behind them. There, squatting leisurely between the root buttresses
+of a huge tree, Lourenço looked up at them in amusement. They had passed
+within rifle length of him without seeing him.
+
+"Of what use are your eyes, comrades?" he chaffed. "In the bush one
+should see in all directions at once. You were looking at that patch of
+sunlight just ahead, yes? But danger lurks in the shadows, not in the
+glaring light."
+
+Without awaiting an answer, he arose and took the lead. At the edge of
+the small sunlit space beyond he halted.
+
+"You were heading for the right place," he added then. "Look around. Do
+you see anything?"
+
+Swiftly they scrutinized the gap left by the fall of a great tree whose
+gigantic trunk had bludgeoned weaker trees away in its crushing descent.
+Seeing nothing unusual, they then peered around them. Tim suddenly
+snapped up his rifle.
+
+"Holler tree there--and a man in it! Hey! come out o' there!"
+
+"Your eyes improve," Lourenço complimented. "But the man is Pedro."
+
+Tim lowered the gun as Pedro, grinning, came out of his concealment.
+
+"That is the tree of the Raposa," Lourenço went on. "The lightning
+flashing in from above showed us the man. But now, senhores, I think we
+must tramp the bush for some time before we find that Raposa again.
+There is no trace of him here."
+
+"Hm!" said Knowlton. Striding to the hollow tree, he peered about inside
+it. The cavity was almost big enough to sling a hammock in, but it was
+empty of any indication of habitation, human or otherwise. A temporary
+refuge--that was all.
+
+"No sign anywhere around here, eh?" queried McKay.
+
+"We have found none. We shall look farther, but I have small hope. If
+you senhores will make the camp this time we shall start at once and
+stay out until dark. Build no fire until we return. And if you hear the
+call of the mutum, pay no attention to it; we may use it to locate each
+other if we separate, and also perhaps as a decoy. Any wild man, red or
+white, hearing that call would seek the bird making it, for a fine fat
+mutum is well worth killing. Keep quiet and be on guard."
+
+"Right. Go ahead."
+
+The bushmen turned at once and stole away. The others returned to the
+canoes, transported the necessary duffle to the base of the hollow tree,
+made camp with a few poles, and squatted against the trunk to smoke,
+watch, and wait. Several times they heard mutum calls receding in the
+distance. Then came silence.
+
+The sun-thrown shadows in the gap crawled steadily eastward. Knowlton
+tested the feed of his automatic, which, since its balkiness in the
+fight with the Peruvians, he had kept carefully oiled and free from the
+slightest speck of rust. Tim arose at intervals and paced up and down in
+sentry go, eyes and ears alert--a useless activity, but one which
+provided an outlet for his restless energy. McKay let his gaze rove over
+the small area visible from their post, studying the contours of the
+towering trunks, the prone giant whose fall had opened the hole in the
+leafy roof, the parasitical vines twined about other trees, the thin,
+outflung buttresses supporting the mighty columns--all familiar sights
+to him, but the only things to occupy his vision. So limned on his brain
+did the scene become that after a time he could close his eyes and see
+it in every important detail.
+
+It might have been two hours after Pedro and Lourenço had departed--the
+shadows had grown much longer--when over McKay stole the feeling that he
+was being watched. He glanced at his companions and found that neither
+of them was looking at him. Knowlton, sitting with hands clasped around
+updrawn knees, was dozing. Tim, though wide awake, was staring absently
+at a fungus. The captain's eyes searched the short vistas all about,
+spying nothing new. Still the feeling persisted. Then all at once his
+roaming gaze stopped, became fixed on a point some forty feet away.
+
+There rose a rough-barked red-brown tree, and from it, near the ground,
+projected a blackish bole. McKay was very sure the protuberance had not
+been there before. He had stared steadily at that tree more than once,
+and its shape was quite clear in his mind. Was that bump an insensate
+wood growth now revealed for the first time by the changing sun slant,
+or--
+
+For minutes he watched it. It did not move. Then Tim, restless again,
+rose directly in McKay's line of sight, yawned silently, swung his gun
+to his shoulder, and began another slow parade of his self-appointed
+post. When he had stepped aside McKay looked again for the puzzling
+bole.
+
+It was gone.
+
+With a bound the captain was up and dashing toward the tree, drawing his
+pistol as he ran. But within three strides he went down. A tough vine,
+unnoticed on the ground, looped snakily around one ankle and threw him
+hard. His gun flew from his hand. As he fell a tiny whispering sound
+flitted past, followed by a small blow somewhere behind him. Ensued a
+gruff grunt from Tim and the swift clatter of a breech bolt.
+
+Raging, McKay kicked his foot loose and heaved himself up. Empty handed,
+he continued his rush for the tree. But when he reached it he found
+nothing behind it. If anything had been there it now was gone, and the
+vacant shadows beyond were as inscrutable as ever.
+
+Feet padded behind him and Tim and Knowlton halted on either side. A
+moment of silent searching, and Tim broke into reproach.
+
+"Cap, don't never do that again! If ye take a tumble in my line o' fire,
+for the love o' Mike stay down till I shoot! I come so near drillin' ye
+when ye hopped up that I'm sweatin' blood right now."
+
+In truth, the veteran was pale around the mouth and his broad face was
+beaded with cold drops.
+
+"I seen more 'n one time in France when I felt like shootin' my s'perior
+officer, but I never come so near doin' it as jest now. I had finger to
+trigger and had took up the slack, and a hair's weight more pull would
+have spattered yer head all around. And besides givin' me heart failure
+ye let that guy git away. We'll never find him--"
+
+"You saw him?" McKay cut in.
+
+"I seen somethin' beyond ye--couldn't make out what 'twas, but from the
+way ye was goin' over the top I knowed it must be a man. And then when
+the arrer come--"
+
+"Arrow?"
+
+"Sure. Missed ye when ye took that flop, and stuck in the tree over
+yonder. What'd ye rush the guy for, anyways? Whyn't ye drill him from
+where ye was?"
+
+In the reaction from his sudden fright Tim was as wrathfully ready to
+"bawl out" his captain as if he were some raw rookie. McKay, with a cool
+smile, explained his abrupt action, meanwhile reconnoitering the dimness
+for any further sign of the vanished assailant. None showed.
+
+While Tim stood vigilant guard the other two stooped and moved around
+the base of the tree, narrowly examining the ground. Beyond it they
+paused at one spot, fingered the soil lightly, and lit a match or two.
+
+"No ghost," said Knowlton. "Barefoot man. Didn't leave much trace, but
+enough to show he was here. Let's look at that arrow."
+
+Back to the hollow tree they went, retrieving McKay's pistol on the way.
+About a yard above the earth a long shaft projected from the bark.
+Knowlton reached for it, but McKay held him back and drew it out.
+
+"M-hm! Thought so!" he muttered. "Poisoned."
+
+"Oof! Nice, gentle sort of a cuss," rumbled Tim. "That smear on the
+point--is that poison?"
+
+"Poison. Quickest and deadliest kind of poison. Mixes instantly with
+blood. Paralysis--convulsions--death. The least scratch and you're gone.
+Wicked head on this thing, too: looks like a piece of serrated bone. See
+all those little barbs along the edges? War arrow, all right."
+
+"Meanin' that we'll be jumped pretty soon by more Injuns. If that guy's
+on the warpath he ain't alone."
+
+"Wouldn't be a bad idea to take cover," nodded McKay. Turning the
+five-foot shaft downward, he plunged its head into the soft ground and
+left it sticking there, harmless.
+
+"Tim, go down and guard the canoes. Merry, lie in between these roots
+and keep watch off that way. I'll go over to that tree where the spy
+hid."
+
+For another hour the camp was silent. Each in his covert, finger on
+trigger, the trio watched with ceaseless vigilance, expecting each
+instant to detect dusky forms crawling up from tree to tree. Yet nothing
+of the sort came. Nor did any hostile sound reach them. Somewhere
+parrots squawked, somewhere else the puppylike yapping of toucans
+disturbed the solitude; nothing else.
+
+The wan light faded. The sun crawled up the trees, leaving all the
+ground in shadow. Then, not far off, sounded the soft whistle of the
+mutum. Suspicious, the watchers held their places until, with another
+whistle, Pedro came into view, followed by Lourenço.
+
+McKay arose, met them, and briefly explained the situation. They nodded,
+but seemed undisturbed.
+
+"We can start a fire now, Capitao," Lourenço said. "Night comes and we
+are hungry. There will be no danger before another dawn."
+
+With which he leaned his rifle against a tree and started immediate
+preparations for a meal. Pedro continued on to the canoes, made sure
+they were drawn up high enough to remain in place in case of any sudden
+rain, and returned with Tim. Around them now resounded the swiftly
+rising roar of the nightly outbreak of animal life. The sun vanished. At
+once blackness whelmed all except the little fire.
+
+"See anything while you were out?" asked McKay.
+
+"We found no trace of the Raposa," Lourenço evaded.
+
+"What do you plan to do now?"
+
+"Eat--smoke--talk--sleep."
+
+McKay eyed the bushman keenly, feeling that he was holding something
+back. But, feeling also that this pair knew what they were about, he
+bided his time. When all had eaten and tobacco smoke was blending with
+that of the burning wood, Lourenço drew the arrow from the ground and
+studied it. Then he passed it to Pedro, who, after a critical
+examination, held it in the blaze until the deadly head was burned away.
+
+"A big-game arrow of the cannibal Mayorunas," said Lourenço. "The point,
+with its sawtooth barbs, is made from the tail bone of the araya, the
+flat devilfish of the swamp lakes. That fish, as you perhaps know, has a
+whiplike tail armed with that bone; and if he strikes the bone into your
+flesh it breaks off and stays in the wound, and you are likely to die."
+
+"But in that case death comes from gangrene," McKay remarked. "This
+point has been dipped in wurali poison."
+
+"You have seen such arrows before, Capitao?"
+
+"Seen the poison before, yes. Over in British Guiana. The Macusi Indians
+make it from the wurali vine, some bitter root or other, a couple of
+bulbous plants, two kinds of ants--one big and black with a venomous
+bite, the other small and red--a lot of pepper, and the pounded fangs of
+labarri and couanacouchi snakes. They boil all this stuff down to a
+thick syrup, and that's the poison. The man who makes it is sick for
+days afterward."
+
+"Our cannibals make that poison in much the same way. Yet Guiana is many
+hundreds of miles from here, and our Indians know nothing of those
+Macusi people. Queer, is it not, that the same plan should be used by
+savages thousands of miles apart?"
+
+"Rather odd. Must have started from some common source hundreds of years
+ago and spread around. Queerest thing is, though, that a poison so
+deadly doesn't spoil meat for eating."
+
+"Huh?" exclaimed Tim. "Mean to say them cannibals can kill us by
+scratchin' us with a poison arrer and then stummick us afterwards?"
+
+"Exactly. You'd taste just as sweet as ever, Tim--maybe more so. Cheer
+up! They say it doesn't hurt much to die that way; you're paralyzed so
+quick you just sort of fade out."
+
+Tim shook his head, his abhorrence of poison strong as ever. Knowlton
+spoke.
+
+"I've heard that this wurali poison is much overrated, that it will kill
+only birds and monkeys, not men."
+
+"_Por Deus!_ Whoever said that was a fool trying to appear wise!" Pedro
+snorted. "We have seen the poison death, and we know."
+
+McKay also shook his head.
+
+"Experiments have been made with the wurali of the Macusis," he stated.
+"It was tried on a hog, a sloth--and a sloth is mighty hard to
+kill--also on mules, and on a full-grown ox weighing almost half a ton.
+It killed every one of them."
+
+A momentary silence followed. Tim gazed sourly at the arrow, now
+harmless but still sinister.
+
+"Urrrgh!" he growled. "Cap, ye had a narrer squeak--come near gittin' it
+from in front, and behind, too. Wisht I could have drilled that guy."
+
+The bushmen grinned. And Lourenço's next speech was amazing.
+
+"Be thankful you did not. That bullet might have killed us all."
+
+After enjoying their puzzled expressions a moment he continued.
+
+"We are nearer to a Mayoruna _maloca_ than I thought. Not the one I
+intended to seek, but a smaller one. It is about three days' journey
+from here, and to reach it we must go through the bush. The man who left
+this arrow here to-day is from that _maloca_.
+
+"A week ago his brother went hunting, and he has not returned. So this
+young savage and three of his comrades now are searching the bush for
+some sign of him. To-day they separated, each going in a different
+direction, agreeing to meet again to-night at a place less than half a
+day's journey from here. This man circled around and worked along this
+creek, knowing his brother would hardly go beyond the water. He spied
+our canoes, then sought the men who had come in them and found you.
+
+"He watched you for some time, and if you had not rushed at him he would
+have slipped away without attacking you, for he was alone and he saw
+your guns. But when you, Capitao, suddenly leaped at him he darted away,
+then stopped long enough to send an arrow at you. After that he dodged
+out of sight and ran to the camp of his three friends. He is there now,
+telling about you."
+
+"Great guns! You chaps are wizards!" cried Knowlton. "How do you know
+all this?"
+
+"Because we met him while on our way back here. He was running hard, and
+we heard him, so we blocked him. After we convinced him that we were
+friendly we talked for some time--I can speak their tongue--and he told
+us about you. He was sure you were enemies to him and his people, and
+believed also you had killed his missing brother, and he was going first
+to rejoin his companions and then hasten to the _maloca_ to bring all
+their fighters against you. It was well that we met him in time. It was
+well, too, that you did not shoot him--or even shoot at him. His
+companions would have learned of it, and then--death for us all."
+
+"And now what?"
+
+"Now, comrades, we all go to the _maloca_ of that man. We meet him and
+the other three to-morrow at the place where we talked to him to-day. I
+told him we were going to visit that other chief whom I knew, and,
+though he was at first suspicious of a trap, he finally agreed to lead
+us to his own chief. So in the morning we march. Now let us sleep."
+
+Knowlton and McKay glanced at each other and nodded.
+
+"Luck's with us so far," said the captain.
+
+"Right. We just march right into Jungle Town with bodyguard and
+everything. Pretty soft! Wonder if they'll turn out the tomtom band to
+drum us in."
+
+Tim said nothing. He squinted again at the headless arrow, then
+inspected the breech bolt of his rifle.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE WAY OF THE JUNGLE
+
+
+Dawn came, dismal, damp, and chill. Moisture dripped drearily from the
+upper reaches, and under the dense canopy of leaves and limbs the gloom
+and the fog together made a murk wherein the early-rising bushmen were
+scarcely visible to the North Americans ten feet away. Yet day had come,
+or was coming; the noise of the animal world left little doubt of that.
+
+By the light of a sullen smoky fire and oil-smeared torches Pedro and
+Lourenço made up their packs, cording them roughly with bark-cloth
+strips brought from headquarters. The Americans, after eating a more
+solid meal than the Brazilians seemed to require, also rolled their
+blankets, hammocks, nets, and other paraphernalia; strapped the outfits
+into the army pack harnesses which they had transported for thousands of
+miles and never yet used; crammed their web belts with cartridges; slung
+their sheathed machetes down their left thighs; looked to their guns;
+and announced themselves ready to go.
+
+While the northerners made these final preparations their guides slipped
+away for a time. Pedro, on his return, announced that the canoes had
+been concealed. Lourenço, bringing back the freshly filled canteens of
+the ex-army men, delivered with them the marching orders of the day.
+
+"If you thirst, comrades, drink only from your canteens. If the canteens
+fail, never fill them from flowing water unless the Indians also drink
+from the stream. There are always small pools to be found, and, though
+their water may be warm and stale, it is not likely to be poisoned, as
+the streams may be.
+
+"To-day, and every day after we meet the cannibals, make no suspicious
+moves. Do not speak harshly. Do not laugh or sneer at them. They are
+unreasoning and easily insulted, and lifelong foes when angered. Let me
+do the talking.
+
+"Do not hold a gun in a threatening manner or draw pistols unless you
+must fight. Then kill.
+
+"Above all, pay no attention to their women.
+
+"Now we go. I lead."
+
+He turned and strode away into the fog as easily and surely as if
+cat-eyed and cat-footed. Pedro swung nonchalantly after him. The others
+followed in order, hitching at their backstraps.
+
+The ghostly haze about them now was paler, but through the interstices
+overhead came no glint of sunshine, nor even the glow of a clear dawn.
+The whole sky evidently was overcast, and around the marching men the
+gloom still lay thick. Yet Lourenço's eyes seemed to bore through the
+shades and the dark shroud blurring the trunks, for his steady gait did
+not falter. The little file hung close together, for all knew that any
+man straggling would be instantly lost.
+
+Worming around gigantic columns, crawling over rotting trunks long laid
+low, changing direction abruptly when blocked by some great butt too
+high to be scaled, sinking ankle-deep in clinging mud, the venturesome
+band wound along through the wilderness. Repeated glances at his compass
+showed McKay that the general trend of the march was southeast; but the
+impassable obstacles encountered at frequent intervals necessitated not
+only detours, but sometimes actual back-tracking.
+
+"Walk four miles to advance one," was his thought. And for some time it
+seemed that such was the case. But then the ground changed, the light
+improved, the trees thinned, and the undergrowth became more dense--and,
+paradoxically, the rate of progress improved.
+
+This was because the smaller growth gave the two leaders a chance to cut
+their way straight onward instead of dodging about; and cut they did.
+Their machetes swung with untiring energy, opening a path through what
+seemed an impenetrable tangle. Now every yard of movement was a yard
+gained. But the ground was rising and the struggle up some of the sharp
+slopes winded more than one man.
+
+Then the slope dipped the other way, and they slipped down into a ravine
+where water gleamed darkly. Here a halt was called while the leaders
+sought for a fallen tree. Tim squatted and mopped his face for the
+hundredth time.
+
+"Gosh! This is what I call travelin'!" he panted. "Flounderin' round in
+mud soup, bit to death by skeeters and them what-ye-call-'em
+flies--piums--sweatin' yerself bone dry and totin' forty thousand
+pounds, on yer back, not to mention hardware slung all over ye--this
+ain't no place for a minister's son or a fat guy, I'll tell the world.
+And this is only the start!"
+
+A call from Pedro forestalled any answer. The trio struggled along to
+the spot where the guides waited at the butt of a slanting tree trunk
+spanning the gulf. As they reached it Pedro walked carefully up the
+trunk, carrying a long slender sapling, which he lowered and fixed in
+the bottom of the stream. Then, steadying himself with the upper end of
+this pole, he continued his journey to the other side, where he flipped
+the sapling back to Lourenço. One by one the others crossed, slipping,
+almost losing balance, but managing to evade a fall. Tim, walking the
+precarious bridge and looking down, saw that the surface of the water
+was dotted with the heads of venomous snakes.
+
+"Are you following your trail of yesterday?" demanded McKay.
+
+"No, Capitao. Yesterday we circled. To-day we go as nearly straight as
+possible."
+
+"And you can find the appointed place by this new route?" The captain's
+tone was dubious.
+
+"Certainly. Else I should go the other way. Come."
+
+Up another bank they toiled, and on through rugged country which seemed
+momentarily to become higher and harder to traverse. In the minds of the
+Americans grew suspicion that, for the first time, the Brazilians were
+bluffing; it seemed impossible for any man to keep his sense of
+direction in such a maze. But they said no word and followed on.
+
+At length the leader paused and sent the long call of the mutum floating
+through the trees. No answer came. After a moment the line moved on,
+each man peering ahead with sharper gaze, each holding a little tighter.
+To the Americans, at least, the thought of possible ambush loomed large.
+
+Four man-eating savages, hidden in this labyrinthine tangle and armed
+with arrows whose slightest scratch meant death, could strike down every
+man of this expedition without even a wound in return; for of what avail
+were high-power guns, automatic pistols, and machetes against invisible
+enemies? Yet there was assurance in Lourenço's confident air, and
+reassurance in the thought that these tribemen would be unlikely to
+assail a band avowedly on its way to visit their chief.
+Besides--Knowlton smiled grimly--even if the Mayorunas hungered for
+human flesh it would be more economical of labor to let the meat travel
+to the slaughterhouse on its own legs than to kill it here and carry it
+home.
+
+Again the mutum whistle drifted away. Again no answer came. For a short
+distance farther the file continued its march. Then, in a small opening
+where the uptorn roots of a tree rose like a wall at one side, it
+halted.
+
+"The place of meeting," Pedro said. All peered around. None saw anything
+but the upstanding roots, the forest jumble, the misty serpentine
+lianas. None heard any sound but their own hoarse breathing, the solemn
+drip of water, the insect hum, and the occasional melancholy notes of
+birds. The place seemed bare of life. Yet upon McKay came again that
+feeling of being watched.
+
+Slowly, deeply, Lourenço spoke. The words meant nothing to his mates.
+They were like no words they knew. His eyes roved about as he talked,
+and it was evident that he saw no more than did the silent men behind
+him. But they guessed that he said he and they were there as agreed,
+with peace in their hearts, and that he was telling the men of the
+wilderness to come forward without fear. And they guessed rightly.
+
+As quietly as a phantom of the mist a man took shape at the edge of the
+tree roots. Tall, straight, slender, symmetrically proportioned, with
+unblemished skin of light-bronze hue, straight black hair, and deep dark
+eyes, he was a splendid type of savage. Face and body were adorned with
+glossy paint--scarlet and black rings around the eyes, two red stripes
+from temple to chin, wavy lines on arms and chest. He held a bow longer
+than himself, with a five-foot arrow fitted loosely to the string and
+pointed downward, but ready for instant use. Diagonally across his body
+ran a cord supporting a quiver, from which the feathered shafts of
+several arrows projected above his left shoulder. Around his waist
+looped another cord from which dangled a small loin mat. Otherwise he
+was totally nude--a bronze statue of freedom.
+
+Lourenço spoke again in the same quiet tone. The savage stepped warily
+forward. At the same moment three other naked men appeared with equal
+stealth from tree trunks which had seemed barren of all life. Like the
+first, each of these held an arrow ready, but pointing downward; and
+each moved with the slow, velvety step of a hunting jaguar. Their eyes
+searched those of these strange men of another world who, wearing
+useless clothing, carrying heavy weapons of steel, burdening themselves
+with queer weights on their backs, now invaded the wilderness which they
+and their fathers had roamed untrammeled for centuries. The invaders in
+turn studied the faces of the Mayorunas, of whom so many gruesome tales
+were told. For long silent minutes primitive and civilized man probed
+each other for signs of treachery--and found none.
+
+Tim, forgetting the orders of the day, spoke out abruptly. At the gruff
+jar of his voice the wild men started and raised their weapons.
+
+"Say, are those guys cannibals? I was lookin' to see some ugly mutts
+with underslung jaws and mops o' frizzy hair, like them Feejee Islanders
+ye see pitchers of. Barrin' the paint, I've seen worse-lookin' fellers
+than these back home."
+
+With which he gave the savages a wide, unmistakably approving grin.
+
+"Shut up!" muttered McKay.
+
+Lourenço, unruffled, made instant capital of Tim's remarks.
+
+"My comrade of the red hair," he said in the Indian tongue, "has never
+before seen the mighty warriors of the Mayorunas, and is astonished to
+find them such handsome men. He says his own countrymen are not so good
+to look upon."
+
+Slowly the menacing arrows sank. As the savages studied Tim's wholesome
+grin and absorbed the broad flattery of Lourenço a slight smile passed
+over their faces. They stood more at ease. The whites sensed at once
+that, for a moment, at least, a friendly footing had been established,
+and relaxed from their own tension.
+
+Once more Lourenço spoke, motioning toward the farther distances. The
+Indian who had first appeared now replied briefly. Two of the others
+stepped back to their trees and lifted long, hollow tubes.
+
+"What's them?" demanded Tim.
+
+"Blowguns," Pedro answered. "They use them for small or thin-skinned
+game. See, the two blowgun men carry also short darts in their quivers,
+and small pouches of poison."
+
+"Uh-huh. They like their poison a dang sight better 'n I do. Say, are
+them guys goin' to march behind us? I don't want no poison needles
+slipped into my back, accidental or other ways."
+
+Two of the savages were walking toward the rear of the line. Knowlton,
+exasperated, snapped out:
+
+"They'll walk where they like, and you'll do well to give us more
+marching and less mouth. You nearly spilled the beans just now, and if
+Lourenço hadn't said something that pleased these fellows we all might
+be in the soup this minute. Pipe down!"
+
+"Aw, Looey, I only said these guys were good-lookin'. Ain't no fight in
+words like that."
+
+"You heard the orders this morning. Let Lourenço do the talking. That
+goes! We're skating on thin ice--so thin that if it breaks we drop plump
+into hell. Less noise!"
+
+"Right, sir," was the sulky answer. "I'm deaf and dumb."
+
+"March," added McKay. The head of the column already was on the move,
+led by the tallest Indian and a blowgun man, behind whom walked the two
+Brazilians. The whole line took up the step in turn and passed on into
+the unknown.
+
+Again McKay consulted his compass at intervals, finding that now the
+route led more to the south, though there still was an easterly trend.
+After a time, however, the telltale needle informed him that they were
+proceeding almost due east, and glances at the surroundings showed that
+on their right was a densely matted mass of undergrowth. Not long
+afterward another interwoven brush wall blocked the way, and this time
+the leader veered to the west. Not until an opening appeared did he
+resume his southward course. It dawned on McKay that the savages, having
+no bush knives, were accustomed to follow the line of least resistance.
+This obviously increased the distance traveled.
+
+The men of Coronel Nunes, too, perceived this. A halt was called, during
+which Lourenço talked with the guide, tapped his machete, and evidently
+protested against needless detours. The leader, with a few words,
+pointed south. Lourenço nodded and replied. The march was resumed, and
+when the next impenetrable tangle was encountered the Indians in the van
+stepped aside, the machetes of the Brazilians flashed out, and a way was
+cut straight through. From that time on the long knives came into
+frequent play and a direct course was maintained.
+
+Suddenly, with a grunt of warning, the tall tribesman stopped. The plan
+of chopping through instead of going around had brought the Indians into
+a part of the forest which they had not heretofore traversed in their
+search for the missing hunter. Now they stood in a small trough between
+the knolls, under good-sized trees around which grew little brush. The
+ground was soft, almost watery. In the damp air, faint but unmistakable,
+hung the odor of death.
+
+The savages at the rear came forward at once. All four of them spread
+out and, sniffing the air, advanced up the trough. A cry broke from one
+of them. The others, and the white men, too, hastened to the spot whence
+the call had come.
+
+Scattered about in the soft muck were bones, two skulls, bits of tawny
+fur, a long bow, several big-game arrows. Around them the ground was
+marked with many tracks. Most of the imprints were of the vultures which
+had stripped the bones, but there were others--those of a barefoot man,
+of a great cat, and of a couple of wild hogs. The peccary tracks went
+straight on, but those of the man and the cat showed that a fierce
+struggle had occurred. And one of the two grinning skulls was that of a
+jaguar.
+
+The story was plain. The hunter, following fast on the trail of the
+hogs, had suddenly met the jaguar. He had shot it; one arrow, blood
+stained for more than a foot above the barb, proved that. But in the few
+seconds of life left to it the animal had sprung and fatally torn the
+man. Then, as usual, had dropped the black scavengers of the sky to rend
+them both.
+
+Silently the men of the bush and the men of the north looked down at the
+brief history written in the mud--a story only a week old, yet ancient
+as human life itself--primitive man and ferocious brute destroying each
+other as in the prehistoric days when saber-toothed tiger and troglodyte
+hunted and slew for the right to live. And as it had been then, so it
+was now. The living read the tale of tragedy and passed on, leaving the
+bones behind them. Only, before they went, the Mayorunas threw the
+remnants of the jaguar aside and piled the bones of their dead comrade
+together in one place. Then, bearing with them his bow and arrows, they
+resumed their way without a word.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+A DUEL WITH DEATH
+
+
+Rain came and went.
+
+The first night's camp of the strangely assorted company was a wet one,
+for well on in the day the skies poured down the watery weight which had
+been troubling them once morning. Yet even in such miserable weather the
+four tribesmen of the Mayorunas declined to sleep in the same camp with
+the whites. They accepted the food tendered them, but when it was eaten
+they withdrew to some covert of their own to spend the night. Whereby
+the whites knew that, though their guides now could no longer suspect
+them of killing the lone hunter, they still were not accepted as
+friends.
+
+"Did ye say them guys had a trick of jabbin' men in their hammicks at
+night, Renzo?" was Tim's significant question after the Indians had
+departed.
+
+"Have no fear," Lourenço assured him. "They have promised to take us
+safely to their chief."
+
+"How much is the word of a cannibal worth?" asked Knowlton.
+
+"Worth everything, so long as you do nothing to make them forget it,
+senhor. Being uncivilized, they are not liars."
+
+The lieutenant eyed him sharply, half minded to regard the answer as
+insolent. But there was no insolence in the Brazilian's straightforward
+gaze, and McKay laughed approvingly.
+
+"Well spoken!" was the captain's comment.
+
+"Among those people there are but two great crimes," Lourenço added.
+"They are, to speak falsely or to be a coward."
+
+"Wherein a goodly portion of the so-called civilized world would fail to
+measure up to the standards of these cannibals," McKay said. "By the
+way, have you asked them about the Raposa?"
+
+"No, Capitao. It is as well not to put into their heads the idea that we
+are hunting anyone here. I shall say nothing of that matter until we
+reach the chief who knows me."
+
+"Good idea."
+
+With that the talk ended and all sought their hammocks, dog tired from
+the day's travel. No watch was kept, for, as Pedro quaintly phrased it,
+"We now are in the hands of God and the cannibals." Nor was any watch
+needed.
+
+Daybreak brought sunlight. While the breakfast coffee was being boiled
+the four wild men appeared silently and simultaneously, one bringing a
+red howling monkey and another a large green parrot as their
+contributions to the morning meal. Neither bird nor animal showed any
+wound except a slightly discolored spot surrounding a skin puncture no
+larger than if made by a woman's hatpin--the marks left by poisoned
+darts from the ten-foot blowguns. When the meat was cooked they offered
+portions to the whites, of whom Tim alone refused.
+
+"I'd as quick eat a rat killed with Paris green," he growled. "No
+poisoned meat gits into my stummick if I know it."
+
+"Bosh!" scoffed McKay. "It's perfectly wholesome--though it's tough as a
+rubber boot."
+
+"And I might tell you, senhores, that among these people it is an insult
+to refuse any food offered you," added Lourenço. "I advise you to forget
+about the poison hereafter and eat what is put before you, even if it
+stinks."
+
+His advice was emphasized by the evident displeasure of the tribesmen,
+who, though saying nothing, looked rather grimly at the man who had
+despised their provisions. But Lourenço then smoothed over the matter by
+telling them that the red-haired man was sick at the stomach that
+morning--which, at that particular moment, was not far from the truth.
+
+Soon the triglot column was once more on its way across the hill
+country, which hourly grew higher and rougher--a constant succession of
+ridges and ravines. Lourenço, pointing out the absence of water marks on
+the trees of the uplands, said that now the land of the great annual
+floods had been left behind; for even the sixty-foot rise of waters in
+the rainy season could not reach to these hilltops. With the entry into
+this terra firma the travelers had also found the sun again, the dank
+mist of yesterday having vanished. Nevertheless, the going was fully as
+hard as on the previous day, because of the density of the bush and of
+the labor of crossing the narrow but deep streams flowing at the bottom
+of nearly every clove. Few words were exchanged, every man needing his
+breath for the work of walking.
+
+As before, the keen machetes of the Brazilians opened a direct route
+through all opposing undergrowth. When a brief halt was called at noon
+the Mayorunas, who seemed to know exactly where they were despite the
+fact that they had never before followed this straight course, informed
+Lourenço that much circuitous traveling had already been saved, and that
+by tramping hard until sundown they might succeed in reaching the tribal
+_maloca_ that night. But McKay vetoed the idea of a forced march.
+
+"This gait is fast enough and hard enough," he declared. "No sense in
+exhausting ourselves to save a few hours' time. Also, we don't want to
+go staggering into the Mayoruna village with our tongues hanging out and
+our knees wabbling. First impressions are lasting with such people, and
+they might get an idea we were weaklings."
+
+To which all except the savages, who did not understand the language of
+the white man, assented approvingly.
+
+Yet it was the Mayorunas themselves who delayed arrival at their
+_maloca_--the Mayorunas and a monkey. When the sinking sun was still two
+hours high, and while the leader was forcing the pace as if determined
+to reach home that night whether the rest liked it or not, the monkey
+upset any such plan.
+
+He was a big gray monkey, and he was high up in the branches of a tall
+matamata tree, where he deemed himself safe from the many creatures
+laboring along the ground below. Wherefore he chattered impudently down
+at them and, as the tall Indian guide halted, showed his teeth
+derisively. The savage grunted. The man behind him also grunted and
+lifted his blowgun. But the leader growled at him and the blowgun sank.
+
+With a swift sweep of the hand the guide drew from his quiver one of
+those long, poisoned arrows and fitted it to the bow cord, which he had
+laid on the ground. With two toes of each foot he held the cord firmly
+on the soil. His right hand lightly grasped the arrow and aimed it up at
+the insolent primate. His left drew the bow up, up, into an arc.
+
+_Twang!_ the cord thrummed as his lifted toes released it. The arrow
+whirred aloft. Then a snarl of chagrin from the marksman blended with
+the grunts of his mates. The arrow had failed to reach the quarry.
+
+It had missed, however, by a mere hand's breadth--missed only because it
+struck the limb directly under the monkey, where it hung by the tip from
+the bark. Muttering something which may have been a Mayoruna
+malediction, the savage moved aside a step or two, drew another arrow,
+and set it to the cord with more care than before. But while he did this
+the monkey was not idle.
+
+Chattering in rage, the animal leaned down, worked the arrow loose from
+the bark, and threw it aside. The deadly shaft turned in air, then
+plunged aimlessly earthward. At that instant all below were watching the
+guide, who in turn was looking at his toes and placing the new arrow in
+position. Unseen, the other missile hurtled down--and ripped across the
+back of the marksman's left hand.
+
+For an instant the tall cannibal stood as if petrified, staring at his
+cut hand and the shaft now sticking upright in the ground beside him.
+Then, in simple symbolism, he reversed the new arrow and stabbed it also
+into the dirt. Dropping his bow, he lay down on his back.
+
+"Yuara will draw bow no more. Yuara goes to join the spirits of the
+dead," he said, calmly.
+
+Mechanically Lourenço translated the words. McKay sprang forward.
+
+"No!" he disputed. "Not without a try for life, anyhow! Merry, sling a
+tourniquet! Quick!"
+
+Knowlton jumped to the side of Yuara, tied a handkerchief above the
+elbow, twisted it tight. McKay whipped from a pocket a keen-bladed
+knife. In one swift ruthless slash he laid open the arm from elbow to
+knuckles.
+
+"Keep that tourniquet tight!" he snapped. "If the blood once gets past
+it he's gone. Tim, get out the salt bag! Lourenço, tell this fellow to
+breathe deep and keep it up!"
+
+While Tim burrowed into his pack for the salt, Lourenço spoke, as much
+for the benefit of the other tribesmen as for that of Yuara; for the
+three Mayorunas stood in ominous silence, watching the outrush of blood
+caused by the knife of the white man.
+
+"The white man of the black beard, who is very wise, will save Yuara to
+draw many a good bow if Yuara will do as he says. Let Yuara breathe
+deeply, that the spirit of life remain in him to fight against the demon
+of death. Even now the poison rushes out of the arm of Yuara."
+
+"Yuara cannot live," was Yuara's cool reply. "Where once the poison has
+entered, there follows death."
+
+"Is Yuara then a coward, that he will die without a fight? Then he is no
+Mayoruna, for no Mayoruna is a coward. Let Yuara die if he will. His
+comrades shall carry to their _maloca_ the tale that, although the white
+man would have saved him, he died like an old woman, because he had not
+the will to live!"
+
+Fire shot into the eyes of the prostrate man. He ground his teeth and
+struggled to rise and throttle the insulting Brazilian.
+
+"No, not that way," Lourenço went on at once. "Yuara can fight the death
+demon only by drawing into himself the air in which is the spirit of
+life. The wise white man has stopped the poison at the place where the
+cloth is tied, and he knows the air spirits will help Yuara if Yuara
+will breathe deep and long. If he will not, then the white man's
+medicine cannot save him. Yuara's life or death is in his own hands."
+
+In his heart Lourenço had faint hope that the injured man would live.
+But he knew the rest of the cannibal tribe must soon hear the tale of
+this incident from the three now present, and he was preparing an
+excellent excuse for the failure of McKay to save him. Whether Yuara
+lived or not, the Mayorunas now would know that the whites had done
+their utmost for him, and that very fact might make a vast difference.
+
+Yuara, though his eyes still flamed, sank back under McKay's restraining
+weight and obeyed orders. After the first couple of breaths he settled
+into his task and his chest rose and fell rhythmically.
+
+"Here's yer salt, Cap. What'll I do with it?"
+
+"You come here and hold this tourniquet. Don't let it slip! Merry, fill
+this chap's mouth with salt. Lourenço, tell him to hold it as long as
+possible, then swallow it. Now, Merry, fix up a good strong salt
+poultice. The rest of you make camp. We've got a stiff fight on our
+hands, and we can't go farther until we've either won or lost."
+
+The Brazilians glanced at the sun shadows and remained where they were.
+According to their experience, Yuara should be dead within ten minutes
+at most. Time enough to make camp when they knew how this venture would
+result. The Mayorunas also stood fast and watched for the shadow of
+death to blanch the face of their stricken mate.
+
+But the minutes dragged past and Yuara's eyes did not grow dim. His
+first resignation over and his fighting blood aroused, he was battling
+grimly against fate. At times his deep respirations were broken by
+sudden gasps, and spasmodic quivers shook his whole body. But he
+breathed on, paying no heed to the burning pain of his ripped and salted
+arm.
+
+"By cripes! he's puttin' up a man's scrap!" blurted Tim. "Stay with it,
+old feller. Ye'll win out yet!"
+
+And as more minutes passed and the wounded man still breathed, a murmur
+of wonderment passed among the cannibals and the men of Nunes. Yuara
+should be dead, yet he was not even paralyzed. Such a thing had never
+before been known in this bush.
+
+Lourenço touched Pedro's arm.
+
+"Find a spot where we can make camp," he said. "I must stay here to
+speak to the wild men if words are needed."
+
+Reluctantly Pedro went away. Soon he was back with news of a suitable
+place. He found all bending closer over Yuara, whose breathing had
+become stertorous and whose eyes seemed fixed.
+
+"Going!" was the bushman's thought. But the others would not have it so.
+
+"How 'bout a shot o' booze to jolt his heart, Cap?" suggested Tim, whose
+whole soul was in the fight.
+
+McKay nodded. Knowlton quickly produced brandy and poured a stiff dose
+down Yuara's throat. It took hold at once, and light came back into the
+Indian's eyes.
+
+"Got a good chance yet," McKay asserted. "Don't loosen that tourniquet.
+Let the arm mortify, if necessary, but hold that blood away from the
+heart at all costs. I'll chop his arm off at the shoulder before I'll
+give in."
+
+His hard-set face showed he meant it.
+
+Lourenço spoke to the Mayorunas, urging that camp be made at once. He
+and Pedro strode away, and all three of the Indians followed.
+
+"Really think he'll pull through, Rod?" Knowlton asked, then. "If he
+does you're a miracle worker."
+
+"It's an experiment," McKay confessed, watching Yuara with unswerving
+intentness. "Never saw this done, but it's worth a try--and I honestly
+believe it will work. I saved an Indian over in Guiana once by cutting
+off his arm as soon as he was hit, but I want to keep this fellow's arm
+for him if possible. Feed him some more salt."
+
+Time passed unheeded. Sounds of labor not far off told that camp was
+being built. Presently the absent five returned, two of the Mayorunas
+carrying a crude but strong litter constructed from saplings and
+giant-fern leaves. McKay rose stiffly on cramped legs.
+
+"All right. You can move him," he consented.
+
+Carefully Yuara was lifted to the litter and transported to the new
+camp. There the Americans found not only the open shed, or _tambo_,
+usually constructed by the Brazilians, but also a somewhat similar
+shelter erected by the Indians. In the latter stood two stout crotched
+stakes, firmly braced--the handiwork of Pedro and Lourenço. And to
+these, with tough bush rope, the Indians fastened the litter of Yuara,
+thus forming a rude but effective hammock.
+
+While McKay and Knowlton continued their ministrations to the stricken
+man the rest of the camp work was completed, the Mayorunas making
+hanging beds for themselves from withes, leaves, and bush cord, and the
+Brazilians slinging the hammocks of their own party and opening packs.
+
+Night fell and the wounded man lived on. Supper was eaten, pipes smoked,
+the regular activities of the early hours of darkness gone through--and
+Yuara lived on. His deep breathing had become automatic, and his eyes
+stared straight up in concentration on his battle with the death demon.
+
+At length he was seized with violent nausea which convulsed him for a
+time. But when the spasms passed he lay back more easily, and a faint
+smile flitted over his face as he looked at the white men.
+
+"Been expecting that," said McKay. "Might loosen that ligature now--just
+a few seconds.... Tighten it! All right." Alter watching the sick man a
+little longer he added: "Now I'm going to eat and smoke. Feel like
+taking a drink, too, but guess I won't. The Indian will pull through
+now, I think."
+
+When he had returned to the Indian hut with pipe aglow, Knowlton asked
+him, "Now tell us how you doped out this cure."
+
+"Combination of various things. Salt is a partial antidote to venom in
+the blood, and I got it into him in three ways--by mouth absorption, by
+the stomach, and by the salt poultice, which drew out some of the poison
+from the forearm and helped neutralize what remained. Ripping his arm of
+course let out a lot of bad blood. Ligature above the elbow stopped most
+of the rest--though some sneaked past that point, I'm pretty sure.
+
+"Big thing, though, was the deep breathing. Remember I told you about
+the experiments that killed mules and an ox? Another experiment was
+this--opening the windpipe of a poisoned mule after the heart stopped,
+inserting a pair of bellows, and starting artificial respiration. After
+four hours of this the mule came to life and stayed alive--though he was
+a wreck for a year afterward.
+
+"I just put all these together, made the Indian do his own
+breathing--and here he is. I'm going to sit up awhile longer and watch
+him, but the critical period is over. You chaps can turn in."
+
+But none turned in until midnight, when no doubt remained that
+Lourenço's prophecy would come true--that Yuara would live to draw bow
+again. Then, when the slashed arm had been thoroughly cleansed and
+bound, Lourenço spoke once more to the savages.
+
+"The medicine of the wise white man and the air spirits have saved Yuara
+from the death demon. Yuara has fought as a man of his tribe should
+fight, and so has lived when he would have died. To-morrow Yuara shall
+once more see his people, the first man of the Mayorunas to come back
+from the death of poison. And he and his comrades shall tell of the
+white man's wisdom, without which he now would lie cold on the ground."
+
+"So shall it be," Yuara himself faintly answered. "Yuara, son of Rana,
+second chief of the men of Suba, will not forget."
+
+"_Por Deus!_" exclaimed Lourenço. "Comrades, this man is no common
+hunter, but son of a subchief. Capitao, you have done good work to-day."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE CANNIBALS
+
+
+Through the long, dim shadows of early morning the little column passed
+on the last leg of its journey to the _maloca_ of Suba, chief of this
+outlying tribe of the Mayorunas. At its head marched Yuara, his left arm
+incased in bandages, his face drawn and pallid, his stride stiff and
+springless, but still carrying his weapons and stoically setting the
+pace as befitted the son of a subchief. He had had no sleep; he had lain
+in the gates of death; his arm ached cruelly; yet a warm glow shone in
+his hollow eyes as he reflected on the fact that in all the unwritten
+history of his people he was the first man to survive the inexorable
+power of the wurali. As long as he lived this fact would lift him above
+the level of all his fellows. Even the chief could not boast of such a
+superhuman feat.
+
+The undergrowth this morning was not so thick as it had been, and the
+machetes of Lourenço and Pedro stayed in their sheaths. The ground, too,
+was more level and the footing more firm. After some three hours of
+walking the Americans found that they had come into a faint path.
+
+Somewhat to the bewilderment of the white men, who expected the Indians
+to increase their speed now that the way home lay under their feet, the
+leading pair slowed their gait. Moreover, they scanned the trail with
+intent care and watched the trees along the way. At length, with a
+warning grunt, Yuara stepped out of the path and began a detour. His
+comrade and the Brazilians followed. The Americans stopped.
+
+"What's the idea?" demanded McKay, looking along the innocent-appearing
+path.
+
+"Probably a man trap, Capitao," answered Pedro. "Follow us."
+
+"Let's see the trap first."
+
+Lourenço called to Yuara, who stopped and grunted two words.
+
+"_Si_, it is a trap. A pit, Yuara says."
+
+Yuara spoke again, and Lourenço added: "He says we must not touch it. It
+is there just before you, covered so cunningly that it looks exactly
+like the rest of the ground. The cover is a framework of sticks balanced
+on a pole, and the instant a man steps on it it gives way. He falls into
+a nine-foot hole whose sides are dug inward, so that they overhang above
+him. There the cannibals find him and kill him. I fell into one of those
+holes when I first came into this Mayoruna country, so I know just how
+they are made."
+
+"So? How did you get out?"
+
+"There were two of us, and I stood on the other man's shoulders while he
+lifted me high enough to jump out. Then I tied bush rope to a tree and
+he climbed up the rope. Come. Yuara waits."
+
+After a short circuit around the danger point the party returned to the
+path, and as they went on Lourenço explained further concerning the pit:
+
+"Every approach to the _malocas_ has this kind of trap hidden in it, and
+others also. The Indians recognize the places by some secret signal
+known only to themselves--a certain kind of stick or vine or something
+of the kind, placed where it can be seen by those who understand. The
+traps are made to stop any enemies who try to sneak up on the _malocas_
+and catch these people unawares. Another kind of trap is a spring bow or
+a blowgun shot by a vine stretched across the path. Still another is a
+piece of ground studded with poisoned araya bones which pierce the bare
+feet of anyone walking on them. It is well for us that we now have
+friendly guides."
+
+"Quite so," McKay agreed, dryly.
+
+Some distance farther on the leader again left the path, and this time
+all filed after him without comment. Pedro pointed significantly at a
+thin, tight-drawn bush cord stretched across the path at the height of a
+man's ankle--the trigger which would discharge hidden death at anything
+touching it. At another point, perhaps a hundred feet farther along, a
+third and last detour was made, and this time the nature of the trap was
+not revealed by anything on the ground. No questions were asked.
+
+With the passing of these three menaces Yuara resumed his former pace
+and abandoned his circumspection. Before long came sounds of communal
+life--the barking of a dog and shouts of children. Then suddenly the
+forest thinned, and after a few more strides the marchers found
+themselves in a clearing.
+
+Before them rose a big round house, about forty feet high and a hundred
+feet in diameter, its sides composed of palm logs, and its roof a thick
+thatch of palm leaves, whence smoke oozed lazily through an opening at
+the peak. A single low door, not more than four feet high, opened toward
+a creek a few rods away at the right. Near this doorway a couple of
+naked children, boy and girl, were playing with the dog, while beyond
+them a number of women, also nude, were busy at some kind of work.
+
+As Yuara and his fellow-tribesmen entered the open space the boy shouted
+a greeting and started running toward them. Then, seeing the white men
+filing from the bush behind the warriors, the youngster stood as if
+shocked motionless. After one long stare he screamed and bolted for the
+shelter of the _maloca_. Other screams echoed his as the women also saw
+the bearded outlanders. They, too, dived through the doorway.
+
+Out from behind the house leaped three warriors, two of whom already had
+fitted arrows to their bows, while the third--a powerful
+fellow--clutched a four-foot war club. Weapons raised, faces contracted
+into fighting masks, they stared speechless at the spectacle of the
+subchief's son calmly leading gun-bearing whites among them.
+
+Knowlton, though his attention was riveted on the astonished warriors,
+caught the quiet snick of Tim's safe-lock being turned off.
+
+"None of that, Tim!" he warned. "Put that safety on again. And don't
+hold your gun as if you intended to use it."
+
+"Aw, I was jest tryin' her to make sure she was all right."
+
+"Put it on!" snapped the lieutenant. Another tiny click told him the
+order was obeyed.
+
+Out from the doorway darted another warrior, stooping low to avoid
+hitting his head. Others followed instantly, all armed and ready for
+action. The opening was still vomiting tribesmen when Yuara and the rest
+reached it. But none made a hostile move when it was seen that the son
+of the subchief was in command and that the strangers seemed friendly.
+Yuara spoke, briefly but authoritatively, and the weapons sank. Then,
+with a word to his three companions, he ducked through the doorway. The
+other three remained where they were.
+
+"We shall have to wait now, comrades, until Yuara tells his father and
+the chief about us," Lourenço said. "So let us take off our packs and
+rest."
+
+He set the example by laying his rifle on the ground, unslinging his
+pack, squatting beside it, and coolly rolling a cigarette. Apparently he
+was paying no attention whatever to the savages, who watched his every
+move. But McKay, glancing at him as he followed suit, saw that, for all
+his seeming unconcern, the Brazilian bush rover was keenly watchful and
+that his gun lay within reach of his hand.
+
+From within the tribal house sounded the monotonous voice of Yuara.
+After listening a moment Lourenço quietly addressed the nearest warrior.
+A slightly surprised looked passed over the cannibal's face. He replied,
+and a slow conversation ensued.
+
+Meanwhile the others looked over the array of savage fighting men.
+Except for difference of stature, build, and expression, they were as
+like as brothers. All were light skinned--hardly darker than the
+river-tanned whites themselves; all had straight-set eyes, with no hint
+of the slant often found among the Indians of the Amazon headwaters; and
+the cheek bones of all were fairly low. Their average stature was a
+little under six feet, and most of them had an athletic symmetry of
+physique. Their feet, McKay noticed, were small and shapely.
+
+All wore tall feather headdresses of parrot and mutum plumes. All had
+the scarlet and black rings around the eyes, the streaks from temple to
+chin, the wavy design on their bodies. And each wore in the cartilage of
+his nose a pair of small feathers slanting outward. At another time and
+under other circumstances the white men might have smiled at those nose
+feathers, which resembled odd mustaches; but as they studied the austere
+faces around them they found no occasion for merriment. Nor was the
+tension lessened by the sight of the weapons grasped in the strong hands
+of the warriors.
+
+Great bows and arrows, such as the hunters had borne, were supplemented
+here by the long clubs of heavy wood and by ugly spears. The clubs
+terminated in balls studded with jaguar teeth. The spears were triple
+pronged, each prong ending in a saw-toothed araya bone and each bone
+darkened by the fatal wurali. Frightful weapons they were--the one
+designed to smash skulls and tear out brains, the other to stab and
+poison at the same thrust.
+
+Lourenço stopped talking, and the others observed that now the wild men
+stood more easily, their holds on their weapons loosened.
+
+"I have shown them, Capitao, that I can speak their tongue, and told
+them we go to visit the chief Monitaya as friend," he explained. "They
+tell me Monitaya has grown great since last I saw him. Another tribe
+which lost its chief and subchiefs by a swift sickness has joined his
+own, and he now rules two big _malocas_ together. He is a powerful
+fighter, and if he is friendly to us we have a good chance of success.
+Ah! here is Yuara."
+
+The son of the subchief came through the doorway as he spoke, followed
+by an older man whose facial resemblance and ornaments indicated that he
+was the subchief himself. His headgear was more elaborate than that of
+his men, and around his shoulders and down his chest hung a brilliant
+feather dress, while a wide belt of green, blue, and black plumes
+encircled his hips. Yuara himself had inserted feathers in his nose and
+donned a headband of tall parrot plumes a trifle more ornate than those
+worn by the ordinary fighters, and somehow the simple addition seemed to
+transform him into a bigger, fiercer man. Also, his eyes now held a
+smoldering light which had not been there before.
+
+The older man, Rana, the subchief, glanced swiftly along the line of new
+faces. Then his gaze returned to McKay. His mouth set and his
+countenance turned hard. He spoke curtly to Yuara, who replied with one
+word. After another long, unpleasant look at McKay, who stared coldly
+back at him, Rana grunted a few words and re-entered the house.
+
+Lourenço, nonplussed by the frigidity of the subchief where he had
+expected gratitude or at least hospitality, glanced questioningly at
+Yuara. But the young man stood mute, looking straight ahead.
+
+"The subchief says we shall enter and see the chief. We must leave our
+guns outside."
+
+"Don't like that," muttered McKay. "That subchief looks ugly."
+
+"But we must obey or provoke a fight, Capitao. Besides, our rifles would
+be useless inside, as they would be instantly seized if we lifted them.
+So let us make the best of it. But I think you can carry your pistols
+with you; they are covered by the holsters, and I do not believe these
+people know what they are. And since Rana spoke only of guns, we will
+keep our machetes. Come."
+
+"Wait a second."
+
+McKay dived a hand into his haversack and brought forth a heavy hunting
+knife with a gaudy red-and-white bone handle, sheathed and attached to a
+leather belt.
+
+"Brought this along as a present for some Indian who might do us a good
+turn," he explained. "Been thinking of giving it to Yuara, but now I'll
+pass it to the chief. Might make a difference. All right, let's go."
+
+With confident tread, but with some misgiving, the five advanced,
+leaving guns and packs on the ground. One by one they bent low and got
+through the doorway. Yuara, with a word to a clubman and a motion to the
+equipment, followed the whites, trailed in turn by his three companions
+of the forest. The clubman, after a curious inspection of the packs,
+stood on guard among them, his bludgeon grasped loosely but
+suggestively, ready to prevent any undue inquisitiveness by the rest.
+But soon he found himself alone, for the other tribesmen transferred
+their attention and themselves to the interior of the _maloca_.
+
+Within the house the soldiers of fortune halted a moment, adjusting
+their vision to the sudden diminution of light. Except for the sunshine
+pouring in at the smoke hole above and at the tiny door behind, the only
+light in the big room came from small cooking fires scattered about the
+place, and for the moment details were withheld from the newcomers'
+sight. Then they found themselves in what seemed a labyrinth of poles
+and hammocks.
+
+Through this confusion Yuara passed with familiar step, and in his wake
+the travelers went to a central fire around which was a comparatively
+clear space. Beyond, in a big hammock dyed with the symbolic scarlet and
+black and tasseled with many squirrel tails, sat a fat, small-eyed,
+heavy-jawed man whose elaborate feather dress and authoritative air
+proclaimed him chief. Beside him stood Rana and another subchief, lean
+and somber-faced. Behind this bulwark of tribal might huddled the women
+and children, staring wide-eyed. As the visitors stopped and returned
+the chief's unwinking regard the warriors packed themselves at their
+backs, blocking all chance of exit.
+
+When the shuffle of feet had died and no sound was audible, Yuara began
+to talk. In his deliberate way he told the complete narrative of his
+journey, which previously he had sketched only in outline. His three
+companions corroborated his tale from time to time by nods, and when the
+discovery of the slain hunter's bones was described one of those three
+stepped forward and laid the dead man's weapons on the ground before the
+chief. As Yuara went on he touched his bandaged arm and pointed to McKay
+and Knowlton. And as he concluded he motioned toward Lourenço.
+
+Ignorant of the Indian language, but guessing the nature of his talk
+from his motions, the Americans stood patiently awaiting the next move.
+For a time all three of the chiefs remained silent; but all of them
+studied McKay, standing bolt upright with arms folded and the
+belt-wrapped knife partly concealed in the hollow of one elbow. Though
+it was evident that Yuara had given the captain full credit for saving
+his life, the faces of the head men showed no sign of friendliness. In
+fact, their expressions were distinctly ominous.
+
+At length the chief turned his eyes to Lourenço. The veteran bushman
+promptly stepped forward and said his say. At the end he turned, took
+from McKay the knife, unrolled the belt, and dangled the weapon before
+the eyes of the rulers. They stared at it in obvious ignorance of its
+character. Not until the Brazilian drew the blade from its sheath and
+the glint of steel struck their vision did they show recognition. Then
+Chief Suba grunted, his little eyes lit up, and he reached for it.
+
+For a few minutes he sat gloating over the gift, admiring the bone
+handle, hefting the weight of the long blade, while the subchiefs gazed
+in envy. When he looked up his face was beaming. But then the sour-faced
+subchief at his left hand muttered something, and Suba's visage
+darkened. His eyes rested again on McKay, went to the bandaged arm of
+Yuara, dropped to his knife--the first steel knife ever owned by him or
+any man of the Suba tribe--and rose again to the black-bearded captain.
+Abruptly then he spoke out.
+
+Lourenço stared in blank astonishment. After a puzzled moment he shook
+his head as if unable to believe he had heard aright. Suba, scowling,
+repeated what he had said. Lourenço shook his head again, this time in
+vehement denial, and began to talk. But Suba, rising with surprising
+agility for a man of his weight, stopped him imperiously and spoke with
+finality. Slowly the Brazilian nodded and turned to his captain.
+
+"I do not understand this, Capitao. But these are the words of the
+chief:
+
+"'The white man with the black beard tries a trick, but it does not
+deceive the free men of the forest. The thing which he thinks to be
+hidden in his own heart is known to Suba and his chiefs. It is known
+also to the chief Monitaya, and to his chiefs, and to his men also. The
+white man is bold. And now his own boldness shall be his death.
+
+"'Since the white man has said he goes to visit the chief Monitaya, and
+since by some demon's power the white man has saved the life of Yuara,
+who is a man of Suba, the men of Suba will allow him to go in peace from
+this place. But Suba will see that he and his companions go to Monitaya,
+who will know how to deal with his visitors. The men of Suba will take
+the strangers at once to the canoes and carry them to Monitaya.
+
+"'If the white man of the black beard and the black mind thought the men
+of the jungle blind to the foulness he would do here, he is a fool. It
+is useless for him or his men to lie and say they know not what Suba
+means. Let him look into his own heart and he will know well.
+
+"'Suba has spoken.'
+
+"Something is wrong, Capitao, but I do not know what it is. It will do
+no good to argue. Let us go at once."
+
+Suba snarled commands to the warriors. They trooped toward the door.
+Without another word or glance at the three chiefs Lourenço stalked
+after the Indians, and his comrades followed with stiff dignity.
+
+Outside, the savages picked up the rifles and packs and carried them to
+the creek, where small canoes lay. The five strangers were allowed to
+crowd themselves together in a four-man canoe, but their guns and packs
+were distributed among four other dugouts, into which armed paddlers
+entered. Other Indians brought provisions to the outgoing craft. In a
+very short time the leading canoe started off downstream, followed by
+the boat of the white men, behind which the other craft pressed close
+and vigilant.
+
+They swung in among the trees, and the _maloca_ of Suba was blotted out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+BLACKBEARD
+
+
+"Well," said Knowlton, after a period of silent paddling, "we have met
+the enemy and we are his'n. No harm done so far, though, and if old man
+Calisaya, or whatever his name is, wants to act nasty we can send him
+and a few others along the road to glory with our gats. We'll travel the
+same road, of course, but we'll take company with us."
+
+"_Si_, senhor," Pedro agreed. "And besides your pistols we still have
+our machetes. Yet I believe Lourenço's words to the chief Monitaya will
+make all well. But I cannot help wondering--" He glanced at McKay.
+
+"I'm wondering, too, Pedro," said the captain. "It's hardly possible
+that these people know why we're here, and hardly likely that they have
+any interest in the Raposa. Lord knows I've nothing else up my sleeve.
+It's a riddle to me."
+
+It remained a riddle to the rest, for no explanation could be gleaned
+from the Mayorunas. At the first halt, which did not come until nearly
+sundown, the Americans discovered that one of the men in the fore canoe
+was Yuara, who had been lying in the bottom of the craft and sleeping
+all the afternoon. From him Lourenço attempted to get information as to
+the reason for Suba's enmity--but in vain. The tall fellow spoke not a
+word in reply, and his face remained unreadable.
+
+Camp was made, and by Yuara's direction the packs of the adventurers
+were restored to them. The rifles, however, remained under guard of
+savages appointed by the subchief's son. When the night meal was out of
+the way nothing remained but to seek hammocks and sleep, for further
+attempts at conversation by Lourenço met with the same silent rebuff
+from every cannibal addressed. None showed active hostility by either
+look or manner, but it was plain that between wild and civilized men
+stood a wall--a wall not too high for the jungle dwellers to leap over
+in deadly action if occasion should be given. Wherefore the whites held
+themselves aloof, said little, and slept early.
+
+"I am glad Yuara is with us," Lourenço said. "As he promised, he does
+not forget what was done for him. He will keep this band in control, and
+unless I am much mistaken he will tell Monitaya all he knows of us,
+which surely will not do us any harm. At any rate, we can sleep in
+safety to-night. And since it does no good to puzzle about what is gone
+by or to worry about what has not yet to come to pass, let us sleep
+now."
+
+"Ho-hum!" yawned Tim. "Renzo, ye spill more solid sense to the square
+inch than any feller I seen in a long time. We're here because we're
+here; to-day's dead and to-morrer ain't born yet, and li'l' Timmy Ryan
+hits the hay right now. Night, gents."
+
+So, surrounded by man eaters, the trailers of the Raposa slept far more
+securely than on any night down the river when their companions had been
+supposedly civilized Peruvians. Whether a watch was kept by their guards
+during the night they neither knew nor cared, since they had no
+intention of attempting escape.
+
+They awoke to find the men of Suba diminished in number by half. Yuara,
+deigning to speak for the first time since leaving the _maloca_,
+explained that the absent men had gone hunting for their breakfasts.
+Before long the hunters came straggling back, bearing monkeys and birds,
+which were divided among their companions. None of this meat was offered
+to the prisoners, who ate unconcernedly from their pack rations. Tim,
+after watching the Indians sink their sharp-filed teeth into broiled
+monkey haunches and tear the meat from the bones, snorted and turned his
+back to them.
+
+"Look like a gang o' bloody-faced devils gobblin' babies," he muttered.
+"I'll believe now they're cannibals, all right."
+
+So uncomfortably apt was his simile that the others grimaced and turned
+their eyes elsewhere until the savage meal was finished. Then their
+attention became riveted on a queer proceeding at the canoe wherein
+Yuara had journeyed yesterday.
+
+To the gunwales amidships two of the men fastened a couple of small
+crotched posts. In the forks was laid a pole, crosswise of the boat, and
+from this, by slender fiber cords, four slabs of wood were hung.
+Strolling down to the canoe, the travelers found that athwart its bottom
+had been laid a crosspiece supporting two shorter crotched posts,
+between which stretched another transverse pole; and from this pole in
+turn the lower ends of the four slabs had been suspended. Now the
+savages joined the tips of each pair of slabs by carved end sections,
+and the contrivance seemed to be complete--a sort of grate, its bars
+sloping at an angle of forty-five degrees.
+
+As the Americans eyed the arrangement in perplexity, one of the crew
+picked up from the bow of the canoe a pair of mallets the heads of which
+were wrapped in hide. With these he struck the slabs in rapid
+succession. Out rolled four notes of astonishing volume--the first four
+notes of the musical scale. Again and again he ran them over, then
+stopped. The deep tones thrummed away along the creek and died.
+
+"By George! a big xylophone!" Knowlton exclaimed, admiringly.
+
+"It sure talks right out loud," said Tim. "Lot o' class to these guys,
+at that. Bet this is their brass band, and we'll go rip-snortin' into
+the next town like we was on parade. Oughter have some flags to hang up
+in the boats, and mebbe a drum corps to help out. Wisht I had a tin
+whistle or somethin' and I'd join the orchester. I can toot a whistle
+fine."
+
+"My favorite instrument is the old-fashioned dinner horn," laughed
+Knowlton. "But I think you're wrong--this is some kind of signaling
+apparatus."
+
+"You have it right, senhor," Lourenço affirmed. "I have heard this sort
+of thing used, though I never before saw the instrument itself. Those
+notes will carry at least five miles, and the cannibals send messages by
+striking the bars in different order. This run which we have just heard
+is always used first, and no message is sent until a reply is received."
+
+"Bush telegraph," nodded McKay. "First call your operator and then shoot
+the message in code. Pretty ingenious for a bunch of absolute savages."
+
+Lourenço turned to Yuara and asked a question. Yuara curtly replied.
+
+"He says, Capitao, that this is to tell Monitaya we come. But we now are
+too far off for Monitaya's men to hear. The bars are made ready before
+starting so that they can be used as soon as we are within hearing. He
+says also that we start now."
+
+The Mayorunas already were entering their canoes. With cool deliberation
+the whites gathered up their equipment and settled themselves for the
+journey at whose end lay either life or death. The boat of Yuara
+started, and once more the flotilla was on its way.
+
+For an hour or more it swung on among the forested hills before the
+telegraph instrument was put to use. Then it paused, and the sonorous
+voice of the xylophone spoke to the jungle. A period of waiting brought
+no reply.
+
+The canoe moved on for a mile. Again the mallets beat the wood in the
+ascending scale of the call. And then, faint, mellow, far off, sounded
+the answer.
+
+While every man sat silent the bars boomed out their fateful news. Slow,
+brief, deep as a bell tolling a dirge, a reply rolled back. And with the
+solemnity of a funeral cortége the canoes once more moved on, unhurried,
+inexorable, the measured swing of the paddles beating like a pulse of
+doom.
+
+At length the crew of Yuara held their paddles. Yuara himself turned
+toward the second canoe and talked a minute. A signal to his men, and
+his boat proceeded. All the others remained where they were.
+
+"He goes to Monitaya to speak of us," said Lourenço. "He will return. We
+have only to wait."
+
+"Yeah," grunted Tim, disgustedly. "We'll wait till night if he takes as
+long to go through his rigmarole as he done yesterday. If I got to fight
+I want to hop to it, not set round in the shade o' the shelterin' palm
+while them guys are heatin' up the stewpot. This waitin' stuff gits my
+goat."
+
+"You might sing us a song, senhor, to pass the time," Pedro suggested,
+with a tight-lipped smile.
+
+"Say, I'll do that, jest to show these guys I don't give a rip. And
+while their ears are dazzled by me melody I'm goin' to git me holster
+unbottoned and me masheet kinder limbered up. Git set. Here it comes:
+
+ "Ol' Hindyburg thought he was swell,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ He made the kids in Belgium yell,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ But the Yanks come over with shot and shell
+ And Hindyburg he run like hell,
+ Rinkydinky-parley-voo!"
+
+Under cover of his outbreak, which made the savages clutch their weapons
+and glare at him in mingled suspicion and amazement, there proceeded a
+furtive loosening of pistols and machetes.
+
+"A noble sentiment, and more or less appropriate," grinned Knowlton.
+"But don't give them another spasm for a few minutes, or they may rise
+up and kill us all in self-defense. They're on the ragged edge now."
+
+"Aw, them guys dunno how to appreciate good singin'. But I should worry;
+I got me gat fixed now like I want it."
+
+Time dragged past. The Americans and Brazilians smoked and exchanged
+casual comments on subjects far removed from their present environment.
+The Mayorunas watched them with unceasing vigilance, as if expecting a
+sudden break for life and liberty. Their chief had intimated that
+Monitaya would kill these men; and now was their last chance to try to
+dodge death. But neither the black-bearded McKay nor any of his mates
+manifested the slightest concern. And at last the canoe of Yuara came
+back.
+
+It came, however, without Yuara himself. The son of Rana had remained at
+the _malocas_ ahead, whence he sent the command to advance. Closely
+hemmed in by the men of Suba, the white men's boat surged onward at a
+brisk pace. Around a bend in the creek it went, and at once the domain
+of Monitaya leaped into view.
+
+Two big tribal houses, each considerably larger than the one of Suba,
+rose pompously in a wide cleared space beside the stream. Before them,
+ranged in a semicircle, stood hundreds of Mayorunas--men, women,
+children--all silently watching the canoes of the newcomers. In the
+center of the arc, like the hub of a human half wheel, a small knot of
+men waited in aloof dignity, four of them adorned with the ornate
+feather dresses of subchiefs, backed by a dozen tall, muscular savages,
+each armed with a huge war club. Before all stood a powerful,
+magnificently proportioned savage belted with a wide girdle of squirrel
+tails, decked with necklaces of jaguar teeth and ebony nuts, crowned by
+plumes which in loftiness and splendor surpassed all other headgear
+present--the great chief Monitaya.
+
+At the shore, beside a row of empty canoes, Yuara was waiting. He
+mentioned for his men to bring their dugouts to the regular landing
+place, and when they obeyed he gave commands. Then he turned and walked
+toward Monitaya.
+
+"I go," stated Lourenço, rising. "You stay here until called. Yuara has
+told his men to leave all weapons in the canoes."
+
+He walked away after the son of Rana, and if any misgiving was in his
+heart it did not show in his confident step. Halting before the big
+chief, he began talking as coolly as if there were not the least doubt
+of welcome for himself and those with him. Monitaya gave no sign of
+recognition, of friendliness, or of enmity. Proud, statuesque, he stood
+motionless, his deep eyes resting on those of the Brazilian.
+
+"Sultry weather," remarked McKay.
+
+"Just so, Capitao," agreed Pedro, narrow eyed. "We shall soon know
+whether we shall have storm."
+
+"Indications are for violent thunder and lightning soon," Knowlton
+contributed. "See those husky clubmen awaiting? Looks as if a public
+execution were about to be pulled off."
+
+"Yeah. But say, ain't that chief a reg'lar he-man, though! No
+pot-bellied fathead like that there, now, Suby guy. Hope I don't have to
+drill him. I bet I won't, neither. He looks like he had brains."
+
+Hoping Tim was right, but dubious, all watched the progress of the
+parley. Lourenço evidently was stating his case in logical sequence,
+recalling to the chief's mind the time when he had led him to revenge
+against the Peccaries of Peru, then going on to tell of the arrival of
+the strangers and the object of their search. Yuara's sudden, quick
+glance at him showed that the Raposa had been mentioned for the first
+time. A little later his face became slightly sullen, and the watchers
+guessed that Lourenço was now referring in somewhat uncomplimentary
+terms to the treatment received in the _maloca_ of Suba. Soon after that
+the Brazilian ended his speech.
+
+In a deep, quiet tone Monitaya spoke first to Lourenço, then to one of
+his subchiefs. The bushman beckoned to his waiting companions. At the
+same time the subchief stepped out and called two names. As McKay,
+Knowlton, Tim, and Pedro arose and stepped ashore with the weaponless
+men of Suba, out from the great human arc came two men. All advanced
+toward the chief. And though the Americans were studying the central
+figures as they walked, they also noticed that the pair of Mayorunas who
+had been summoned were lame. One walked with a stiff knee, the other as
+if a whole leg was paralyzed.
+
+"Squad--halt!" muttered McKay. A step and a half and the four stood
+aligned and alert, two strides from Monitaya.
+
+The eyes of the chief dwelt long on McKay, and they were hard eyes.
+Without shifting his gaze he grunted a few words. The two crippled
+Indians stumped forward and stared into McKay's face. Through a long
+minute the Americans felt a sinister tension grow in the air about them.
+Then, slowly, the cripples turned about and faced their ruler. In the
+tones of men sure of themselves, they spoke one word.
+
+With the utterance of that word the tension broke. Through the long line
+of watching tribesmen ran a murmur. The clubmen relaxed from their ready
+poise. The subchiefs glanced at one another as if disappointed. And the
+stern face of Monitaya himself was transformed by a wide, friendly
+smile.
+
+A sweeping gesture and the cordial timbre of the chief's voice told the
+Americans plainly what Lourenço translated a moment later.
+
+"We are welcome, comrades. We shall sleep in the _maloca_ of Monitaya
+himself and a feast shall be made for us. Our lives have just hung on
+one word, but now that the word is spoken we are safe. I cannot tell you
+more now, for I do not wholly understand this matter myself as yet--but
+I shall learn. Now is the time, Capitao to give presents, if you have
+any for the chief."
+
+"I have. But our packs are in the canoe, and I'll be hanged if I'll make
+a beast of burden of myself at this stage of the game."
+
+"I will have all the packs brought up, Capitao. The men of Suba took
+them from us at their _maloca_; now they shall restore them before all
+these people."
+
+He addressed Monitaya affably, then spoke more brusquely to Yuara. That
+young man, whose previous austerity now had dissolved into open
+friendliness, uttered four words. Immediately his men returned to the
+canoes and brought up not only the packs, but the rifles.
+
+From his blanket roll McKay brought forth a cloth-wrapped package out of
+which he drew a half-ax, its blade gleaming dully under a protective
+coating of grease, which he swiftly swabbed off. From his haversack he
+produced a heavy chain of ruby-red beads. Under the bright sun the beads
+glowed like living things, and the glittering steel flashed back a
+dazzling beam. The two gifts together had cost considerably less than
+ten dollars in New York, but to the chieftain they were priceless
+treasures; and as McKay, with a formal bow, extended them to him, his
+face shone with delight. Yet he made no such greedy grab for them as had
+been displayed by Suba when tendered the knife. His acceptance was
+achieved with a calm dignity which brought a twinkle of approval to the
+eyes of the white men.
+
+In the same dignified manner he led the way to the _maloca_ which
+evidently was the older of the two and which had always been his home.
+The semicircle of his subjects broke up into a disorderly crowd which
+streamed after him and his guests or surrounded the men of Suba with
+holiday greetings. Within the tribal house the adventurers proceeded to
+the central space where burned the chief's fire. There Monitaya ordered
+certain hammocks removed to make room for those of the visitors. Soon
+the travelers were seated at ease in their hanging beds, their packs and
+rifles lying on the ground beneath them, while near at hand clustered
+groups of Mayorunas, staring at them in naïve curiosity.
+
+Pedro drew a long breath.
+
+"Senhores, that was a very close call," he declared. "As Lourenço says,
+our lives have hung on one word. What was that word, comrade?"
+
+"The word was, 'No,'" answered Lourenço. "Monitaya asked those two
+crippled men, 'Is this the man?' As you saw, they looked at the capitao,
+giving no attention to the rest of us. Then they said, 'No.' You will
+remember that the capitao was the one whom Suba also picked upon. As
+soon as Monitaya finishes talking with those men I shall ask him what
+all this means."
+
+The big chief was giving directions to a score of young fellows, who
+presently scattered to various parts of the house and accoutered
+themselves for hunting. Thereupon Lourenço approached Monitaya with the
+familiarity of former acquaintance, being received with a good-humored
+smile. For a time the two conversed. As they talked the smile of the
+ruler faded and his face grew dark, while into the Brazilian's voice
+came a wrathful growl. Finally both nodded. Lourenço returned to his
+hammock, frowning.
+
+"Capitao, it is all because of your black hair and beard. Through all
+the _malocas_ of the Mayorunas, far and near, has gone the word to watch
+for a big, black-bearded man who is neither a Brazilian nor a Peruvian,
+but of some country unknown to these people; and when such a man is
+caught, to kill him and his companions without mercy. And the reason for
+such a command is this:
+
+"For many moons the Mayorunas, especially those of the smaller and
+weaker _malocas_, have been losing women. From time to time sudden raids
+have been made by gangs of gun-carrying Peruvian Indians and
+_mestiços_--half-breeds--who shot down the defenders of the houses
+before they could reach their weapons, and carried off girls. This, of
+course, is nothing new here, for such things have happened occasionally
+for many years. But within the past five years there has been a
+difference in these attacks which has made them much more deadly.
+
+"These raids used to be made always at night, and they were few and far
+between. But of late they have come about also in the day, at times when
+almost all the men of the small _malocas_ were far out in the forest
+hunting meat and the women had little protection. Several chiefs have
+been killed by the raiders, who seemed to be acting according to an
+agreed plan, to be organized for this work, and to know when to strike
+and how to get away quickly. And what is more, the men who did this were
+not chance parties who came only to get women for themselves and then
+stayed away. The same men came back time after time.
+
+"A few of these were killed, but only a few; and all the dead were
+Peruvians. Being dead, they could tell nothing. But the Mayorunas felt
+that all these raids were directed by one mind. And they became sure of
+this when one captured girl escaped by killing a Peruvian with his own
+knife and returned to her own _maloca_. She said the raiders took her
+and the other girls to the big man with the black beard, who waited at a
+safe place a day's march from the tribal house.
+
+"A few weeks later another small _maloca_ several miles from here was
+attacked at night while two men of Monitaya were there, having stayed
+out too late on a hunting trip and taken refuge with their neighbors
+until day. Both these men were hit and crippled by bullets in the wild
+shooting that opened the attack. One was struck in the knee, the other
+in the lower part of the back. But both caught a glimpse of the leader's
+face and saw that he was the black-bearded man himself.
+
+"So you see, Capitao, why we have been near death. Suba and Monitaya
+both thought you were the man. We were lucky to escape alive from Suba,
+and still more lucky that hero were two men who knew the face of the
+blackbeard."
+
+"Schwandorf!" barked McKay.
+
+"Yes, Capitao, it must be the German--"
+
+"I know it's Schwandorf! And I know his game! He's a slaver!"
+
+"A slaver?"
+
+"That's it. Knew I'd seen that sneak before. He worked the same game in
+British Guiana eight years ago on a small scale. Had a gang of tough
+bush niggers from over in Dutch Guiana to do his dirty work. Stole
+Macusi girls--they're the best-looking Indians in B. G.--and sold them
+like cattle to gold miners. Cleaned up quite a pot before the English
+got on to him, but had to get out of the country on the hot foot--didn't
+have time to take his gold with him. His name wasn't Schwandorf over
+there, and he had no beard; he was thinner, too, and posed as a Russian;
+but he's the man. Must have made his get-away by the back door--down the
+Branco to the Amazon. Now he's running Mayoruna girls into Peru. He
+could sell them to rubber men or miners and make good money, eh,
+Lourenço?"
+
+"_Si._"
+
+"Sure. And that's why he wanted to kill off his Peruvians--they knew too
+much; probably were trying to bleed him for hush money. He must have a
+regular slave route and a gang of border cutthroats to do his
+raiding--men who don't go downriver. Murderer, slaver--wonder how many
+other crimes are on his soul."
+
+"Them two are enough," growled Tim. "And he 'ain't got no soul."
+
+"No soul," echoed Pedro. "You have said it, Senhor Tim. And if ever
+these people capture him he soon will have no body."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+FEVER
+
+
+In the _maloca_ of Monitaya a feast was in the making.
+
+Fires glowed all about the great room. Hunters came in, bearing birds or
+beasts which were placed before the tribal ruler for inspection and
+approval. Fishermen armed with tridents or crude harpoons arrived with
+sizable trophies of their skill. And at length two young bowmen advanced
+proudly with a freshly killed wild hog. After glancing at this the chief
+added to his usual nod a few words of praise which made the huntsmen
+grin with all their pointed teeth.
+
+Lourenço, squatting comfortably on a jaguar skin beside the lavishly
+decorated hammock of Monitaya, carried on a lazy-toned monologue which
+probably dealt with his various experiences since his last meeting with
+these people and which appeared to interest and amuse the chief. The
+others, lolling back in mingled fatigue and relief from tension, studied
+the interior of the place and watched the activities around them.
+
+As in the _maloca_ of Suba, the small forest of poles and hammocks
+seemed a higgledy-piggledy maze wherein was neither beginning nor end.
+Yet, as the newcomers took time to observe it, they presently found that
+the confusion was only apparent and that there existed an efficient and
+orderly arrangement. The hammocks, seemingly slung from any available
+pair of poles in utter disregard of one another, really were arranged in
+triangles. On the ground under the hanging beds lay woven grass mats and
+hides of the sloth and the jaguar; and in the space inclosed by each
+trio of hammocks burned a small fire. The hammocks were the beds of men,
+the mats and furs the couches of women and children, and each fire was
+the focal point of the family residing in that triangle.
+
+Above the hammocks, from transverse poles, were suspended the weapons of
+the men: the great bows, the long blowguns, the fighting spears whose
+deadly points now were sheathed in thick scabbards of grass, the
+unpoisoned fish spears and harpoons. From these poles also hung the
+quivers of arrows and darts and the small rubber-covered pouches wherein
+a little fresh poison was carried by warrior or hunter. Thus both the
+ground and the air were utilized, and by the compactness of the
+arrangement an entire family with its worldly goods, was enabled to live
+in a comparatively small space. Looking around the wide room and
+remembering the big half circle of Indians who had stood outside, the
+two ex-officers estimated that in this tribal house and its twin dwelt
+seven hundred people.
+
+Tim and Pedro, less interested in the Mayoruna domestic economy than in
+the Mayorunas themselves, were scanning the figures moving about in the
+reddish haze of smoke. Most of them were women, all nude and naïvely
+unconscious of any need of clothing. Like the men of the tribe, they
+bore the red and black rings and streaks on face and body; but, unlike
+the males, each wore a facial ornament in the shape of an oval piece of
+wood thrust through the lower lip. From time to time those near by
+glanced up from their work and gave the new men unmistakably friendly
+looks--particularly several young but well-grown girls who obviously
+were still unmated. In fact, these last smiled openly at the lithe,
+handsome Pedro, and red Tim was by no means overlooked.
+
+"I got me orders," said Tim, _sotto voce_, "and I'm danged if I crack a
+smile back at them girls. But I sure feel like grinnin'. Watch yourself,
+old-timer; they're tryin' to flirt with ye."
+
+Pedro, mindful of watchful eyes, turned his gaze to Tim's face before
+allowing himself to smile. Then he laughed.
+
+"Do not fear," he said. "My heart is still my own."
+
+"Same here. Specially when I remember these females would grin jest the
+same if them club swingers had spattered our brains all over the front
+yard awhile back. But I wisht sombody'd give the girls a nightie or
+somethin' to wear. I been around some and I seen quite a lot, but I
+ain't used to bein' vamped by a bunch of undressed kids with goo-goo
+eyes the size of a plate o' fish balls. I'm only a bashful country kid
+from N'Yawk."
+
+"Live and learn," chuckled Pedro. "And clothes really have nothing to do
+with modesty."
+
+"True for ye. Clothes is mostly a disguise, anyhow, specially with
+women, and an awful expense, besides. These guys are lucky, I'll say;
+they 'ain't got to buy their wives no fur coats or silk stockin's or
+nothin'. All the same, I got all I can do to hold me face straight when
+I see these li'l owl-eyes givin' us the glad look. I'd oughter stayed
+back in Remate de Males, where a feller can wink at a woman without
+gittin' all his pardners massacreed."
+
+"Perhaps it would not be fatal, now that we are guests of the chief. But
+it is best to take no chances."
+
+"Safety first. That's us. Grin at one of 'em and another might git sore
+because she missed out, and first thing ye know ye've started somethin'
+without meanin' to. Let's look at somethin' harmless--one o' them
+poisoned spears, f'r instance."
+
+At that moment Monitaya and Lourenço both arose, the chief to inspect in
+person the progress of the arrangements for the feast, the bushman to
+return to his companions with additional news.
+
+"Monitaya tells me," he said, "that his people have lost girls in other
+ways than by the murderous attacks of the gunmen. A number of young
+women who have gone into the bush near their _malocas_ to get urucu and
+genipapa, which they use to make the red and black body dyes, have
+disappeared. So have several who went to the creeks for their daily
+baths. Warriors who tried to trail them have found the footprints of a
+few men, but always lost them at water. The girls had been taken away in
+canoes. Even this tribe of Monitaya, which never has been attacked by
+night raiders because it is too strong, has not been safe from these
+stealthy woman stealings by daylight. Three girls have been taken from
+here within the past two moons, and others have disappeared from other
+_malocas_."
+
+"Hm! And Schwandorf hasn't been here recently," said Knowlton.
+
+"No. It must be that he has agents who work when he is not here, or else
+this is done without his knowledge. I have told Monitaya what I know of
+Schwandorf, and he agrees that the women are taken as slaves. I have
+also told him that when we return down the river we shall see that
+Schwandorf troubles the Mayorunas no more."
+
+"Excellent," McKay approved. "Have you asked him about the Raposa?"
+
+"Not yet. It does not pay to hurry business with these people. After the
+feast is out of the way I will talk further with him."
+
+No more was said for a time. The five lounged at ease, sniffing the
+savory odors arising from the reddish clay pots and pans in which fruit,
+fish, or fowl was frying in tapir lard, or meat was stewing. At length a
+number of tall, shapely women, apparently the handsomest of their sex in
+the tribe, laid a number of small mats in a semicircle on the ground
+before the chief, and placed thereon a steaming array of edibles. Furs
+were placed outside the line of mats. From somewhere appeared all four
+of the subchiefs, accompanied by Yuara. Thereupon Monitaya, with a
+smiling nod to his guests, squatted within the arc. Forthwith the
+visitors advanced in a body, disposed themselves comfortably on the
+furs, and assailed the viands with a vigor that brought a delighted grin
+to the face of their barbaric host.
+
+Fried bananas, tender fish, broiled parrot which was not so tender, a
+thick stew of somewhat odorous meat seasoned with tart-tasting herbs,
+roast wild hog, and other things at whose identity the whites could not
+even guess, all were chewed and washed down with generous draughts of a
+rather sour liquid resembling beer. Remembering Lourenço's previous
+warning, each man took care not to slight any portion of the meal or to
+show distaste with anything, whether it pleased the palate or not.
+Throughout the feast the tall women hovered near, bringing fresh
+supplies whenever a dearth of any edible appeared to threaten. And when
+at last the feasters were full to repletion Monitaya himself designated
+what he considered titbits to tempt them further.
+
+"Gosh! if I eat any more I'll bust, and I'm danged if I'll bust jest to
+satisfy this guy," asserted Tim. Wherewith he put one hand under his jaw
+and patted his stomach with the other, signifying that he was filled to
+the throat. Pedro lifted his elbows, dropped his jaw, and made motions
+as if gasping for air. The chieftain grinned widely. The grin became a
+chuckling when Tim, after a vain attempt to rise, lay back at full
+length on his rug and begged some one to make a cigarette.
+
+"Guess I'll have to follow Tim's example," confessed Knowlton. And he
+too stretched out. Pedro and Lourenço also sprawled back. McKay, after
+glancing around, compromised with his dignity by leaning on one elbow.
+The subchiefs and Yuara, with slight smiles, relaxed in various
+postures. Monitaya alone arose--not without some difficulty--and got
+into his hammock, where he beamed down at them.
+
+"Suppose this is a compliment to the chief," smiled McKay. "He thinks he
+has eaten us helpless."
+
+"Speakin' for li'l old Tim Ryan, that ain't no joke, neither. Lookit all
+the girls givin' us the laff. Who are them tall ones that's been rushin'
+the grub? Waitresses or somethin'?"
+
+"Those are the chief's wives," Lourenço explained.
+
+"Huh? Gosh! he's one brave guy, that feller! Two--four--six--eight--nine
+of 'em! Swell lookers, too. I s'pose he has his pick o' the whole crowd
+here."
+
+"He does not have to pick them Senhor Tim. They pick him. He and the
+subchiefs are the only ones who can take more than one wife. When a girl
+wishes to become the wife of the great chief or of a subchief, she works
+for months making feather dresses and necklaces and hammocks, and when
+these are done she gives them all to him. If he likes her well enough he
+accepts the gifts and allows her to be a wife to him."
+
+"Yeah? And she's flattered to death, I s'pose. Wisht they'd start
+somethin' like that up home, or, anyways, fix it so's a feller could get
+an even break. Way it is now, a feller blows in every dollar he's got,
+and then when he's fixin' to git the ring the girl leaves him flat for
+some other guy that 'ain't spent his dough yet. Yo-ho-hum! I'm goin' to
+take a snooze right there on the table. Wake me up, somebody, when the
+next mess call blows."
+
+And with no further ado he shut his eyes and drowsed.
+
+His companions lolled for some time, smoking and watching the family
+life of the ordinary members of the tribe, nodding now and then to some
+friendly-looking young fellow, but ignoring the mischievous glances of
+the girls. Monitaya himself lay back in his hammock and dozed. His
+wives, stepping nonchalantly among the strangers, cleared away the
+remnants of the feast by the simple process of eating them. Then they
+carried off the clay vessels.
+
+For another hour all hands rested. Then Monitaya sat up, stretched his
+big arms, looked casually around the house to see that all was well, and
+smiled down at his guests. Lourenço, rising to a squat, began a new
+conversation. After a while he turned to McKay.
+
+"The Red Bones and the Mayorunas are neither friendly nor hostile toward
+each other, and there is little communication between them," he
+reported. "From those _malocas_ to the town of the Red Bones is a
+journey of five long days, so the men of Monitaya hardly ever go there.
+
+"The Raposa whom we seek is known to the men of Monitaya, but he never
+has come here to the tribal houses. Hunters from this place have met him
+at times roving the wild forests, and some of the younger men fear him
+as the bad spirit of the jungle. The Mayorunas believe in two spirits or
+demons, one good and one bad, and the bad one is said to roam the
+wilderness, seeking lone wanderers, whom he kills and eats; the people
+sometimes hear this demon howling at night in the dark of the moon. So
+the young men have thought the Raposa might be this demon and have
+avoided him--it would do no good to try to kill a demon, and it would
+only make their own deaths more sure and horrible.
+
+"But the older men do not believe this. They say the wild man is of the
+Red Bone people, and that the reason why his bones are marked in red on
+his living body is that he is neither alive nor dead. If he were dead
+his body would be thrown into the water and left there until his bones
+were stripped by those cannibal fish, the piranhas, and then the bones
+would be dyed red and hung up in his hut, as is the custom among those
+people. If he were alive like other men he would not have those marks on
+his body, but would wear only the tribal face paint. The bone paint on
+him is a sign to all the _Ossos Vermelhos_ that he is alive, but dead,
+and is not to be treated like other men."
+
+"Crazy!" exclaimed Knowlton.
+
+"Yes. I think that is it. His body lives, but his mind is dead. Death in
+life."
+
+"Has he been seen lately?"
+
+The Brazilian repeated the question in the Indian tongue. The chief
+looked toward a certain hammock some distance off, called a name, raised
+an imperative hand. A slender savage came forward. To him the chief
+spoke, then to Lourenço, who, as usual, relayed his information.
+
+"This young hunter saw him six days ago while following a wild-hog trail
+far out in the bush toward the Red Bone region. He came on the fresh
+track of a man who was following the same hogs, and later he caught up
+with that man. It was the red-boned wild man, and the wild man was very
+lame, having a hurt foot. They stood and looked at each other, and then
+the wild man walked away, watching him closely and ready to shoot with
+his bow. After he disappeared in the forest this hunter heard a long,
+shrill laugh and words that sounded like 'Podavi.'"
+
+"Podavi--Poor Davy!" ejaculated Knowlton. "That's he, sure enough! Then
+he's near his own town now--he won't go far with a bad foot. We'd better
+move as soon as we can. Ask about an escort."
+
+Once more the bushman conversed with Monitaya. The ruler's smile
+disappeared. For some time he sat gazing out over the heads of all,
+evidently weighing matters in his mind. When he responded, however, it
+was without hesitation.
+
+"There is neither friendliness nor enmity between the two peoples, as
+has been said," Lourenço stated. "Our business among the Red Bones is
+our own affair, not that of Monitaya, and Monitaya will make no requests
+for us. But in order that we may go safely and return without harm he
+will send with us twenty of his best men. These men will have orders to
+protect us at all times, unless fighting is caused by our making a
+needless attack on the Red Bones. In that case the Mayorunas will do
+nothing to help us. They will only defend themselves."
+
+"Fair enough!" nodded McKay. "Tell him we'll start no fight. If any
+trouble comes it will be from the other fellows. We'll leave here
+to-morrow morning."
+
+Lourenço translated the promise into Mayoruna. But the chief seemed not
+to hear. His eyes had narrowed and were fixed on the face of Tim, who
+still lay on his back and was giving no attention to what went on.
+Following his look, the bushman gazed critically at the red-haired man.
+
+Tim's florid face had paled. His mouth was drawn and his eyes stared
+straight up, wide and glassy. Slowly he rolled his head from side to
+side.
+
+"Gee! Cap," he whispered, hoarsely, "I et too much. My head aches so I'm
+fair blind, and I'm burnin' up. Gimme some water."
+
+With a swift, simultaneous movement McKay and Knowlton put their hands
+on his forehead. Lourenço and Pedro leaned closer and peered into his
+face. All four glanced at one another. Pedro nodded. His lips silently
+formed one dread word:
+
+"Fever!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+FRUIT OF THE TRAP
+
+
+Heavy hypodermic doses of quinine, aided by Tim's rugged constitution
+and the fact that this was his first attack of the ravaging sickness of
+the swamp lands, pulled him back to safety within the next two days. To
+safety, but not to strength. Despite his stout-hearted assertions that
+he was ready to hit the trail and "walk the legs off the whole danged
+outfit," he was obviously in no condition to stand up under the grueling
+pack work that lay ahead. Wherefore, McKay, after consultation with the
+others of the party, and, through Lourenço, with Monitaya, gave him
+inflexible orders.
+
+"You'll stay here. Stick in your hammock until you're in fighting trim.
+Then watch yourself. Don't pull any bonehead plays that'll get these
+people down on you. Take quinine daily according to Knowlton's
+directions--he's written them on the box. If we're not back in a
+fortnight Monitaya will send men to find out why. If they find that
+we're--not coming back--you will be guided to the river, where you can
+get down to the Nunes place."
+
+"But, Cap--"
+
+"No argument!"
+
+"But listen here, for the love o' Mike! I ain't no old woman! I can
+stand the gaff! I'm goin' with the gang!"
+
+"You hear the orders!" McKay snapped, with assumed severity. "Think we
+want to be bothered with having you go sick again? You're out of shape
+and we've no room for lame ducks. You'll stay here!"
+
+Tim tried another tack.
+
+"Aw, but listen! Ye ain't goin' to desert a comrade amongst a lot o' man
+eaters--right in the place where I got sick, too. Soon's I git away from
+here I'll be all right--"
+
+"That stuff's no good," the captain contradicted, with a tight smile.
+"You didn't get fever here. It's been in your system for days. You got
+it back on the river. These people don't have it, or any other kind of
+sickness. I've looked around and I know. As for the man eaters, they're
+mighty decent folks toward friends. We're friends. You'll be under the
+personal protection of Monitaya, and his word is good as gold. It's all
+arranged, and you're safer here than you would be in New York."
+
+In his heart the stubborn veteran knew McKay was right, but, like any
+other good soldier ordered to remain out of action, he grumbled and
+growled regardless. To which the ex-officers paid about as much
+attention as officers usually do. They went ahead with their own
+preparations.
+
+"Be of good heart, Senhor Tim," Pedro comforted, mischievously. "You
+will not lack for company. The chief has appointed two girls to wait
+upon you at all times."
+
+"Huh? Them two tall ones that's been hangin' round and fetchin' things?
+Are they mine?"
+
+"Yes. They are quite handsome in their way, and strong enough to help
+you about if your legs remain weak. In that case you will probably be
+allowed to put your arms around them for support. I almost wish I could
+get fever, too."
+
+Tim's voice remained a growl, but his face did not look so doleful as
+before.
+
+"Grrrumph! I always seem to draw big females, and I don't like 'em.
+Gimme somethin' cute like them li'l' frog dolls in Paree--sort o'
+pee-teet and chick. Still, a feller's got to do the best he can. Mebbe
+I'll live till you guys git back."
+
+With which he availed himself of the prerogative of a sick man and
+grinned openly at the two comely young women who stood near at hand,
+awaiting any demand for services. They were not at all backward in
+reciprocating, and, despite the tribal paint and their labial ornaments,
+the smiles softening their faces made them not half bad to look upon.
+
+"'O death, where is thy sting?'" laughed Knowlton. "Be careful not to
+strain your heart while we're away, Tim."
+
+"Don't worry. It's a tough old heart--been kicked round so much it's
+growed a shell like a turtle. Besides, I seen wild women before I ever
+come to the jungle."
+
+Notwithstanding his apparent resignation, however, Tim erupted once more
+when his comrades shouldered their packs, picked up their guns, and
+spoke their thanks and good-by to Monitaya. He arose on shaky legs and
+desperately offered to prove his fitness by a barehanded six-round bout
+with his commanding officer. When McKay, with sympathetic eyes but gruff
+tones, peremptorily squelched him he insisted on at least going to the
+door to watch his comrades start the journey from which they might or
+might not return. Nor did he take advantage of his chance to hug the
+girls on the way.
+
+With one arm slung over the shoulders of a wiry young warrior who
+grinned proudly at the honor of being selected to help a guest of the
+great chief, he followed the departing column out into the sunshine,
+where the entire tribe was assembled. And when the stalwart band had
+filed into the shadows of the trees and vanished he stood for a time
+unseeing and gulping at something in his throat.
+
+Straight away along a vague path beginning at the rear of the _malocas_
+marched the twenty-four, the two northerners bending under the weight of
+their packs, the pair of Brazilians sweeping the jungle with practiced
+eyes, the score of Mayorunas striding velvet footed, resplendent in
+brilliant new paint and headdresses, armed with the most powerful
+weapons of their tribe, and loftily conscious of the fact that they were
+chosen as Monitaya's best. Savage and civilized, each man was fit,
+alert, formidable. Nowhere in the loosely joined chain was a weak link.
+
+Before the departure the Americans had been at some trouble to rid
+themselves of Yuara, who, with his men, had tarried at the Monitaya
+_malocas_ during Tim's sickness. While Knowlton was giving his ripped
+arm a final dressing he had calmly announced his intention of joining
+the expedition into the Red Bone country, and it had taken some skillful
+argument by Lourenço to dissuade him without arousing his anger. All
+four of the adventurers would gladly have taken him along had he not
+been hampered by his injury, but, under the ruthless rule barring all
+men not in possession of all their strength, he had to be left.
+
+Now, as on the previous jungle marches, the way was led by two of the
+tribesmen, followed by the Brazilians and the Americans, after whom the
+main body of the escort strode in column. The leader and guide, one
+Tucu, was a veteran hunter, fighter, and bushranger, who had been more
+than once in the Red Bone region and withal possessed the cool judgment
+of mature years and long experience; a lean, silent man who, though not
+a subchief, might have made a good one if given the opportunity. With
+him Lourenço had already arranged that a direct course should be
+followed, and that whenever dense undergrowth blockaded the way the
+machete men should take the lead.
+
+For some time no word was spoken. The path wound on, faintly marked, but
+easy enough to follow with Tucu picking it out. It was not one of the
+frequently used trails of the Monitaya people, but a mere _picada_, or
+hunter's track; yet even this had its pitfalls to guard the tribal
+house. Soon after leaving the clearing Tucu turned aside, passed between
+trees off the trail, went directly under one tree whose steep-slanting
+roots stood up off the ground like great down-pointing fingers, and
+returned to the path. All followed without comment.
+
+A considerable distance was covered before any further sign of the
+presence of ambushed death was shown by the savages. Then it came with
+tragic suddenness.
+
+Tucu grunted suddenly, and in one instant shifted his gait from the easy
+swing of the march to the prowl of a hunting animal. Behind him the line
+grew tense. The click of rifle hammers and of safeties being thrown off
+breech bolts blended with the faint slither of arrows being swiftly
+drawn from quivers. Eyes searched the bush, spying no enemy.
+
+Two more steps, and Tucu stopped, head thrust forward, eyes boring into
+something on the ground. The rest, taking care not to touch one
+another's weapons, crowded around and looked down at the huddled form of
+a man.
+
+A matted mass of black hair, a neck burned copper brown by sun, tattered
+cotton shirt and trousers, big, bare dirty feet, a rusty repeating rifle
+of heavy caliber--these were what they saw first. The man lay straight,
+his face in the dirt, his hands a little ahead as if he had been
+crawling forward at the moment of death. Tucu turned him on his back,
+revealing a blanched yellow-brown face which was proof positive of his
+race.
+
+"Peruvian," said Pedro.
+
+"What got him?" demanded Knowlton. "No wound on him."
+
+Lourenço questioned Tucu. The leader, who evidently knew just where to
+look, tore open the thin shirt at the left side and pointed to a tiny
+discoloration surrounding a red dot under the ribs. He muttered a few
+laconic words.
+
+"A blowgun trap," Lourenço explained. "The gun is set a little way
+beyond here. This man, sneaking along the path, broke the little cord
+which shot the gun. The poisoned dart struck in his side. He must have
+pulled out the dart, but he could not go far before his legs became
+paralyzed, and he fell. Then, still trying to crawl, he died."
+
+Pedro picked up the dead man's gun and worked the lever. The weapon was
+fully loaded and showed no sign of recent firing. Pedro coolly pumped it
+empty, gathered up the blunt .44 cartridges, and pocketed them for his
+own use.
+
+Tucu watched the proceeding in satirical approval. Then, leaving the
+body where it lay, he went stooping along the path ahead, his keen eyes
+searching the undergrowth. In a few minutes he returned with the
+blood-stained dart which, as Lourenço had guessed, the stricken prowler
+had pulled from his flesh and dropped. This he passed to a blowgun man.
+The latter carefully opened his poison pouch, redipped the point of the
+dart, held it a moment to dry in a shaft of sunlight, and slipped it
+into his dart case among a score of unused missiles.
+
+"No waste of ammunition here," was McKay's dry comment. "What happens to
+this corpse now?"
+
+Through Lourenço's mouth Tucu answered.
+
+"It will be left here until police warriors come from the _malocas_.
+Certain men travel the paths daily to inspect the traps. When they find
+this man they will cut off his hands and feet with their wooden knives
+and throw the rest aside to be eaten by the animals. He has not been
+dead long or he would have been devoured by some wild thing before we
+came. The trail travelers will set the trap again and take the hands and
+feet to the _malocas_, where they will be washed, cooked, and eaten."
+
+The faces of the Americans contracted slightly. A simultaneous thought
+made them flash startled glances at each other.
+
+"Tim--" Knowlton said, and paused. Lourenço smiled.
+
+"No, Senhor Tim will not be expected to eat man meat," he assured them.
+"I thought of that before we left--one never knows when these traps will
+yield human flesh. So, without letting Monitaya know why I spoke, I told
+him you North Americans believed the flesh of an enemy to be poisonous,
+and that you would not eat it on that account. Monitaya will remember
+that."
+
+"By George! you have a head on your shoulders, old scout! I was worried
+for a minute. If they offered Tim a broiled foot or a stewed hand he'd
+go for his gun."
+
+Briefly Tucu spoke. The Mayorunas separated and went into the forest,
+seeking any sign of other enemies.
+
+"Queer that this chap should come here alone--if he was alone," added
+Knowlton. "Suppose he's the fellow that's been swiping stray girls? Or a
+spy?"
+
+"Neither, I think, senhor. The girls were captured by more than one man,
+and I doubt if this one had been here before. Probably he was one of
+those lone prowlers of the bush whose hand is against every man. He is a
+half-breed, as you see, and came, perhaps, to steal a girl for himself.
+The jungle is well rid of him."
+
+"Uh-huh. Guess you're right. Say, I'd like to see how that blowgun trap
+operates. Can't understand what blows the dart when nobody is here."
+
+"I do not know, either, senhor. Perhaps Tucu will show us."
+
+The savage guide, after a moment's hesitation, pointed along the trail
+and stalked away, the others at his heels. At a spot some fifteen yards
+farther on he turned into the bush at the right, walked a few paces away
+from the path, turned again sharply to the left, advanced once more, and
+halted. Before them, not easy to discern in the masking brush, even
+though they were looking for it, hung the long barrel of the blowgun,
+lashed to a couple of small trees and pointing toward the path.
+
+Tucu stepped to the mouthpiece of the slender tube and pointed to a
+sapling, just behind and in line with it, which had been cut off about
+shoulder-high from the ground. From the tip of this thin trunk dangled a
+wide strip of bark. The savage, having indicated this, stood as if the
+action of the device were perfectly clear.
+
+"Too deep for me," admitted McKay, after a puzzled study of the tube and
+the trunk. The others nodded agreement. Lourenço confessed to the Indian
+the blindness of all.
+
+Thereupon Tucu bent the sapling far over and released it. As it sprang
+erect the bark strip slapped the end of the gun. Also, the watchers saw
+something hitherto unnoticed--a thin, flexible vine attached to the top
+of the thin stump. Lourenço's face showed understanding.
+
+"See, comrades, this is it: The little tree is bent far down and held by
+the long vine. The vine passes around a low branch, then up over other
+limbs, and out across the path, where it is fastened to a root near the
+ground. A man following the path breaks the vine. The little tree then
+flies up and the bark sheet strikes the wide mouthpiece of the gun. The
+air forced into that mouthpiece by the blow of the bark shoots the
+little dart. The dart does not fly as hard as if blown by a man, but it
+goes swiftly enough to pierce the skin of anything except a tapir. As
+soon as the poison is in the blood the work is done."
+
+"It sure is done," Knowlton echoed, thinking of the short distance
+covered by the dead Peruvian after passing this spot. "Mighty ingenious
+apparatus. These people are no fools, I'll say."
+
+"You say rightly," Pedro muttered. Turning, they went out to the path,
+looking askance at the thin death tube as they passed along it.
+
+The scouting Mayorunas returned, having found nothing. Tucu resumed his
+place at the head of the line. Without a backward glance at the body
+sprawling in the trail at the rear, the column swung into its usual
+gait.
+
+The Americans, silent before, were silent again. They had looked for the
+first time on the work of the Mayoruna traps; had observed the
+cold-blooded way in which the Indiana handled the still form on the
+ground; had visualized the forthcoming mutilation of that body and the
+resultant cannibal rites. More vividly than ever before they realized
+that these men and Monitaya himself were relentless creatures of the
+jungle, and that, despite the present existent friendliness, there
+yawned between them and their barbarous allies an impassable gulf.
+
+For the moment the jungle itself seemed a poisonous green abyss of
+creeping, crawling, sneaking death. And though they had faced death too
+often in another land to fear it in any form, though they marched on
+with unwavering step, their eyes were somber as in their hearts echoed
+the last appeal of the man they had left behind them:
+
+"Ye ain't goin' to desert a comrade amongst a lot o' man eaters--"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+THE RED BONES
+
+
+Four days the expedition tramped steadily onward through the rugged
+labyrinthine hills. Four nights its members slept in utter exhaustion.
+Neither by day nor by night was any sign of the Raposa seen, nor of any
+other human being.
+
+So tired from the constant struggle did the Americans become that their
+jaded brains began to picture the mysterious wild man as a mere
+legendary creature, which they never would find even though they
+searched the inscrutable forests until the end of time. Yet when, on the
+fifth day, Tucu informed them that they now were nearing the principal
+settlement of the Red Bones, the announcement cheered them as if they
+were about to enter a civilized city and there meet David Rand safe and
+sane.
+
+Not that any chance of striking his trail had been neglected in the
+meantime. It was thoroughly understood that if he were met anywhere he
+was to be made prisoner, and that thereafter the back trail should be
+taken. Lourenço had impressed on Tucu the fact that the whole journey
+had for its object the finding of the wild man, and that he must not be
+killed if found. Since the Indians were not in the habit of hunting so
+assiduously anyone but a bitterly hated foe, it is quite possible that
+they misunderstood the spirit of the quest and believed the "dead-alive"
+prowler would, if captured, undergo some extremely unpleasant treatment
+at the hands of the white men. But so long as it was made clear that the
+Raposa must be caught alive, if caught at all, Lourenço did not trouble
+about what the Mayorunas might surmise.
+
+Now, as the end of the long, pathless trail approached, arose a question
+of which McKay had previously thought but had not spoken--how he was to
+converse with the Red Bone chief. Lourenço asked Tucu whether the Red
+Bones spoke the Mayoruna tongue. Tucu replied that they did not. He
+added, however, that the languages were not so dissimilar as to prevent
+some sort of understanding being reached between members of the two
+tribes. The veteran bushman nodded carelessly.
+
+"When the tongue fails, Capitao, the hands still can talk," he said. "It
+takes more time and work, that is all. Ah, here is a path!"
+
+It was so. For the first time since leaving the Monitaya region a path
+lay under their feet. And for the first time Tucu and his fellow
+Mayorunas, glancing along that faint track, showed hesitation.
+
+"Why the delay?" snapped McKay.
+
+"They suspect traps. I will go ahead and feel out the way. I have done
+it before on other paths."
+
+After a few words to Tucu, Lourenço cut a long, slim pole. With this in
+hand he preceded the column, walking slowly, pausing sometimes,
+continually prodding the path, studying it with unswerving gaze as he
+progressed. The thin but rigid feeler, strong enough to tip the cover of
+any pit or to spring any concealed bow or blowgun, was at least ten feet
+long, and between the scout and the head of the line Tucu preserved
+another ten-foot interval. Progress was necessarily slow, but it was
+sure.
+
+In this fashion they advanced perhaps half a mile. Not once did they
+have to leave the path, but Lourenço's caution did not diminish. Rather,
+it increased as they neared the Red Bone town. At length another path
+joined the one on which they were traveling. Here Lourenço paused for
+minutes, inspecting with extreme care the ground and the bush.
+
+Suddenly he cocked his head as if listening. Then, with a backward
+motion of the hand to enjoin silence, he faced down the branch path and
+stood calmly waiting.
+
+To those behind came a light rustle of leaves and a scuffle of moving
+feet; a sudden cessation; then Lourenço's voice speaking to some one
+concealed behind the intervening undergrowth. His tone was slow, quiet,
+easy--the tone which, even if the words were not understood, would
+soothe suspicious and abruptly alarmed minds. After another short
+silence he resumed talking, pointing carelessly to the place behind him
+where stood the silent file of Mayorunas. A guttural voice replied. A
+head peered cautiously from the edge of the bush, stared fixedly at
+Tucu, and withdrew. The voice sounded again. Immediately three Indians
+stepped into view, poised for action. Another interval of staring, and
+they relaxed.
+
+"Come forward, comrades," said Lourenço. They came, halting again at the
+junction of the trails. Tucu spoke to one of the newcomers, who scowled
+as if only partly understanding, but grunted some sort of answer. Those
+behind the Mayoruna leader craned their necks and scanned the Red Bone
+men, who continued to eye with evident misgiving the tall-bonneted
+cannibals and the broad-hatted pair of whites.
+
+Man for man, these Red Bones were in every way inferior to the
+emissaries of Monitaya. Their bodies were more gaunt, their skins more
+coppery, their foreheads lower, and their expressions much less
+intelligent. Furthermore, they wore not even the bark-cloth clouts which
+formed the sole body covering of the Mayorunas--they were totally naked.
+The one point of similarity between the two tribes was that the faces of
+the Red Bone men were streaked with red dye. But the facial design was
+much different: two short transverse stripes on the forehead, and three
+lines on each cheek, running from the eyes, the end of the nose, and the
+corners of the mouth, straight back to the ears. Studying those visages,
+Knowlton and McKay recalled Schwandorf's statement that these people not
+only ate human flesh, but tortured prisoners of war. It was easy to
+believe that he had told truth.
+
+McKay, standing behind Pedro, shifted his position a bit. At once the
+eyes of the three Red Bones widened and riveted on his face. Heretofore
+they had seen only his hat and eyes, the rest being hidden from them by
+Pedro's neck and an intervening palm tip. Now that they saw his
+black-bearded jaw, they started slightly and peered intently at him.
+
+"I think, Capitao, you would do well to shave," Pedro suggested, with a
+smile.
+
+"'Fraid so," the captain granted. "Black beards evidently are _de trop_
+in the jungle social set at present."
+
+But then one of the Red Bone men came forward, still squinting narrowly,
+and his expression was not hostile. In fact, it was more friendly than
+it had yet been. After a closer scrutiny, however, his face turned
+blank. Slowly he stepped back and muttered something to his companions.
+
+At this Pedro's eyes narrowed speculatively. But his expression did not
+change, and he said nothing.
+
+A lengthy conference took place between Lourenço and Tucu on the one
+hand and the three Red Bone tribesmen on the other; a difficult talk in
+which words and sign language both were used and frequently repeated.
+Eventually an understanding was reached. The three stepped back, picked
+up some small game which they had dropped on beholding Lourenço,
+returned, and led the way along the path. Lourenço cast aside his poke
+stick and resumed his usual place in the column. The whole line moved
+ahead at a much smarter gait than before.
+
+"Note--this path is not mined," thought Knowlton.
+
+This proved true. Moreover, the way now was more broad and firm, so that
+travel on it was much easier. After twenty minutes of rapid tramping it
+debouched abruptly into a cleared space. Here all halted.
+
+Before them lay a town of small, low huts, crowded closely together in
+two parallel rows which curved together at one end. The other end lay
+open, giving access to a sizable creek whereon floated canoes. At the
+water's edge, along the crude street studded with charred stumps, and
+among the damp-looking huts moved naked figures of men and women
+occupied with various sluggish activities. Some of the men already had
+spied the invading party and were standing at gaze.
+
+"Comrades, we have reached the end of our trail," said Lourenço, running
+a cool eye over the place. "Now all we have to do is to find your Raposa
+and get him and ourselves away alive."
+
+"That's all," Knowlton echoed, unsmiling. "The reception committee is
+forming now." And with the words he unbuttoned his holster.
+
+A shrill yell had run along the double line of houses, and out into the
+stumpy street now swarmed men armed with hastily seized weapons. Hands
+pointed, confused exclamations sounded, and a compact detachment of
+warriors came jogging toward the newcomers. The three guides drew away
+from the Mayorunas. The latter promptly fitted arrows to their bows,
+inserted darts in their blowguns, lifted spears or clubs, and with eyes
+glittering awaited whatever might befall.
+
+A couple of rods away the Red Bones halted, bows ready. A hatchet-faced
+savage who seemed to be in command rasped something at the three
+hunters, who quickened their pace toward him. Tucu strode out four paces
+beyond his own men and stopped. Then both parties waited while the
+hunters reported what they knew to the hatchet-face.
+
+"What did you tell them, Lourenço?" asked McKay.
+
+"That we came on a friendly visit to the chief, for whom we had
+important words."
+
+"Nothing of the Raposa?"
+
+"No. They wasted much time arguing that we must tell them all our
+business and let them inform the chief, while we were to stay back on
+the path until permitted to enter the town. We told them our talk was
+for the chief alone, and that we should come here whether they liked it
+or not. So, having no choice, they led us in."
+
+McKay made no comment. None was necessary. Furthermore, his steady eyes
+had caught a simultaneous head movement of the Red Bones--a peering
+movement, as if all were seeking some one man among the new arrivals.
+Pedro observed this. He spoke softly to Lourenço.
+
+"Lourenço, tell Tucu to say to the Red Bones that we come led by a
+black-bearded white man; that this blackboard comes from the far-off
+country where all men wear black beards; that the blackbeard will speak
+with the chief only."
+
+The Americans looked queerly at the young Brazilian, as did Lourenço
+himself. But without question Lourenço obeyed. Calling to Tucu, he gave
+the message. Tucu moved his head slightly, but gave no other sign of
+having heard.
+
+"Now, Capitao, step forward a little and show yourself more clearly,"
+prompted Pedro.
+
+With another puzzled glance McKay did so. He saw that the brown eyes of
+the younger man held a dancing gleam, but he could not read the thought
+behind those eyes. Yet he noticed that as soon as he stepped out the Red
+Bones all focused their gaze on him. More than that, the spokesman of
+the three hunters pointed at him and said something to the
+sharp-featured leader.
+
+Now that leader came forward alone. Six feet from Tucu he halted again
+and talked in a growling tone. The Mayoruna leader, cool and dignified,
+made answer. After a somewhat protracted exchange Tucu turned his head
+and motioned to Lourenço, who went forward, listened, replied shortly,
+and came back. Meanwhile the first detachment of Red Bones had been
+strongly reinforced by others who had come up singly or in small
+parties. Now the expedition was outnumbered at least four to one by
+hard-faced, brute-mouthed, naked men ready, if not eager, for trouble.
+
+"The Red Bone says we shall see the chief," Lourenço stated. "At first
+he said only you, Capitao, should go to him. Then he insisted that we
+all lay down our arms. Tucu has told him we lay down our arms for no man
+or men; that we come in peace--otherwise there would be many more of us;
+that we leave in peace unless the Red Bones themselves bring on a fight.
+In that case, though we are few, there lies behind us the power of
+Monitaya, and behind Monitaya the power of the Mayoruna chiefs, all
+strong enough to wipe the Red Bone nation off the face of the ground."
+
+"Strong stuff, that," said Knowlton.
+
+"Strong, yes. But no stronger than is needed to impress these people.
+Tucu intends to prevent trouble if he can; and often the best way to
+prevent trouble is to make the other man realize what may happen to him
+if he starts it. Also he has his orders from Monitaya to stay with us at
+all times, and he will follow that order even if you, Capitao, try to
+change it. Now we go together to the chief."
+
+He nodded to Tucu, who grunted to the Red Bone leader. The hatchet-face
+in turn shouted something to the men behind. Slowly they drew apart into
+two groups.
+
+"You are the leader, Capitao," suggested Lourenço. Promptly McKay
+marched forward, head up, eyes front, face bleak. The rest followed,
+Tucu falling in behind McKay when the captain passed him. Preceded by
+the Red Bone spokesman, the line advanced between the two bodies of
+copper-skins and swung along the evil-smelling avenue to its upper end.
+
+There, in the very center of the loop joining the two rows of huts, was
+a house twice as big as any other. From its doorway the inhabitant of
+that house could watch the whole life of the Red Bone town. Obviously it
+was the home of the chief. At its door a pair of warriors stood guard,
+but of the ruler himself there was no sign.
+
+Ten paces from it the thin-featured leader stopped and motioned to McKay
+to halt. As the captain and the line behind him did so he stalked
+onward, passed through the doorway, and faded from sight in the dimness
+beyond. With one accord the members of the visiting party looked around
+them.
+
+The street behind now was filled with the mass of Red Bone warriors who
+had trooped after the column. All exit in that direction was blockaded.
+But the ex-officers noted that between the houses were spaces each wide
+enough to hold a couple of men, and in an undertone McKay gave defensive
+instructions to Lourenço.
+
+"If fighting starts, have the Mayorunas take cover along these houses on
+each side. We who have guns will use the chief's house. We can sweep the
+whole street from there. You two fellows capture the chief alive if
+possible. He'll be more useful as a hostage than as a corpse."
+
+Pedro beamed approval of this swiftly formed plan. Lourenço muttered to
+Tucu, who in turn passed the word down the line. Then all stood waiting.
+
+Presently the Red Bone man came out. He shouted a name. From the doorway
+near at hand, where he had been standing and peering at the small but
+formidable body of newcomers, an old man now stepped forth and advanced,
+limping a little, to the hatchet-face. The latter talked briefly to him,
+then to Tucu. The Mayoruna leader pointed to Lourenço. The old man spoke
+to the Brazilian, who answered at once. Thereupon the wizened old fellow
+entered the chief's house.
+
+"That old man speaks the Mayoruna tongue quite well, Capitao," said
+Lourenço. "He says you and I shall enter and talk through his mouth with
+the chief. All others remain outside, and we must leave our rifles
+here."
+
+"All right. Glad we can leave Tucu out here to control these fellows.
+Here, Merry." He passed his rifle to Knowlton. Pedro took Lourenço's
+gun. With packs still on their backs the chosen men proceeded to the
+doorway and entered the house where waited the ruler of the Red Bone
+tribe.
+
+Behind them the line settled into easier postures of waiting. The Red
+Bones, though so compactly ranged as to cut off any chance of escape,
+held their distance, obviously neither inclined to fraternize nor ready
+to precipitate conflict by crowding. Thus, while keeping their ears open
+for any sound of a concerted movement from behind, the visitors could
+use their eyes to inspect the huts nearest them.
+
+In some of these, women stood near the doorways, staring with unwinking
+absorption at the light-skinned, athletic men outside who were so much
+better to look upon than their own mates. The Mayorunas returned the
+stares with the brief glances of men accustomed to noticing everything
+but totally uninterested--as well they might be, for these poorly
+shaped, heavy-mouthed, mud-skinned females were not to be compared with
+their own women. Knowlton and Pedro, too, looked them over, but with the
+same expression as if inspecting a family of lizards. Then they glanced
+into other huts now empty of life, and in a couple of these they saw
+rigid red-hued objects hanging from the roofs.
+
+"The red bones of the dead, senhor," Pedro muttered, and his blond
+companion, peering again at the sinister decorations, nodded without
+reply.
+
+Voices came to them from the chief's house, talking with droning
+deliberation. Evidently no cause for friction had yet arisen. They let
+their eyes rove on beyond the guarded doorway, to pause at a house a
+short distance away at the right. There stood a clubman, who leaned idly
+on his weapon, but showed no intention of moving from his place. The
+door of that house was closed. Not only closed, but barred on the
+outside.
+
+"Hm! Looks like a jail," said Knowlton. Pedro smiled, but an intent look
+came into his face and he studied the closed house.
+
+Suddenly both started. At one corner of the house, unseen by the
+clubman, a head had cautiously slipped forth. For only an instant it
+hung there before dodging back out of sight. But both the watching men
+had seen that the face, though half masked by long dark hair and a thick
+beard, was much lighter than that of any Red Bone savage. And in the
+hair above one ear was a white streak.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+THE RAPOSA
+
+
+McKay and Lourenço, in a broad, low, musty-smelling room, faced a man
+who stood and a man who sat. The man who stood was the old savage who
+could talk in the Mayoruna language. The man who sat was the chief of
+the Red Bones.
+
+In his first words to the visitors the old interpreter revealed that the
+name of the Red Bone ruler was Umanuh. Later on Lourenço informed McKay
+that in the Tupi _lengoa geral_ of the Amazonian Indians (which,
+however, was not spoken by this tribe) the word "umanuh" meant "corpse."
+And whatever the name may have signified in the language of the Red
+Bones, its Tupi definition fitted with disagreeable precision. For
+Umanuh was a living cadaver.
+
+Gaunt, gray skinned, lank haired, hollow of cheek and eye, with thin,
+cruel lips so tight drawn that the teeth behind seemed to show through,
+ribs projecting, clawlike hands resting on bony knees, his whole frame
+motionless as that of a man long dead, the head man of the bone-dyeing
+tribe was the antithesis of both the piggish Suba and the herculean
+Monitaya. Only his eyes lived; and those eyes were cold and merciless as
+those of a snake or a vulture. A man who ruled by ruthless cunning, who
+would gaze unmoved on the most ghastly tortures, who would devour human
+flesh with ghoulish relish--such was the creature who sat in a red-dyed
+hammock and contemplated the impassive face of McKay.
+
+"Umanuh, great chief, eater of his enemies, with fangs of the jaguar and
+wisdom of the great snake, awaits the greeting of the one-whose-hair
+grows-from-his-mouth," droned the old mouthpiece of the chief.
+
+"Makkay, leader of the fighting men of the Blackbeards, whose voice is
+the thunder and whose hand spits lightning and death, gives greeting to
+Umanuh," responded Lourenço in a like droning tone.
+
+A pause. Umanuh gave no sign of life. McKay, straight and cold, met the
+unwinking stare of the chief with his own chill gray gaze. Between the
+two who spoke not was a testing of wills.
+
+"Makkay brings with him none of the Blackbeard warriors," pointed out
+the interpreter, who seemed to know his master's thought. "He comes with
+only the jungle men of light skins."
+
+"Makkay needs none of his own warriors when he comes in peace. If he
+came in war the terrible Blackbeards with him would cause the whole
+forest to fly apart in smoke and flame. Since he walks in peace to visit
+his friend Umanuh, of whose wisdom he has heard, he brings only his
+friends the Mayorunas, who are friends also to the men of the Red
+Bones."
+
+Another pause. The old man now seemed somewhat uncertain of himself. The
+silent duel between McKay and Umanuh went on. At length the chief's eyes
+flickered a trifle. In a hissing whisper he said something.
+
+"The men of the Mayorunas never come to this country unless seeking
+something," the interpreter promptly spoke up. "What do they seek?"
+
+"Only that which Makkay seeks."
+
+Then, turning to the captain, the Brazilian added: "Capitao, we now have
+reached the point to talk business. Have you any presents? And is it
+your wish to give them now or later?"
+
+"I have a few things. But I'll give them later--if at all. This chief is
+hostile. Tell him what we're here for and see how he acts."
+
+"It has come to the ears of Makkay," Lourenço informed the man of
+Umanuh, "that a man of the Blackbeards lives among the men of the Red
+Bones. Makkay would see that man."
+
+Again the interpreter awaited his master's voice before answering.
+
+"No man of the Blackbeards is among the men of Umanuh," he then denied.
+
+"If he is not among them he is near them," was Lourenço's certain reply.
+"He has been seen both by other Blackbeards and by the Mayorunas. I,
+too, have seen him. He bears on his bones the sign that his mind is out
+of his skull. His eyes are green and his hair touched with white. Umanuh
+and his men know well that I speak true."
+
+The pause this time was longer than before.
+
+"There was such a man, but he is gone."
+
+"Then Makkay asks his friend Umanuh to find that one. A chief so wise
+can easily find him where others would see only water and mud."
+
+"If he could be found what would the great Blackbeard leader do with
+him?"
+
+Lourenço thought swiftly. To say the Raposa was McKay's friend would do
+little good. Friendship meant nothing to this unfeeling brute. Therefore
+the bushman insinuated something which his cruel mind could comprehend.
+
+"If a Red Bone man abandoned his people and went to another tribe, what
+would Umanuh do to him when he was found?"
+
+A cold glimmer in the chief's eyes showed that he thought he understood.
+Moreover, he would much like to see what sort of torture this hard-faced
+Blackbeard would use on a fugitive. It might be something even more
+fiendish than his own pastimes. So the next reply came promptly.
+
+"If that man is found the blackbeard will pay for him?"
+
+"There are gifts of friendship for Umanuh," Lourenço nodded.
+
+"The Blackbeard leader will pay more than the other Blackbeard?"
+
+Lourenço almost blinked. What other Blackbeard? The Raposa himself? But
+the Brazilian repressed his bewilderment.
+
+"Makkay will first see the man to make sure he is the Blackbeard whom
+Makkay wants," he dodged. "Then he will pay well."
+
+"Umanuh will see the gifts now."
+
+"The gifts cannot be shown now. They are packed away. When Makkay has
+looked on the man Umanuh shall look on the gifts."
+
+Another eye duel between the chief and McKay. As before, the captain's
+eye proved the harder.
+
+"Umanuh will think of the matter. Night comes. The man hunted by the
+Blackbeard is not here. The Blackbeard and his men may stay to-night
+across the water. When the sun rises again Umanuh will talk further."
+
+"It is well. Let Umanuh tell his men to stay on this side of the water,
+that we may not mistake them in the night for enemies."
+
+When Umanuh had hissed assent the old man stepped to the doorway and
+summoned the hatchet-faced warrior. To him instructions were given. He
+turned and carried the commands to the tribesmen.
+
+"Makkay wishes Umanuh peaceful rest," said Lourenço. With which he
+flicked his eyes toward the door. McKay, with stiff stride, stalked out.
+Lourenço followed. Both felt the snake eyes of the cadaverous chief
+dwelling on their backs.
+
+To the waiting Knowlton, Pedro, and Tucu it was briefly explained that
+preliminary negotiations had been concluded and that camp now would be
+made on the farther side of the creek. Tucu, observing that the Red Bone
+mass behind was dividing again to let the visitors pass through, gave
+the word to his men. The column began to move out, marching in reverse
+order. Pedro muttered swiftly to his partner.
+
+"Lourenço, see that house with the barred door where the clubman stands
+guard. Remember where it is."
+
+The other swept the loop in one quick glance, located the house, and
+fell into step without a word, the guarded structure fixed on his brain
+as clearly as if he had studied it for an hour. Walking down the
+malodorous street, he said, quietly, "There will be a small moon
+to-night."
+
+"You are becoming a reader of the mind, comrade," Pedro grinned. No more
+was said.
+
+Down to the shore of the creek trooped the party, followed closely by
+the hatchet-face and a score of tribesmen. The whites and the Mayorunas
+got into half a dozen of the waiting canoes and paddled across. In other
+dugouts the Red Bone men also crossed, but they did not land. As soon as
+the borrowed boats were empty the tribesmen took them in tow and
+returned to their own bank. The visitors were left on a partly cleared
+shore, separated from their uncordial hosts by some twenty yards of deep
+water. Not one canoe was left them. Furthermore, the Red Bones now began
+activities indicating an intention to establish a night-long watch on the
+irside of the stream.
+
+"Taking no chances of our raiding them to-night, or even snooping around
+town," said Knowlton. "Keeping everything in their own hands. Reckon
+we'd better post sentries to-night, Rod, just to keep an eye on that
+outpost of theirs."
+
+McKay nodded.
+
+"We four will take it in turn," he agreed. "Lourenço--Pedro--you--I.
+Three-hour tours."
+
+"Pardon, Capitao," interposed Pedro. "It would be well to change that.
+You two senhores take the first two watches."
+
+"Why?" frowned McKay.
+
+"Because Lourenço and I wish to go visiting. We are much smitten with
+the charms of the ladies here."
+
+The captain's frown deepened, but he studied Pedro's devil-may-care face
+keenly before answering.
+
+"Humph! What's up your sleeve? Out with it!"
+
+Pedro glanced around him and across the water. The tribesmen, both of
+the Mayoruna force and of the Red Bones, were watching the colloquy.
+
+"We are watched, Capitao. Let us make camp now and talk later. These men
+do not understand our words, but we cannot tell what they may see in our
+faces. Now speak harshly, as if I had been insolent."
+
+McKay did. He thundered at the young bushman as if about to do him
+bodily injury.
+
+Pedro retreated a step, as if taken aback by the storm he had unleashed.
+When McKay stopped he replied: "Excellent, Capitao. Now I go to start
+work on the _tambo_."
+
+He trudged away with a sullen gait. On both sides of the stream the
+Indians muttered and looked at the tall commander with increased
+respect. Truly, the Blackbeard was a fierce ruler and one who must not
+be angered; he had the voice of a great gun and the temper of a jaguar.
+That other man was lucky to have his head still on his shoulders!
+
+When the camp was made at the edge of the bush and the four comrades
+were grouped in their hammocks, Lourenço narrated in detail the
+conversation with Umanuh. Knowlton reciprocated with news of what he and
+Pedro had seen at the corner of the barred house.
+
+"I almost jumped after him, Rod," he admitted. "Had all I could do to
+hold myself. But I knew anything sudden like that might start war right
+there, and we wouldn't have a Chinaman's chance of getting away with
+him, so I stood fast. But he's here, and old Umanuh's a liar by the
+clock if he says otherwise."
+
+"He is the same man we saw in the forest, Lourenço, or my eyes are
+twisted," added Pedro.
+
+"Hm! Something very fishy here," commented McKay.
+
+"Very fishy indeed, Capitao," Lourenço echoed. "The man is within call,
+yet Umanuh says he is not here. And Umanuh wants us to buy the man. What
+is more, he asks if we will pay more than the other Blackbeard. What
+other Blackbeard? The man himself has a dark beard, and since we left
+headquarters Pedro and I have grown black whiskers, too. Yet Umanuh
+cannot mean the crazy man would pay him to stay here, or that either of
+us Brazilians would try to buy him. There are no other men with black
+beards--except the German woman-stealer; and of course he cannot be the
+one."
+
+"No?" Pedro asked, softly.
+
+"No, certainly. Why? Of what were you thinking?"
+
+Pedro's brown eyes twinkled, but he made no answer. He only inhaled a
+long puff from his cigarette and looked across the water at the
+hairpin-shaped town.
+
+"What about that visiting trip of yours to-night?" McKay asked.
+
+"I wish to see what is in that house with the barred door, Capitao. When
+I am curious about such a matter Lourenço always becomes curious, too,
+so I shall have to take him with me. If I did not he would say I was
+making love to the chief's wives."
+
+"_Por Deus!_ That may be all the barred house holds--the wives of the
+chief," guessed Lourenço. "Why waste time and risk death to look into
+that place?"
+
+"_Quem nao arrisca nao ganha_, as the coronel would say--he who risks
+nothing gains nothing. I feel that we should visit that house. Something
+calls me back to it."
+
+Lourenço studied his partner a moment, then nodded slowly. But McKay
+interposed decided objection.
+
+"Too dangerous. Also unnecessary. We'll get Rand--if the man is
+Rand--through the chief. Your night spying might ruin everything and get
+you killed into the bargain. Nothing to gain and all to lose. Stay
+here."
+
+Pedro's eyes hardened. But it was Lourenço who answered.
+
+"Capitao, I think we had best do as Pedro says. It is a queer thing and
+I cannot explain it, but I have known him to have such ideas in the past
+and they have always worked out for the best. He himself does not know
+why he does some things--things which look totally foolish and which
+often are very dangerous--except that he feels like doing them. Yet I
+have never known this foolishness to fail to turn out well. He and I
+will go over to-night and see what we may see."
+
+The captain's brows drew together. Flat insubordination! Then he
+remembered that these men were not subordinates at all; remembered also
+what Coronel Nunes said concerning their ability to get into and out of
+dangerous situations. When Knowlton sided with them he capitulated.
+
+"Up in the States we'd say Pedro was 'riding his hunch,'" was the
+lieutenant's remark. "And I've known a hunch to bring all kinds of good
+luck. Gee! I'd like to go across with you lads myself! But I'm no jungle
+expert, especially after dark, and I'd only be in the way. Besides,
+we'll sure have to stick here and keep up appearances while you're gone.
+How will you get over? There's no way but swimming, and this creek's
+probably inhabited by the usual 'gators and snakes and things."
+
+"When one can travel only by swimming, one swims," Pedro smiled. "Leave
+that to us, senhores. Now the sun sinks fast and I have hunger. Let us
+eat."
+
+Night was at hand. While the whites talked some of the Mayorunas had
+quietly slipped away into the bush, seeking whatever fresh meat might be
+obtainable without straying too far from camp. Naturally, the hunting
+was poor so near an inhabited place, but now the absent men came
+stealing back with a few small birds and one monkey. Though the savages
+asked nothing and evidently expected nothing from the whites to eke out
+this scant provision, the latter opened their meager larders to Tucu,
+ordering him to see that every man had at least a few mouthfuls to eat.
+Tucu, like a good commander, made no bones of accepting the invitation
+for the good of his men. When all hands had stowed away the last meal of
+the day the rations were reduced almost to the vanishing point.
+
+"Those miserable whelps over there might have had the decency to give us
+a few bites," Knowlton growled, looking at the Red Bone men on the other
+bank, who were gorging themselves on meat brought by their women.
+
+"It is quite possible that they intend to give us several bites later
+on," Pedro suggested, with a mirthless smile.
+
+"Uh-huh. Shouldn't wonder. But it's also possible that they'll have to
+assimilate a few lead pills before chewing us up. Rod, we'll have our
+work cut out standing guard to-night. I wouldn't put it past that lying
+old Umanuh to try rubbing us out before morning."
+
+"Nor I," concurred McKay. "Only question is whether he dares take a
+chance against our guns and against the likelihood that Monitaya will
+send other men to investigate our disappearance. Better keep well out of
+sight."
+
+As he spoke the last light of day vanished. Stars and a quarter moon
+leaped out in the swiftly darkening sky. The small fire of the
+expedition threw dim shadows against the poles of the night shelters.
+Lights glimmered in the Red Bone huts, and other lights began to streak
+across the gloom--the bright little lanterns of fireflies coasting along
+the stream. But at the point where the Red Bone night guard lurked no
+light shone. They had built no fire, and now they were almost invisible
+in the faint moonshine--sinister shadows which even now might be
+meditating murder or worse.
+
+Lourenço lounged over to Tucu, who was watching those shadows with a
+fixed cat stare, and informed him that until morning a man with a gun
+would be always on guard while the rest slept. The Indian grunted
+approval. By way of precaution against being killed by his own men, the
+Brazilian added the information that later on he and his comrade would
+leave the camp and go upstream for a time. At this Tucu's eyes dwelt on
+his, veered to the lights of the town, and returned. In them was a
+plain, though unspoken, question. The bushman ignored it and strolled
+back to his _tambo_.
+
+The moon sailed higher. The animal uproar of early night began to
+diminish. The fire, almost buried under slow-burning wood whose acrid
+smoke alleviated the insect pests, smoldered dull red. McKay and
+Knowlton drew lots for the first sleep, the captain winning and promptly
+getting under his net. In the Mayoruna shelter all was dark and silent,
+each man sleeping lightly with one hand on a weapon. The two Brazilians
+also were out of sight in their hut.
+
+Up and down, a barely distinguishable figure, Knowlton passed slowly
+with holster unbuttoned and rifle cocked, eyes turning periodically to
+the Red Bone outpost and ears intent to pick any unusual sound out of
+the night noise. Gradually the small lights of the town faded out. To
+all appearance, sleep had whelmed it for the night. The watchers on the
+farther shore stirred a little at times, but the blot they made in the
+moonshine remained fixed in the same spot. The only moving things were
+the khaki-clad sentinel and the blazing fireflies.
+
+Another hour rolled slowly by. The sentinel stopped and stood at a
+corner of the _tambo_. Now was as good a time as any for the Brazilians
+to start their perilous reconnaissance. Perhaps they had gone to sleep.
+He squinted at their hammocks. Yes, they were occupied. Stepping softly
+to the hammock of Pedro, he lifted the net to whisper to the occupant.
+Then he stared, dropped the net, and lifted Lourenço's curtain. A soft,
+self-derisive chuckle sounded in his throat as he stole out again.
+
+The hammocks were occupied, yes; but only by packs and rifles. Armed
+only with machetes, the two bushmen now were--where? He did not even
+know when or which way they had gone. Fine sentinel, wasn't he, to let
+two full-grown men sneak away right under his nose? And if they could
+get out so slick, why couldn't somebody else--a murderous Red Bone, for
+instance--get in with equal facility?
+
+Wherefore he became all the more alert. Instead of resuming his slow
+pace, he stood quiet at a corner, scrutinizing everything within his
+range of vision, listening more intently than ever. Two or three times
+he leaned forward and lifted his piece as some splashing noise in the
+creek came to him; but each time the cannibal guards on the other bank
+also sprang to see what caused the sound, then grunted to one another
+and relaxed, so he knew it was made by piscatory or reptilian life. Near
+him nothing moved. And the moon sailed on westward, smoothly, steadily
+measuring off the silent hours of the night watch.
+
+Then all at once every nerve in him strained toward the back of the
+_tambo_. Something was there! He had not heard it--seen it--smelled
+it--but he felt it; a nameless thing that did not belong there. With
+smooth speed he pivoted, looked, listened. Nothing there.
+
+Motionless, feeling slightly creepy, concealed under the roof corner, he
+waited. A sound came--a stealthy sound. Something was creeping in.
+Lourenço and Pedro, perhaps? Stooping low, he peered along the ground
+under the hammocks.
+
+A man was coming--coming on all-fours like an animal. He was too
+stealthy to be either of the Brazilians. Knowlton glimpsed him only
+dimly, but he was sure this was no man who belonged here. And now, as on
+a previous occasion almost identical in its circumstances, the watchman
+acted in accordance with Tim Ryan's General Order Number Thirteen.
+
+In three jumps he was upon the invader. His gun butt crashed down on the
+rising head. The other collapsed on the ground.
+
+Swiftly Knowlton snapped a match with his thumb-nail. The sudden flare
+half blinded him, but what he saw made him suck in his breath. When the
+match went out he turned the senseless body over, drew his pocket
+flashlight, stabbed its white ray downward. Then he committed the
+unpardonable sin of the army--he dropped his rifle.
+
+Dark haired, dark bearded, streaked with red dye and bleeding slightly
+at the nose, at his feet lay the man for whom the indomitable trio had
+traveled thousands of miles and dared all the deaths of the jungle--the
+Raposa.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+SHADOWS OF THE NIGHT
+
+
+"Rod! Wake up!"
+
+The tense whisper aroused McKay instantly. With one sweep of the arm his
+net was torn aside and he leaped out with pistol drawn.
+
+"Right, Merry. What is it?"
+
+"We've got him! Look!"
+
+The electric ray again streaked the gloom. The astounded captain did not
+drop his gun, but he came near it. For a long minute he stood as in a
+trance. When he attempted to holster his weapon he fumbled three times
+for the sheath before he found it.
+
+"Whew!" he breathed. "Have you killed him?"
+
+"Nope--don't think so. Lord! I hope not! Now that I think of it, I did
+give him a mighty solid smash. Used the butt. He was crawling in here,
+and naturally I didn't stop to ask for his card. Feel his head."
+
+McKay complied. His exploring fingers found only a huge bump under the
+thick hair.
+
+"No, his skull's whole. Didn't even split the scalp. You crowned him
+hard, but unless he got concussion he's still useful. His nosebleed
+comes from hitting the ground, I think. Turn off the light. Are you
+still on guard?"
+
+"Yes. The Brazilians are out."
+
+"Take a turn and see that all's clear. Can't tell what might break any
+minute now. Leave your flash here."
+
+Passing the flat, nickel light-box to the captain, Knowlton retrieved
+his gun from the ground and resumed his patrol. Slight as the
+disturbance had been, uneasiness was in the air. The savages on the far
+shore were up, peering at the _tambo_ and muttering to one another.
+Measuring the distance, the lieutenant saw that, though they had
+undoubtedly seen the flashlight switched on and off and made out the
+movements of men, they could not have discerned what lay on the ground
+beyond the hammocks. Nearer at hand, Tucu and a couple of the Mayorunas
+were awake and looking out. But the sight of the sentinel strolling up
+and down in apparent unconcern and the absence of light in the _tambo_
+gradually quieted the suspicions on both sides of the water. Soon the
+Red Bones squatted again and the Mayorunas lay back with minds at ease.
+
+Then a dim sheen of light showed for a time at the back of the white
+men's shelter, fading out after a few minutes into the usual gloom.
+McKay had pulled a blanket over himself and the unconscious man, masking
+his torch glare from any watching eye while he studied the face and form
+of the invader. After the faint radiance vanished certain sounds came to
+the sentry's ears. Then McKay's tall figure loomed in the vague
+moonshine. Knowlton stopped beside him.
+
+"It's Rand," the captain vouchsafed in an undertone. "No question of it.
+Features identical, though face is drawn. White hair mark, broken nose,
+green eyes. I opened one eye. Got a bad foot, partly healed; looks as if
+he'd torn it on a stub. Poor devil seems nearly starved."
+
+"So? Then that's why he sneaked in like that--wanted to steal some grub.
+Those mutts over yonder probably haven't fed him since he got hurt."
+
+"That's it. He's had to do his own foraging, and his foot has given him
+mighty little chance. Damn those brutes!"
+
+"Right! But now what? Look out that he doesn't sneak away again."
+
+"He won't. I tied his feet. He's in Pedro's hammock, still dead to the
+world. If he wakes up and starts to yell I'll gag him. We've got to get
+away now as soon as we can."
+
+"How?"
+
+"Don't know. By water, perhaps. Wish those bushman were here. Haven't
+heard any noise over there, have you?"
+
+"All quiet. They're safe--or dead."
+
+"Hm! Confounded foolishness, anyway. But we've no means of getting out
+until they're back. Couldn't desert them, besides. What time is it?"
+
+"Ten-thirty. You go on watch at midnight."
+
+"I'm on watch now, inside. They may be back any time. If they don't show
+up in the next couple of hours I'll send Tucu to find out why. We'll
+have to get those canoes over here, too. Water leaves no trail."
+
+He turned back into the hut, leaving Knowlton figuring chances. To
+obtain those canoes was a man-sized job. To put the Red Bone guards out
+of action without arousing the whole tribe was an even bigger job. But
+no boats could be brought over until the outpost was silenced, that was
+sure.
+
+Another half-hour crept past. Still no noise from the town, no
+suspicious move on the other shore. Then from the _tambo_ itself came a
+low mumble of voices. Knowlton stepped swiftly into it. As noiselessly
+as they had gone the two bushmen had returned.
+
+In his usual concise phrases McKay was informing them of the capture of
+the Raposa. With his back to the stream and the flashlight held close to
+his body, he played the light for an instant on the face of the still
+unconscious man. Then, once more in darkness, he asserted:
+
+"Now that we have him, we must get out of here. Only chance to do that
+is to get the canoes. With them we can at least be away from this town
+by sunrise, and it will take the Red Bones just so much longer to find
+our trail where we take to the bush. We'll get a flying start that way.
+Anything else to suggest?"
+
+"That is the best plan, Capitao," Lourenço agreed. For the first time
+since the Americans had known him his voice held a note of suppressed
+excitement. "It is the only plan worth while. And I do not think we
+shall have to take to our legs soon--if at all. I believe this creek
+connects with that which flows past the Monitaya _malocas_. We have
+learned some things. _Por Deus!_ If only we had known the Raposa was
+here!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because then we could have brought company with us. Senhores, guess
+what the barred house holds."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Women of the Mayorunas! Girls stolen from Monitaya and other
+settlements!"
+
+"Jumping Judas!" ejaculated Knowlton. "Are you sure?"
+
+"Sure, comrades! These foul Red Bones are the men who have been lurking
+around the Mayoruna tribe houses and capturing girls who went into the
+bush. They have taken the prisoners to the water, where the trails
+always were lost and where they could find hiding places until night,
+then drive their canoes past the clearings and get out of that country.
+So there must be some water connection by which these men travel, and by
+which we too can travel. If we go downstream we are almost sure to find
+it by daylight."
+
+"But why--what's the idea of their stealing the girls? For victims? If
+so, how are the girls still alive?"
+
+"Do you not see, senhor?" Pedro broke in, impatiently. "Did not Umanuh
+ask if we would pay more than the other Blackbeard for the Raposa? What
+other Blackbeard?"
+
+"Schwandorf!" the Americans blurted, simultaneously.
+
+"Not so loud! Schwandorf, of course! Umanuh works with the German. He
+catches girls by stealth and sells them to the German to add to his
+slave gangs. While the Mayorunas all blame the Peruvians for the
+disappearances, Umanuh works unsuspected. He is holding these women
+until Schwandorf comes again--and it may be that Schwandorf is not far
+off at this moment. Now that we have come seeking the wild man, Umanuh
+at once thinks of selling him also; and he wonders whether we or
+Schwandorf will pay the more for him."
+
+"By thunder! I believe you're right!" Knowlton coincided. "He's stalling
+for time, holding us here while Schwandorf comes up, I'll bet. No wonder
+he and his men are wary of the Mayorunas--they thought we'd come to
+snoop around and catch 'em with the goods. You fellows must have done a
+mighty slick job to find out this stuff without getting caught. Isn't
+the house guarded at night?"
+
+"Indeed it is! Two clubmen are there now, and there is only the one
+door. Not even a window. But Lourenço worked a small hole between two
+logs at the back while I watched the clubmen, and through the hole he
+whispered with one of the women inside. If only we had known the wild
+man was here we could have jumped the guards and tried to bring back the
+women. But of course your business about the Raposa had to be thought of
+first, so all we could do was to tell them friends were here."
+
+For a few seconds there was the silence of thought. Then Knowlton
+chuckled.
+
+"I'll say we have our hands full this night. Now we not only have to get
+ourselves and Rand out of here, but also rescue the fair damsels from
+the clutches of the ogre. 'Twon't do to leave them here while we go back
+to Monitaya and get the rest of his army. By the time we could come back
+they'd be gone--one way or another. What's done has to be done now or
+never."
+
+"Right!" McKay commended. "We'll have to save the women, of course.
+Question is--how?"
+
+Lourenço answered at once.
+
+"My idea, Capitao, is this: We two will return. With us we will take
+Tucu. The three of us can handle those guards quietly. We must have
+Tucu, because the women do not know us and might balk at the last
+moment. Women are queer creatures, and these might think themselves
+safer inside prison walls than following two strange men through the
+night; but Tucu can handle them. When once we are clear of the houses
+Tucu can lead the women to the bank above here, and we shall try for the
+canoes. Then it will be fast work to get away, but if we have good
+fortune it can be done."
+
+"Confound it! You fellows are taking all the risks! Can't you take more
+men--"
+
+"No. No man but Tucu. He has a cool head. These others, if they knew,
+would go blood-mad and attack the Red Bones to avenge their lost women,
+and so would get us all killed. Now I will talk with Tucu."
+
+He slipped into the Mayoruna shelter and returned with the cannibal
+leader, whom he led to the far side of the _tambo_ before speaking.
+Then, in whispers which the other tribesmen could not overhear, he
+explained the situation. Knowlton took another turn or two along his
+post, finding that the Red Bones across the water were stirring about
+and evidently aware that something was going on; but they made no move
+either to get into a canoe or to send a man to the houses beyond. As he
+stopped again at the corner near the whispering pair he heard Tucu
+grinding his teeth, and as the savage turned his face toward the Red
+Bone outpost it was a mask of murder. But he spoke no word as he slipped
+back to his own men.
+
+"He will wake another man and tell him what to do," Lourenço explained.
+"But only we four shall know of the women until they are freed. Will one
+of you lend Tucu a machete? He may need a weapon, and he cannot carry
+his big bow on this trip."
+
+A few minutes later the three crept out behind the _tambo_, Tucu
+gripping McKay's machete. As a final word Lourenço said: "Our men here
+may move about a little after a time, but do not try to keep them quiet.
+It is a part of the plan."
+
+With that he was gone. Listen as they might, the Americans could hear no
+sound to indicate that three men now were traversing the black tangle
+beyond.
+
+McKay took up his rifle and assumed the sentry work. Knowlton sat in his
+hammock, grateful for the chance to rest his weary legs. From the
+hammock where the Raposa lay no sound came. With a worried frown the
+lieutenant leaned over him and laid hand on his heart. After a while he
+sat up again in relief.
+
+"Lord! I sure knocked him cold!" was his thought. "But he's still with
+us, and there's no use in reviving him now; the less noise over here the
+better. Hope I didn't jar his brains loose altogether; he might wake up
+a murderous maniac. Poor devil! A millionaire, yet half starved and more
+than half nutty."
+
+He glanced at the dim scene before the hut. The moon now had journeyed
+so far westward that the creeping shadows of the tall trees had moved
+out almost to the creek, and the two crude shelters and the sentinel
+were surrounded by dense gloom. The Red Bone men opposite must rely on
+their ears alone hereafter, for they could not see through this
+darkness. McKay was visible enough to his own party, but not to the
+enemy. The blond man in the hammock watched the somber figure of his
+comrade, followed the flight of a big firefly whose light floated near,
+thought of the two bushmen out in the dark, and looked again at the
+still form of Rand.
+
+"Drifters all," he soliloquized. "The fireflies and Rod and Tim and I
+and those Brazilian dare-devils--all floating around because we can't
+keep still, and never getting anywhere. And you, you silly-ass Rand,
+have a mint waiting for you up home, and we have to come find you and
+lead you up there and shove your nose into it. And if you get your
+brains back you'll be a nine days' wonder and a hero of the jungle and
+all that, and the girls will all tumble over you--because you've got a
+couple of millions in your sock. And we fellows who yanked you out of
+hell by the left hind leg can pocket our pay and go jump off the dock,
+for all anybody cares. Ho-hum! All the same, I'd rather be me than you,
+old thing. Free to drift and able to handle myself. You can have the
+money and the moths that hang around it."
+
+With which he yawned, squinted again at the sinister figure squatting
+out yonder in the moonshine, arose, and made himself useful. Working
+very quietly, he took down three of the hammocks, rolled them up, laid
+them at the corner nearest the creek; made up the packs by sense of
+touch and placed them and the rifles of the absent pair in the same
+place. Then he lifted the Raposa from the one remaining hammock, laid
+him on the packs, rolled up the hammock itself, and put it under the
+unconscious man's head. If given time when the crisis came, he meant to
+save all equipment. If not, Rand lay where he could be grabbed without
+delay.
+
+Before he completed the work he became aware that the Mayorunas all were
+awake. Not only awake, but moving stealthily about, as Lourenço had
+predicted. McKay also knew it and stepped back into the hut, where
+Knowlton told him what he had done. But so softly did the men of
+Monitaya move that the Red Bone watchers showed no sign of alarm. Both
+the Americans observed, however, that the cannibals across the stream
+had their heads together and that occasionally one looked up at the
+little moon.
+
+"Get that, Rod? They're waiting for the shadows to crawl over there and
+cover them and the water. They know that then we can't see what they're
+up to. I'm betting they intend to pull some dirty work after that."
+
+"Yep. But intention and accomplishment are two different birds. Wonder
+what these Mayorunas are fixing to do. Wish I could talk their
+language."
+
+"Tucu evidently left orders for them to get up at a certain time, but
+why I don't know. We'd better let them alone."
+
+The shadow line passed out upon the water, slipping by infinitesimal
+gradations across its mirror surface. The Mayorunas had become quiet.
+The whites waited in silent suspense for they knew not what. Far out in
+the forest a jaguar gave his coughing roar at intervals. Little by
+little the Red Bone men arose from their squat until they stood erect. A
+tense stillness held both forces. And the shadows crawled on--on--and
+reached the farther bank.
+
+Then a Red Bone man shoved his head forward, squinting upstream as if he
+had heard something move in the rank grass. He began to sneak softly in
+that direction. At that moment, from the water's edge a little above the
+camp, sounded a loud hiss.
+
+Before the sound died a sudden thrum of bow cords filled the air. A
+whisper of five-foot shafts speeding over the water--a rapid-fire series
+of tiny impacts--a couple of short groans--the thumps of falling
+bodies--and the Red Bone outpost was no more. Shot through and through
+by the deadly war arrows of the Mayorunas, they were dead before they
+struck the ground. And from the men of Monitaya sounded one short,
+subdued "Hah!" of savage satisfaction.
+
+Up from the ground where that hiss had sounded rose a tall figure which
+waved its arms and danced about in impromptu signals. Then it ran for
+the canoes. Out from the gloom upstream other figures took shape,
+running fast for the same point. With one simultaneous movement Knowlton
+and McKay seized the Raposa and rushed with him to the stream.
+
+"Senhores!" sounded Pedro's voice, low but tense, across the water. "Be
+ready!"
+
+"Ready and waiting!" snapped McKay. "Who are those people. Your women?"
+
+"_Si._ We are not discovered--"
+
+Across his words smote a long shrill yell from the town.
+
+"_Por Deus._ We _are_ discovered! Get our rifles, for the love of _Deus
+Padre_."
+
+He leaped into a canoe, drove it headlong across, and dived for the
+_tambo_. Behind him the other figures dashed panting up to the landing.
+Tucu's voice rasped in swift commands. The fugitives swarmed into other
+dugouts. The Mayoruna men, still ignorant of the identity of these
+people, but assured by Tucu's voice and manner that they were not
+enemies, lowered their weapons and rushed for the water. Up in the town
+the yelling swiftly grew into a roar, and running figures came pelting
+toward the creek.
+
+The canoes struck the bank. Some were partly filled, some empty and in
+tow. Into Pedro's canoe the whites bundled the Raposa, while the
+Mayorunas got into anything within reach. Lourenço appeared from nowhere
+and urged the Americans to open fire. As he spoke, arrows thudded into
+the ground and the water.
+
+"Take this man and go!" rasped McKay. "We're losing our equipment,
+but--"
+
+His rifle leaped to his shoulder. Flame spat from it. From the van of
+the charging Red Bones shrilled a death scream.
+
+Again and again the captain's gun cracked. Knowlton's joined in. Before
+their rifles grew silent the blunt roar of Pedro's repeater broke out.
+And with the emptying of their long guns the Americans drew their short
+ones, and in a concerted ripping crash the forty-fives volleyed death
+and dismay into the oncoming cannibals.
+
+The rush was checked. For a few seconds the Red Bones wavered and milled
+about. Into their mass poured a cloud of arrows and blowgun darts from
+the silent but no less deadly weapons of the Mayorunas. As the whites
+paused to reload, Pedro opened a new blast from Lourenço's rifle, which
+his comrade had passed to him on the run. Lourenço was not shooting, but
+working madly and alone to save the equipment. And, thanks to the
+renewed deadly fire of the guns, he saved it.
+
+Before the wicked belch of the three rifles and the two automatics the
+Red Bones gave back more and more. Their arrows plunged all around the
+fighting men, but they fell at random, for the gunmen and the canoes
+were virtually invisible in the deep shadows. Downstream, Tucu's harsh
+voice jarred in commands as he straightened out the line of boats.
+
+At the next lull in the firing Lourenço panted: "In, comrades! We are
+loaded. In!"
+
+"Great guns! Are you still here?" snapped McKay. "I told you--"
+
+"In! Talk later. Come!"
+
+The three gun fighters swiftly obeyed. With a powerful heave Lourenço
+sent the canoe after the others. Americans, Brazilians, and the Raposa
+hunched up among the packs, all went sliding down a jungle Styx.
+
+A moment later the Red Bone warriors, taking heart from the cessation of
+firing, poured an avalanche of arrows into the spot where they had been.
+And as the canoe, last in the escaping line, was swallowed up in the
+impenetrable blackness of the forest a hair-raising screech of
+diabolical fury blended with a swift succession of splashes back where
+the cannibals were plunging headlong into the stream to reach the dead
+or wounded men whom they vainly hoped to find on the farther shore.
+
+"I told you to take this man and go!" McKay fumed. "By disobeying orders
+you risked losing him."
+
+"Oh, pipe down, Rod!" remonstrated Knowlton. "If they had, where'd we be
+now? This was the last canoe."
+
+"_Si._ It is so," added Lourenço, his voice hard edged. "As it is, the
+man and the equipment and you also are here. And let me tell you this,
+Capitao Makkay, whether you like it or not: Pedro and I would see this
+wild man and a million others like him in a hotter place than this
+before we would abandon fighting comrades."
+
+To which McKay, finding no adequate answer, made none whatever.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+THE SIREN OF WAR
+
+
+Like a fleet manned by sightless sailors the line of boats blundered on
+through the blackness. With no guiding light, the canoes bumped the
+banks and collided with one another in perilous confusion. Speed was
+impossible, yet speed was imperative. Knowlton and his little flashlight
+solved the problem.
+
+"Say, fellows, let's take the lead," he suggested. "This little light
+isn't much, but it's something, and there are some extra batteries in my
+haversack when this burns out. We can see a little way ahead, and pass
+back the word to the rest. What say?"
+
+"_Na terra dos cegos quem tem um olho e rei_--in blindman's land he who
+has one eye is king," said Pedro. "That little white eye in your box may
+save us all. Lourenço, tell those ahead to let us pass."
+
+Without question the preceding dugouts swerved, and the boat of the
+white men slipped by. At the head of the line they found Tucu and his
+crew struggling manfully to make progress without wrecking the whole
+fleet at the turns. Vast relief and instant acceptance of the new
+leadership followed Lourenço's explanation. At once the floating column
+began to pick up speed. And it was well that it did.
+
+Howls of baffled hate came faintly through the tree mass from the Red
+Bone town. Some time later more yells of rage sounded, much nearer--back
+at a place on the creek which the last boat had cleared only a few
+minutes previously. Some of the Umanuh men had made torches and run
+along one of the Red Bone trails to a bend in the stream, only to find
+the water bare of everything but dying ripples.
+
+Whether the enemy attempted to follow in canoes the escaping party never
+knew, for none succeeded in overtaking the rearmost boat. And after that
+one snarling uproar on the creek bank they heard no more of the land
+pursuit. The narrow margin of safety gained by the aid of the flashlight
+proved enough to give a commanding lead, and from that time on the only
+obstacles to their retreat were those of darkness and winding waters.
+
+Hour after hour Knowlton squatted in the extreme bow, picking out the
+turns and snags just ahead and passing the word back to Lourenço, who,
+in the stern, steered in accordance with his orders and relayed the
+course to Tucu, just behind. Amidships, Pedro and McKay plied steady
+paddles and the Raposa lay all but forgotten on the baggage. There were
+no halts. If any boat back in the blackness got into difficulties it
+extricated itself as best it could, unaided by the rest, and fell into a
+new place in the column.
+
+At last a wan light, which was scarcely a light, but rather a lessening
+of the density, came about the stream. The renewed racket of birds and
+beasts announced that up overhead the sky had paled into dawn. Slowly
+the nearest tree trunks began to take shape in the void, and presently
+the shore line became visible to all eyes. At the same time Knowlton's
+tiny lamp dimmed and faded out.
+
+"Another battery gone," he announced, opening the case and dropping its
+contents into the creek. "Ho-yo-ho-hum! Gee! I'm all in! Eyes feel like
+a couple of burnt holes. Well, gents, I move that at the first available
+spot we go ashore, feed our faces, look at the ladies, and perform our
+morning salute to Umanuh--said salute consisting of applying the right
+thumb to the end of the nose and snappily twiddling four fingers."
+
+"Motion carried." McKay's set face relaxed. Then, his glance dropping to
+the Raposa, it tightened again. "Oh, hullo, Rand! How you feeling?"
+
+The unconscious man was unconscious no longer. Moreover, his expression
+was not that of one just emerging from a stupor and bewildered as to his
+surroundings. Though he had made no movement to change his position, his
+eyes indicated that he had been awake for some time. They dwelt steadily
+on McKay, then strayed past the captain to Pedro, Lourenço, and the
+first Mayoruna crew following a few feet behind. His face was
+inscrutable, and he spoke no word.
+
+"You're with friends. Understand? Friends. You're going home. These
+Indians are friends, too. Get that? _Friends!_"
+
+The green eyes hung on McKay's face again; but, as before, no answer
+came in word, movement, or expression.
+
+"No good, Rod," said Knowlton, who could not see the rescued man's face,
+but watched McKay's. "'Fraid I knocked his last brains down his throat.
+Dead from the neck up."
+
+"I don't know about that. He doesn't look vacant. See here, Rand. We're
+going to land and eat! You hungry? Uh-huh. Thought you'd understand
+that. He's alive, Merry. Maybe not all here, but enough to get us."
+
+"Good!"
+
+The blond man turned his attention downstream again. Soon he suggested,
+"How about landing at that little open space down there at the left,
+Lourenço?"
+
+"Very good, senhor. It looks dry."
+
+The canoe swerved and floated down to a spot on the left shore where
+bright light poured down from an opening in the overhead wall of
+foliage.
+
+"Now look here, Rand," warned the captain. "We'll untie you. But if you
+try to duck into the bush, now or later, you get shot. Shot!
+Understand?"
+
+He tapped his pistol, and the gray eyes boring into the green ones were
+hard as chilled steel. For the first time Rand responded--a slow, short
+nod.
+
+McKay cut the cord around the wild man's ankles, then stepped ashore and
+held out a hand. Rand arose quietly, jumped to the earth unassisted,
+lifted his bad foot and stared at it, then limped onward into a spot
+where the sun now shone bright and warm, and sat down to bask.
+
+"Have to fix that foot, I expect," yawned Knowlton. "But my eyes right
+now are one solid ache, and I'm going to rest them. Watch him, will you,
+Rod? Can't tell what he might do. Of course you wouldn't shoot him,
+but--"
+
+"Wouldn't I? Not to kill, no. But if he makes one break I'll drill a leg
+for him. He's going to the States!"
+
+"Sure. I'm with you all the way. Now beat it and let me repose myself."
+
+He bathed his eyes, then lay down in the canoe with a wet handkerchief
+across them. Pedro and Lourenço already were ashore and raiding the
+slender packs for food. The Mayorunas were debarking and watching each
+new boat as it drew up, their eyes on the women who had wielded paddles
+with them but whose faces they now saw closely for the first time. In
+the shaft of sunlight McKay stood tall and forbidding, rifle in the
+crook of one arm, hat pulled low, guarding the gaunt man at his feet and
+viewing the landing of the expedition.
+
+The women, all young, numbered eleven. Their skins looked slightly
+pallid, their eyes too big and black, their faces somewhat drawn--the
+results of close confinement and anxiety; but none showed any sign of
+abuse. For commercial reasons alone, Umanuh had seen to it that the
+woman flesh he held for sale should remain uninjured. Now, saved from
+the slave trail or worse, the girls showed no more emotion than if on a
+mere journey after turtles or fish. A few spoke to men whom they
+evidently knew. Others gathered in a dumb cluster and awaited whatever
+might come next. With these Tucu talked in gruff monosyllables.
+
+When all were ashore, a dozen of the men went into the jungle to hunt.
+The others sought firewood, inspected weapons, talked with one another
+and with the girls, who stared at McKay and asked who he was. A number
+of the warriors looked sourly at Rand, whose face still bore the Red
+Bone tribal streaks which now, to Mayoruna minds, was the insignia of
+the enemy. All knew he was the man who had been sought, all saw that he
+was not a Red Bone, but a white man; yet their mental reaction to the
+sight of the sinister red cross on the forehead and the straight cheek
+lines was rabidly hostile. McKay, all-seeing, decided to wash Rand's
+face for him before journeying much farther. But Rand himself gave no
+sign that he either knew or cared what the feeling of the Mayorunas
+might be. Utterly impassive, he stared back at them.
+
+Then one of the women pointed at him and said something to Tucu. The
+tall watchdog's jaw set a little harder as he waited the effect.
+Somewhat to his surprise, Tucu and a couple of the other men now gave
+Rand a more friendly look. Soon afterward Tucu passed Lourenço, who
+talked with him a few minutes. Catching the Brazilian's eye, the captain
+motioned him nearer and asked for any news.
+
+"Tucu says, Capitao, that most of these girls are from _malocas_ other
+than that of Monitaya, though some of Monitaya's women also are here.
+And one of them says this man, the Raposa, tried to release them a short
+time ago and was nearly killed by the Red Bones for it. They let him
+live only because he is crazy, and they fear to kill a crazy man."
+
+"What! He tried to get them clear?"
+
+"Yes. He opened the door and motioned for them to run, but before they
+could escape they were caught. He was badly beaten. You will remember
+that he was hiding behind that same house when Pedro and Senhor Knowlton
+saw him. Perhaps he meant to try again."
+
+"Hm! Crazy and wild, but a white man for all that. How did you manage to
+free the women?"
+
+"Very simple," was the cool answer. "We stabbed the guards, opened the
+door, and came back to the creek with the women."
+
+"Just like that, eh? And the guards made no resistance, I suppose."
+
+"Not much," grinned the bushman. "They were not allowed to."
+
+"I see. Very simple, as you say. About as simple as our calm and
+unhurried departure."
+
+"Something like that, Capitao. What do you desire for breakfast--salt
+fish and coffee, or coffee and salt fish?"
+
+"A little of everything, thanks. Here comes some monkey meat, too."
+
+The first of the hunters had returned, bringing two big red howlers.
+Others drifted in at intervals, and not one returned empty handed; for
+here in the virgin jungle the game was plentiful, particularly at this
+early hour. Soon the air was heavy with the odor of broiling meat, and
+from the fire of the Brazilians the fragrance of coffee was wafted to
+the nostrils of the recumbent Knowlton. He arose, swallowing fast.
+
+"Gee! I'm half drowned!" was his humorous complaint. "The smell of eats
+makes my mouth water so fast I have to gasp for air. Must tickle your
+nose, too, eh, Rand, old top?"
+
+Rand, famished though he was, gave no sign of assent or of hunger. In
+fact, he gave no sign of anything. Stoically he sat, eyes front.
+
+"By thunder! the man's got pride!" the lieutenant added, in a lower
+tone. "Almost ready to keel over from lack of food, but stiff as a
+cigar-store Indian. Darned if I'm not beginning to respect him!"
+
+Tucu approached, carrying two big monkey haunches. One he offered to
+McKay, the other to Rand. The latter's immobility vanished in a flash.
+With a lightning grab he seized the proffered meat and sank his teeth in
+it. As he wolfed down the tough flesh the three men standing over
+exchanged glances. Tucu laid a hand on his stomach and pressed inward,
+signifying that the man had long gone hungry. The others nodded. Then
+they split the other haunch between them and fell to gnawing.
+
+Lourenço, bringing coffee to the captain, asked Tucu in what direction
+the Monitaya houses lay. Without hesitation the Indian pointed off to
+the left. The Brazilian glanced at the creek, estimating its general
+direction and rate of flow, then returned to his fire.
+
+Offered coffee, Rand took it and sipped it with evident relish. Likewise
+he accepted a cigarette, which he puffed like a man just learning to
+smoke--or one who has not smoked for years. For his meat, his drink, and
+his smoke he gave no indication of gratitude. His attitude was as
+indifferent and matter-of-fact as if he were one of the Mayorunas. When
+his smoke was ended he began inspecting his bad foot.
+
+"Let's see that," said Knowlton, dropping on one knee. "Looks pretty
+sore. Yes, it's more than sore; it's infected. How'd you get it,
+anyway?"
+
+No answer. Knowlton probed his face keenly. Rand straightened out his
+legs, wriggled his toes, and scowled.
+
+"Queer!" muttered the lieutenant, rising. "He looks as if he actually
+didn't know how he got that wound. You'd think he'd remember that much,
+anyhow. I sure am afraid his head is all scrambled up."
+
+He went to the canoe, returned with his meager medical kit, and knelt
+again.
+
+"Now listen here, Rand. I don't know how well you understand me, but I'm
+taking the chance. This foot has to be opened up and cleaned out.
+Otherwise you're going to have serious trouble with it. I'm going to
+hurt you. If you raise a row you'll get an anæsthetic--a swift punch
+under the ear. Better sit still and make no fuss."
+
+With which he went to work. He did a thorough job, and there was no
+doubt that it hurt. But Rand gave no trouble, nor even a sign of
+pain--except that he dug his fingers into the dirt.
+
+"Good boy!" the amateur surgeon approved, when he finished. "You're a
+Spartan--if you happen to remember what that is. Now we'll move on. But
+before we go, wash your face good and hard. Get that tribe paint off.
+These Indians with us don't like it. You're no Indian, anyhow; you're
+white, like us. Savvy? White man. Wash off paint!"
+
+He rolled up his kit and returned to the canoe. The Mayorunas, men and
+women, were entering their own craft. Rand sat motionless a moment,
+McKay and the Brazilians watching him keenly. Slowly then he got up of
+his own accord, limped to the water's edge, and began to scrub his face.
+
+When he desisted the marks still showed, for the red dye clung
+stubbornly to his skin; but they were fainter than before. The other men
+eyed him thoughtfully, none speaking. He settled himself in his former
+place, curled up, and began to doze.
+
+"A queer fish!" Pedro said, softly. "Is he crazy or not?"
+
+"Hanged if I know," replied McKay. "He's no maniac, anyhow. I'd give
+real money to know just what his mental condition is. But we can forget
+him for a while. I'm going to let you fellows sleep by turns now. I had
+some sleep last night; you've had none at all. Merry, your eyes need
+rest. You curl up in the bow and snooze one hour. Then another man, and
+so on. And how about letting Tucu lead the parade again?"
+
+"Excellent, Capitao! I was thinking of that." Lourenço talked to Tucu,
+who swung out into the current. The boat of the white men followed, then
+the others. At a steady cruising speed the brigade surged on downstream.
+
+Knowlton's allotted hour passed. Pedro took his place and was instantly
+asleep. In turn he was aroused, and Lourenço laid down his paddle. But
+just then Tucu's canoe slowed and floated in to the left bank.
+
+The others backed water and looked at a very narrow ravine--almost a
+cleft--in a rising hillside. Through it led a lane of water. From the
+third boat, in which were two women of the Monitaya tribe, now came
+voices carrying information to the Indian leader. At once he turned his
+boat into the cleft.
+
+"This is the connection we have been seeking." Lourenço explained. "The
+women say the boats of their captors came through this crack in the
+hill. At the end we shall find the creek of Monitaya."
+
+The women spoke truth. After threading their way along the weedy
+water-path, which was barely wide enough to give passage for the boats,
+they emerged at a slant into another stream. Down this, with the sure
+instinct for direction of the hereditary jungle-dweller, Tucu turned his
+prow without asking the women whether to go with or against the current.
+Once more on the waters of their home creek, the Mayorunas quickened
+their strokes and howled merrily on toward their _malocas_.
+
+Lourenço took his nap and resumed his place. Hour after hour the fleet
+sped on. Noon passed without a halt, the paddlers munching at whatever
+fragments remained from breakfast. By turns the Americans and Brazilians
+each got another hour's sleep, McKay consenting to relax when all his
+mates had rested. Rand dozed and awoke at intervals, seeming content and
+comfortable despite his cramped position.
+
+By four o'clock even the Mayorunas began to lag in their strokes.
+Excluding the halt at sunrise, they now had been journeying for fifteen
+hours, in the last nine of which they had covered many miles of
+serpentine water. The heat of the day and the constant drive of the
+paddles had taken their toll, and now the body of every man fiercely
+demanded more food. McKay, knowing that in jungle travel distance is not
+a matter of miles, but of hours, had begun to figure that the journey
+which had taken nearly five days of overland work might be completed
+that night by the swiftly moving canoes. But now, recognizing the signs
+of exhaustion, he realized that without some powerful spur the Indians
+would not attempt to reach the home _malocas_ until the morrow.
+
+Then the spur came. Even as Tucu began scanning the shores for a good
+camp site, he and every other Mayoruna suddenly ceased paddling and
+threw up his head. Faint and far, a xylophonic call of beaten wooden
+bars rapped across the jungle, rising and falling in swift, regular
+cadence--a sirenical flow and ebb of sound waves. Over and over it
+undulated, rapid, incessant, imperative.
+
+A chorus of excited grunts broke from the canoe brigade. The dugout of
+Tucu leaped away like a roweled horse. Lourenço and Pedro buried their
+paddles in mighty strokes, hurling their boat ahead to keep from being
+run down by those behind.
+
+Lourenço barked at Tucu, who flung back an answer.
+
+"Paddle hard, Capitao! If we do not keep up we shall be wrecked. That
+message is the war call of the Mayorunas--calling in the hunters from
+the forest to take arms against an enemy. We must race now with these
+madmen around us, or we go under. Paddle!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+STRATEGY
+
+
+In the last light of the fast-fading day the canoes darted from the
+forest into the clearing where stood the Monitaya _malocas_.
+
+Long before their arrival the siren call had ceased, but there had been
+no lessening of speed by the racing dugouts. On the contrary, the last
+long mile had been covered in a final desperate spurt, the paddles
+swinging in swift unison to the accompaniment of a ferocious chant of
+one syllable: "Hough! Hough! Hough!" This explosive cadence had echoed
+down the stream ahead of them; and now, as the panting crews emerged
+from the jungle, they found themselves flanked by a long line of their
+fellow-warriors, bristling with drawn arrows and ready spear points. But
+of the enemy whose presence that great xylophone had betokened there was
+no sign.
+
+At sight of the familiar feather bonnets of their own men the tense
+Monitayans let their weapons slowly sink. And when Tucu, leaping ashore,
+gaspingly demanded news of the fight, the line dissolved into a mob
+which rushed to welcome him and his mates. In the first few breaths it
+was learned that no fight had yet taken place, but that all the warriors
+had been brought in and ordered to prepare to march at the next sunrise;
+and that the sudden war call had been sent out as the result of the
+arrival of a stranger.
+
+Then the crowd parted, and through it came striding two men whose
+appearance caused the white men to erupt into hoarse shouts of greeting.
+One, whose hard face swiftly relaxed into a half smile of relief, was
+the great chief himself. The other, whose jutting jaw suddenly dropped
+and whose blue eyes opened in incredulity, was Tim--Tim, once more
+strong and florid and aggressive, gripping his rifle, astounded at the
+sight of his comrades standing there alive and alert. They soon learned
+why.
+
+Dropping his gun, he sprang at them with an inarticulate roar of
+welcome. He wrung their hands, pounded their shoulders, laughed, cried,
+swore, all at once. Then he burst out:
+
+"Glory be! Ye're alive, homelier 'n ever and tough as tripe! We thought
+ye was wiped out sure! We was all set to start in the mornin' and pull
+them Red Bones to pieces. Mebbe we'll do it yet, too. How'd ye break
+through? Did ye kill Sworn-off and his gang?"
+
+"Schwandorf? Gang? Haven't seen anybody but Red Bones--though we sure
+saw plenty of them," replied Knowlton. "What are you talking about?"
+
+"Then ye missed him by about one point windage. When'd ye leave? Last
+night? I bet he's there by now. Gee! Where'd ye git them girls? And
+who's this guy? Great gosh! Is he the Raposy? Wal, for the love o'
+Mike--"
+
+"Tim!" broke in McKay. "What's all this about? Now wait. This is the
+Raposa. These girls are Mayoruna women held prisoners by the Red Bones.
+We got them last night and lit out in the middle of a general
+engagement. Now open up with your news."
+
+"Right, Cap. We got a visitor to-day--old friend of ourn--li'l' old
+Hozy, the only white guy in that Peruvian crew we had. He's all dolled
+up like an Injun--shaved face, tribe paint, and so on. He come through
+the Injun country that way--I dunno yet how he done it, him bein' a
+Peruvian and all, but he got through, and he says Sworn-off and a whole
+gang of bad eggs is back here to git this Raposy guy and all the girls
+they can lay hands on. He says Sworn-off's got them Red Bones workin'
+for him, and you fellers must be massacreed sure by now.
+
+"Good thing I was here when he come, or he'd be cut up and in the
+stewpot. Monitaya's a good skate, but he sure is poison to anything
+Peruvian, and soon as Hozy begun to try to talk he got wise and dang
+near bumped him off. I got him to cool down some, and he believes Hozy's
+tellin' the truth, but even at that they got Hozy tied up like a dog.
+Come look at him."
+
+But it was necessary to wait awhile for Tucu and Lourenço to tell
+Monitaya the tale of what had taken place; for the chief demanded
+immediate and full details, and not until he had them would he return to
+his _maloca_ and his hammock throne. By that time the little moon was
+again ruler of the sky and the keen hunger of the voyagers had grown
+ravenous. Followed by the rescued and the rescuers, he then stalked into
+the tribal house and to his usual place, where he commanded that food be
+brought.
+
+On the ground, directly in front of the chief's hammock, sat a gaunt,
+painted Indian around whose neck was a stout noose, the other end of the
+cord being held by a muscular savage whose skull-smashing club was
+gripped loosely in his other fist. As the whites reached them the noosed
+man's face cracked in a grin.
+
+"Greetings, señores," said the voice of José. "You will pardon me for
+remaining seated, yes? The man behind me is itching for an excuse to
+crush my head."
+
+"José!" exclaimed both Knowlton and McKay. Though Tim had said José was
+"tied like a dog," they had not thought to find the expression literal
+truth. The sight angered them and they turned to Lourenço.
+
+"Tell Monitaya we want this man freed!" McKay snapped. At his peremptory
+tone the cannibal chieftain looked oddly at him, and when Lourenço
+translated the demand--though in a more diplomatic manner--he scowled.
+But he gave the clubman the word and the rope was lifted from the
+prisoner's neck.
+
+"_Gracias, amigos_," he bowed. "If I still remain seated, it is because
+I am very weary--and I have not eaten since yesterday."
+
+His thin face and his projecting ribs not only corroborated his simple
+announcement, but indicated that for more than one day his food and rest
+had been almost _nil_. Naked, painted, minus his fierce mustache and
+flamboyant headkerchief, he appeared a far different man than the
+domineering _puntero_ of a short time back. But his bold black eyes, his
+reckless grin, and his mocking tone proved him the same swashbuckling
+José, undaunted by hunger, exhaustion, or his position as prisoner of
+man eaters whose enmity was implacable.
+
+"Well, you're going to eat now, or we'll know why not!" vowed Knowlton.
+"We understand that you brought a warning to Monitaya. Is this his way
+of treating men who risk their lives to befriend him?"
+
+José shrugged.
+
+"Once an enemy, always an enemy. That is their rule. And do not think
+that I traveled the bush and threw myself into this snake heap from love
+of Monitaya. I do not care if he and all his race are blown to hell. I
+am here because, as I once told you, José Martinez never forgets. Thank
+you, señor, I will eat now and talk later."
+
+Deftly he extracted a chunk of meat from a clay pot which had been
+placed before Knowlton and in turn tendered to him. Monitaya watched him
+eat, but gave no sign of disapproval; and the Americans, and even the
+Brazilians, made an aggressive show of friendship toward the lone
+Peruvian for the express benefit of the chief. They knew well that by
+their rescue of the Mayoruna women they had made their own position
+among these people virtually impregnable, and that their recognition of
+José as a friend probably would be his only bulwark. Wherefore they left
+no doubt in the minds of the watchers as to where he stood in their
+regard.
+
+Monitaya, sitting in regal dignity, looked down upon two parties of
+seven feasting with famished speed--the rescued women who were not
+members of his own tribe, and the four Americans, two Brazilians, and
+one Peruvian. All the others had scattered--Tucu and his band to their
+own family triangles, and the four Monitaya girls to become the nuclei
+of feminine groups which demanded intimate accounts of their capture and
+treatment by the captors.
+
+To the strange women at his feet the chief paid scant attention now,
+though he meant to interrogate them after their hunger was satisfied.
+His eyes dwelt on Rand, the strange combination of white man, Indian,
+and jungle demon of whom he had heard so much and on whose tanned skin
+the red skeleton streaks told the tale of a "mind out of the skull."
+José and Tim stared in frank curiosity at the dead-alive newcomer, whose
+silent composure remained totally unperturbed. But the seven new girls,
+though ignored by the chief and his guests, were by no means neglected
+by the other men of the _maloca_, being thoroughly stared at by most of
+the young bucks--and, it must be confessed, by a goodly proportion of
+the married men also.
+
+When at length the meal was finished Monitaya commanded the girls to
+stand before him and narrate their experiences. The men lit smokes, José
+seizing the proffered cigarette with avidity, Rand accepting his with
+the usual odd deliberation.
+
+"Wal, Hozy, old feller, ye're in right with the chief now," asserted
+Tim. "Ye got all our gang with ye, and she's some li'l' old gang, I'll
+tell the world. This feller Renzo can talk cannibal so good he makes
+Monitaya hunt for the dictionary, and he'll tell the chief in ten
+seconds what I tried half an hour to say this afternoon--that ye belong.
+I 'ain't been here long enough to learn much o' their lingo, ye
+understand. If I could spout it like French, now, there wouldn't been no
+trouble."
+
+McKay and Knowlton snickered. They knew Tim's French was several degrees
+worse than the usual American doughboy's "frog" talk.
+
+"Good thing you couldn't," derided Knowlton. "You'd have had José
+crucified before we got here."
+
+"That's right, gimme the razz! Course, I did have a li'l' trouble makin'
+some o' them frogs understand, but that was because they was so ignorant
+they didn't know their own language when they heard it spoke right.
+Anyways, ye got to admit Hozy's still with us and sassy as ever, and he
+wouldn't been if Timmy Ryan hadn't been round to powwow for him."
+
+"You have it right, señor," José agreed, gravely. "Without you I should
+now be dead. I can speak the Mayoruna tongue quite well, but of what use
+is it to talk any language when men will not listen? It was you and your
+gun that saved me."
+
+"Gun? Good Lord! Did you pull a gun on Monitaya?" ejaculated the
+lieutenant.
+
+"Aw, no. That is--I guess mebbe I did wave me piece around while I was
+arguin'--I can always convince a guy better if I got somethin' in me
+hand. But I didn't git real rough."
+
+"You are lucky to be still alive, Senhor Tim," said Lourenço. "If
+Monitaya were not the man he is you would not be alive. I am glad we
+have returned."
+
+"Meanin' I need a guardeen? Say, lookit here now--"
+
+"As you were!" clipped McKay. "We're all wasting time. José, let's hear
+your report. I thought you were going to put Schwandorf out of action
+for good?"
+
+"And I am, Capitan! That is why I now am here. If I had reached him
+immediately after leaving the Nunes place it would have been done at
+once. But a man travels slowly when he is alone and has lost much blood,
+and before I met Schwandorf again I had time to think coolly. Then when
+I saw him I changed my plans.
+
+"Some days down the river I met him traveling fast in a canoe paddled by
+hard men whom I know. He pretended to be greatly grieved when I told him
+you all were dead. Oh yes, señores, I told him that! I was playing with
+him, and it amused me to see how he thought he was deceiving me when I
+was really fooling him. I said we were attacked by Indians a short way
+above the Nunes place and that I alone escaped. Then he said something
+that made me decide not to kill him for a time.
+
+"He told me he had learned that this man here--his name is Rand,
+yes?--that the man Rand was a bank thief who had run away from North
+America, and that a reward would be paid for him. He said your real
+reason for coming here was that you were detectives trying to earn the
+reward. That is false, is it not, señores?"
+
+"We're no detectives. Rand's no thief."
+
+"Ah, so I thought. But Schwandorf often tells truth to conceal his lies,
+so that it is sometimes hard to know which is true and which untrue. He
+went on to say he had warned you not to come into this Indian country,
+and he was sorry you had been killed--the snake--but since you were dead
+we might get the money for ourselves. If we succeeded in catching the
+man Rand and taking him out alive I should get half the reward, or five
+hundred dollars.
+
+"I saw plainly what his plan was. I might be useful to him in catching
+Rand if Rand was out in the bush, for I have traveled this country alone
+more than once and am a far better bushman than the German. But whether
+I got Rand or not, I never should live to demand my part of the money. I
+know too much about Schwandorf--things which I shall not tell now. So
+when the right time should come, José would meet with a fatal accident,
+such as a bullet in the back, or a knife in the throat while sleeping.
+But I did not let him know I saw this. I pretended to fall in with his
+plan like the fool he thought me to be.
+
+"It was not Rand alone that brought him here. You have brought back
+Mayoruna women from the Red Bone country, so you know the Red Bones are
+women stealers. And they steal for Schwandorf. You may believe me or
+not, señores, but I did not know this until the German told me. Oh yes,
+I knew he dealt in women, but of the Red Bone part of his business I was
+ignorant. As soon as I learned it I saw how I could put the illustrious
+Señor Schwandorf out of action, as you say, and at the same time try to
+save you.
+
+"I sharpened my knife to a razor edge, deserted the German when we
+reached the right place, shaved with my knife, painted myself with the
+red and black plant dyes, and came overland to this place, thinking you
+would be here if still alive. But you had traveled faster than I
+expected and had gone into the Red Bone country, so my chance to save
+you seemed to have passed. I could only try to tell this chief the Red
+Bones were stealers of his women and that the German was with them,
+knowing that if he believed me he would go on the war trail against them
+and kill them all. But if Señor Tim had not befriended me I should have
+died too soon to tell my tale. That is all, señores. Now can you spare a
+little more tobacco?"
+
+They could and they promptly did. With a new cigarette glowing he lay
+back and looked quizzically at the women lined up before Monitaya.
+
+"How many men has Schwandorf?" asked McKay.
+
+"About twenty in all, Capitan. There were eight in his crew, and they
+were to meet a dozen more at a place on the Peruvian side."
+
+"All riflemen?"
+
+"_Si._ He brought many cartridges for them. They are to raid tribe
+houses of these people."
+
+"Capture women and run them into Peru?"
+
+"_Si._" José yawned as if speaking of a deal in salt fish.
+
+The Americans looked thoughtfully around the big house. They saw that
+every man near them was inspecting some kind of weapon--making sure that
+bow cords were unfrayed, that arrow heads and spear points were firm,
+that the long blowguns had received no cast from suspension, and that
+darts were absolutely straight and true. The strong but cruel faces of
+the warriors were stamped with malignant hatred of the Red Bone tribe
+and the Blackbeard who enslaved their women. The command to prepare for
+a march at dawn had not been withdrawn.
+
+"We'll be expected to go, too, and I'd sure like another crack at
+Umanuh, not to mention the Schwandorf outfit," said Knowlton, "but we
+have friend Rand on our hands now, and our first duty is to get him out
+of here safely."
+
+"Aw, Looey, have a heart! I 'ain't had no action since that li'l' scrap
+down the river, and I got to have some excitement before we blow. What's
+more, we can't beat it now, with Monitaya dependin' on us to fight on
+his side. He'd git sore, and I don't blame him."
+
+His superior officers and the Brazilians frowned. Every man of them
+itched to close with the enemy in one final decisive battle. Yet--
+
+"What 'll we do with Rand?" Knowlton voiced the general thought.
+
+The green eyes of the Raposa turned to him, rested long on his, traveled
+deliberately along the other faces. And then, to the utter astonishment
+of all, the dumb spoke.
+
+"I'll fight," said Rand.
+
+Speechless, the men around him stared. His face was inscrutable as ever,
+his eyes fathomless, his voice flat and toneless. But slowly he raised
+his hands as if holding a bow; twitched his right thumb and forefinger
+in the motion of loosing a shaft; let the hands sink. His gaze calmly
+lifted from theirs and dwelt on the farthest wall. Not another word did
+he speak.
+
+"Begorry! there's yer answer!" triumphed Tim. "He says, 'Fight!' And I
+bet he can sling a wicked bow and arrer, at that. Don't ye s'pose he
+wants a crack at them Red Bones, after the way they used him?"
+
+"I think, comrades, that the man has settled the matter for us," Pedro
+seconded. "None of us wants to run away; and, as Tim says, we are
+expected to help Monitaya. We should be considered cowards, worse than
+dogs, if we refused. If we do not fight the Red Bones we may have to
+fight these Mayorunas, who now are our friends. We must stay."
+
+McKay nodded, still studying the expressionless countenance of Rand.
+
+"That's settled," he announced, crisply. "Now, Lourenço, find out
+Monitaya's plan of battle."
+
+The chief had finished his examination of the women and Lourenço
+promptly put the question. Monitaya laconically replied.
+
+"His purpose is not changed by our arrival, Capitao. He and his men go
+to-morrow to attack and destroy the Red Bones. When they reach the town
+of Umanuh they will surround it, and all will rush in when the chief
+gives his yell of war."
+
+"About what I expected. An Indian has a single-track mind always. But
+his strategy is rotten. Might be good enough if he had only Umanuh to
+deal with, but with Schwandorf in the game it's different. Ask him how
+he expects to protect his women while he's gone."
+
+"He says," Lourenço reported, "that there will be no danger to the
+women, because his warriors will be between the women and their enemies
+until those enemies are dead."
+
+"Very simple. So simple that it's foolish. He doesn't figure on the
+other fellow's mind at all; doesn't realize that a man like Schwandorf
+is bound to outguess him on such straightaway tactics and isn't at all
+likely to play into his hands. But that's the exact situation. The
+German will outguess him, and it's up to him to outguess the German in
+turn. We'll do his guessing for him.
+
+"Schwandorf goes into Umanuh's town, learns what's happened, finds the
+Red Bones frothing at the mouth, and is sore himself. He figures that
+we've returned here with the women, that Monitaya's men are blood-mad
+against the Red Bones, and that they'll do just what they are planning
+to do--march on Red Bone town and leave their women unprotected except
+by the old men, whose defensive power is negligible. He is in this
+country for the express purpose of getting girls, and with Monitaya's
+men away from their _malocas_ he has a wide-open chance to make the
+biggest slave haul of his life. So he plans to outmaneuver Monitaya,
+attack this place, capture all the young women, allow the Red Bones to
+massacre everyone else and burn the houses, and then move on without the
+loss of a man. After that perhaps he intends to find us and get Rand, or
+perhaps to attack other Mayoruna _malocas_. At any rate, his first
+objective is this place. Am I right so far?"
+
+"Dead right," Knowlton nodded.
+
+"Very well. Now he may figure that, having found the water connection
+between the two creeks, the Mayorunas will come against Umanuh by the
+canoe route. Or he may think they'll make the overland trip. In either
+case, the Red Bones have to come through the bush, for the simple reason
+that they haven't boats enough to carry all their force. Their canoes
+were rather few when we were there, and we commandeered several of them
+for our own use. If they decide to come part of the way in canoes
+they'll have to work a come-and-go transport service, bringing the
+fighting men down in batches to some rendezvous from which they must
+finish the journey on foot. Chances are that they'll disregard the
+canoes and all march overland by some route that would dodge the
+Mayoruna line of march. But in either case they're coming here. And it's
+here, in the place where he's not expected to be, that Monitaya should
+meet them. Let him fortify himself and await the assault. It will come."
+
+"And we shall be saved many weary miles of leg work," José smiled.
+"Capitan, your strategy is magnificent."
+
+"Begorry! it ain't so bad at that!" Tim approved. "Hozy, me and you will
+have our hammicks slung out front here when the show starts and do our
+shootin' prone. Suits me fine. Put it up to the chief, Renzo."
+
+Lourenço did. Very carefully he explained it all to Monitaya, dwelling
+on the fact that McKay himself was a warrior chieftain and familiar with
+the fighting methods of such men as the atrocious Blackbeard, and
+depicting graphically the horror of an attack by the barbarous Red Bones
+on the defenseless women. It took him some time to divert the chief's
+stubborn mind from the original plan, but in the end he succeeded.
+
+To the vast astonishment and disappointment of the vengeful warriors,
+Monitaya curtly announced that the projected march would not take place.
+They stared as if disbelieving their ears, and more than one black look
+was given Lourenço. But not a man questioned the countermanding of
+orders, not a mutter was heard. The great chief had spoken, and his word
+was final.
+
+Reluctantly they laid aside the weapons on which they had been toiling
+with such purposeful zeal. The chief watched them with a little smile of
+pride--pride in their zest for war, pride in their unquestioning
+acceptance of his dampening order. Then he coolly told them to continue
+their work; told them, further, that the next morning all the streams
+were to be poisoned, new traps set, and scouts stationed far out on
+every trail to await and report the approach of foes. Instantly their
+faces flamed again and from every quarter of the wide house rose an
+excited hum. They were to fight, after all!
+
+"Tough eggs, these lads, if ye ask me," yawned Tim. "Bet ye we'll see a
+row worth lookin' at when she does break."
+
+He forebore to mention the fact that in rifle power their assailants
+would outnumber them four to one.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+THE BATTLE OF THE TRIBES
+
+
+The next four days, though they were days of waiting, were busy enough
+to satisfy the most impatient Mayoruna warrior.
+
+Outposts were established on every route by which the attacking force
+would be likely to approach the twin _malocas_, the watchmen being given
+the strictest commands not to fight, nor even to allow themselves to be
+seen, but to run at top speed with the warning.
+
+Poison detachments went forth to collect the ingredients for making
+deadly the water and the weapons. Those detailed to the work of
+polluting the streams gathered quantities of blue-blossomed,
+short-podded plants with yellow roots, the roots being pulped and thrown
+into the slow currents, which straightway became fatal to man or beast
+The wurali squad procured their favorite materials and, in a flimsy shed
+well away from the houses, prepared a plentiful supply of the venomed
+brew.
+
+New traps were set at points where a man or two might be picked off,
+though it was realized that these would have little effect on the final
+result. And inside the big houses men especially skilled in the
+manufacture of arrows and darts toiled swiftly and steadily from dawn
+till far into the night.
+
+These activities, however, were only the usual defensive preparations
+made by the warriors whenever they knew a sizable body of foes was
+somewhere in the vicinity. It remained for the brains of the white men
+to devise additional features, simple enough in themselves, but
+astounding to the savages, who were accustomed only to the primitive
+battle tactics of their ancestors. For the first time in their lives the
+cannibals found themselves digging in--and also digging out.
+
+After a survey of the terrain and a catechism of Lourenço and Monitaya
+as to the usual methods of attack and defense, the two officers broached
+an idea born of the exigencies of the situation. As they expected, the
+great chief was somewhat slow to approve it, for it involved a literal
+undermining of the walls of his fortresses. But despite the natural
+inflexibility of his mental processes he was an unusually intelligent
+savage, and eventually the patient reiteration of the advantages of the
+scheme won him first to assent and then almost to enthusiasm. Wherefore
+the amazed tribesmen were set to work, armed with crude wooden shovels,
+in digging holes under the logs which sheltered them from man, beast,
+and jungle demon.
+
+All along the walls, at intervals marked by McKay and Knowlton, the
+tunnels were dug. At the same time another large gang excavated before
+each of the _malocas_ a deep, curving trench, the two long pits being
+separated by a ten-foot space of solid earth affording free passage from
+the houses to the creek. Meanwhile the women and the older children were
+weaving flimsy covers from withes and vines. As soon as a tunnel was
+completed it was masked outside the walls by one of these covers, on
+which a thin layer of earth and grass was laid. The two trenches were
+likewise concealed, and the loose earth was carried inside the house and
+packed solidly against the walls flanking the doors.
+
+At sundown of the fourth day the work was ended. And so well was it done
+that when the great chief, his subchiefs, and his foreign allies went on
+a final tour of inspection they could find no sign that the houses were
+honeycombed with exits or that the ground in front of the little
+entrances was not solid at all points.
+
+"Rod and I took the idea from those pit traps out on the trails,"
+Knowlton explained for the dozenth time. "Holes are covered to look
+exactly like the rest of the ground. Every man of us has to be inside
+when the enemy arrives, but we have to get out quick when the right time
+comes, so we go under the walls. And can't you see those brave women
+stealers go kerplunk down into the trenches? Oh boy!"
+
+Whereat Lourenço and José smiled as if enjoying a secret joke. They
+were. For they knew something of which the Americans were not
+aware--that Monitaya had improved on the trench-trap idea of the whites
+by studding the bottom of those trenches with barbed araya bones smeared
+with wurali.
+
+"Yeah, and I figger them guys 'll git some jolt when these houses, which
+'ain't got nobody in 'em but women and kids, begin to spit lead out o'
+loopholes and spew screechin' cannibals up out o' the ground. Gosh! I
+wouldn't miss seein' Sworn-off's face for a keg o' beer--and that's
+sayin' somethin'."
+
+Wherein Tim expressed the general sentiment.
+
+So ended the fourth day. When the fifth broke no man showed himself
+outside the walls. Except the few outposts, every male of the Monitaya
+_malocas_ bided within, awaiting with growing tension the arrival of the
+enemy. It was more than likely, McKay had pointed out, that the main
+body of the barbarous force led by Schwandorf would be preceded by a
+handful of scouts, and quite possible that one or more of these would
+slip past the outguards and spy on the tribal houses. The sight of even
+one warrior would instantly apprise any such spy that the others must be
+near, and the word would go back at all speed to the Red Bones.
+Wherefore the only Monitayans to pass through the tiny doorways that
+morning were a few young women sent out as bait. These, naturally, took
+good care to stay near the entrances.
+
+Within, the men waited at their appointed places. Each tunnel had its
+quota of warriors, the number being divided evenly to assure a speedy
+and simultaneous exit. The Americans had elected to fight from the
+_maloca_ of the great chief, while the Brazilians and José were to
+garrison the doorway of the other house as soon as the warning came.
+Rand, wordless and imperturbable as ever, now was armed with a strong
+bow and plenty of new arrows with unpoisoned heads; and he, of course,
+would remain with his own countrymen. Thus, preparations completed, all
+settled themselves to the interminable hours of waiting.
+
+Up on the heaped earth near the doorway, which made the walls
+practically bullet-proof to a height of six feet and thus would protect
+the women and children, one or more of the Americans was constantly on
+the lookout through some inconspicuous loophole. Hour after hour dragged
+past, and no unusual movement or sound came to reward their vigilance.
+Under the glare of the sun the roof and walls grew hot; under the silent
+strain of endless anticipation the impatience of the fighting men became
+a ferment. At length Pedro, unable to keep still, mounted to a peephole
+near Knowlton. Scarcely had he put his eye to the opening when both men
+sucked in their breath.
+
+At the edge of the bush a man's head peered from behind a tree. And at
+the same moment a single canoe came creeping out of the bush and up to
+the landing place. The head behind the tree was that of a Red Bone spy.
+The two in the small canoe were Yuara and a companion from the Suba
+tribe.
+
+"Lourenço!" hoarsely whispered Pedro. "Yuara comes. Tell girls to run to
+welcome him and guide him between the pits. A spy is watching. If Yuara
+walks on the pits he dies and our trap is revealed. _Por amor de Deus_,
+send girls quickly!"
+
+Lourenço acted instantly. Seizing two young women, he propelled them
+doorward, talking swiftly the while. Yuara and his mate were already
+advancing innocently toward the few girls outside, none of whom had wit
+enough to warn him. But the two whom the Brazilian had grasped happened
+to be of quick intelligence, and now they darted out. Before the
+visiting pair could reach the death trap the girls were upon them,
+laughing as if delighted to see a man once more, and deftly turning them
+aside to the point where two unobtrusive stubs marked the bridge of
+safety.
+
+Vastly astonished by such effusive welcome from two girls whom they did
+not know, but by no means displeased thereby, the young warriors of the
+Suba clan were piloted to the door and inside. As they disappeared, the
+head of the spy also vanished.
+
+"Woof!" muttered Knowlton, wiping sweat from his brow. "That was close!
+Here's hoping we have no more visitors."
+
+Yuara and his companion meanwhile were being interrogated by both
+Lourenço and Monitaya, who in turn enlightened them as to the present
+state of affairs. At the promise of war the faces of the Suba men lit
+up.
+
+"Yuara comes only on a visit to learn news," Lourenço told the rest.
+"You remember that the day after our return a canoe was sent downstream
+to a point where the wooden bars could be beaten and heard by Suba's
+men, and that a warning against the Red Bones and Schwandorf was given
+in that way. Yuara has become anxious to know more, so he is here."
+
+"If he sticks around he'll learn a lot," predicted Tim.
+
+With no waste of words or motion Yuara coolly attached himself and his
+fellow-tribesman to McKay. Monitaya and his subchiefs were informed of
+the arrival and departure of the enemy scout. The word passed among the
+warriors, who, despite their innate equanimity, began to grit their
+pointed teeth and quiver like dogs held in leash. But another hour
+passed, and yet another; and still no word from the outposts arrived.
+
+Suddenly a chorus of screams shrilled from the women outside. In a
+frenzy of fear they plunged through the doorways. Blending with their
+outcries, a hoarse yell of ferocity rose raucously from the direction of
+the creek. At once a louder ululation burst forth at the rear and sides
+of the clearing. Monitaya's outguards had failed and the _malocas_ were
+surrounded.
+
+Loping from the bush fringing the stream came a score of yellow-faced,
+shirtless, barefooted brutes crisscrossed with cartridge belts and
+gripping rifles. At their head loomed a burly black-whiskered creature
+with a revolver in each hand--the malignant Schwandorf himself.
+
+Grinning like a pack of yellow-fanged wolves, they doubled toward the
+low entrances, their guns spouting wantonly at the upper walls--a ragged
+volley meant to terrorize the defenseless women within, none of whom
+were to be killed until the handsomest had been cut out and set aside
+for slavery. Some of the heavy bullets bored through between logs and
+thudded wickedly into rafters and roof poles within. But from the
+loopholes where the defending rifles lurked no shot cracked in reply.
+
+The fiendish howling of the Red Bones, sweeping in from all sides to the
+butchery, swelled into a feline screech that almost drowned the roar of
+the rifles. Into the view of the watchers at the loopholes streamed
+hideous faces and naked brown bodies swerving inward from left and right
+to follow at the heels of the Blackbeard and his gunmen. In a few
+seconds more the trotting line of Peruvians was backed and flanked by a
+horde of demons hungering for the taste of women and babes. On they
+came--
+
+With the suddenness of a cataclysm the ground opened. Riflemen vanished
+in midstride. Savages screaming triumphant hate were gone in the flick
+of an eye. Others, instinctively digging their heels into the ground the
+instant those ahead of them disappeared, were hurled forward and down by
+the momentum of the following mass. Before the rush could be checked the
+trenches were packed with men struggling in frenzy to get out, wounding
+themselves and one another with the deadly points of their poisoned
+weapons.
+
+Of the twenty gunmen only four remained. They were the four immediately
+behind Schwandorf. By blind chance the German had set foot on the narrow
+isthmus separating the twin trenches, saving himself and the henchmen at
+his heels from being engulfed. Now, as the Red Bones fought back from
+the trap yawning before them, he and the surviving Peruvians stood
+staring in momentary stupefaction at the welter of death on their
+flanks. The malevolent yells of the savages had been cut short by the
+catastrophe, and for the moment no sound was heard but the grunts and
+snarls of struggling men.
+
+Then into the semisilence burst a mighty voice--the battlefield voice of
+McKay.
+
+"Now! Fire at will!"
+
+The walls spat flame and lead. A scythe of death swept above the ground
+where stood Schwandorf and his riflemen. The Peruvian half-breeds
+collapsed and lay still. But Schwandorf, shocked into activity by the
+impact of that first word, dodged death by an infinitesimal fraction of
+a second. Hurling himself backward, he struck the earth just as the
+bullets sped through the air over him. With a lightning rebound he was
+up while fresh cartridges were jumping into the rifle barrels menacing
+him. Headlong he dived into the mass of Red Bones just behind. And the
+next bullets darting after him killed the savages, leaving him unharmed.
+
+The command of McKay and the crack of the rifles sent the quivering
+Mayorunas into the fight. In a flash every masking tunnel cover was
+thrown bodily into the air. Before the thunderstruck Red Bones had
+recovered from the shock of finding their gun-armed leaders annihilated
+and their mass being swept by swift-shooting rifles hidden in the walls,
+they beheld a horde of vindictive foes erupting from under those walls
+like warrior ants rushing from subterranean galleries. A blood-chilling
+yell of concentrated fury smote their ears; a hastily loosed storm of
+war arrows and short throwing-spears ripped into their flesh; a
+swift-running arc of light-skinned men swerved around them, shooting and
+stabbing as they went. They, who had so exultantly surrounded the homes
+of women and children, now were surrounded in turn.
+
+From the doorway of Monitaya's _maloca_ the two Brazilians and José now
+leaped forth and, firing as they ran, dashed to hold the entrance of the
+other big house. A few arrows whirred around them during their transit,
+but the shafts were shot hurriedly and missed. Meanwhile the three
+bushmen were striking down enemies at every flash of their guns, firing
+with the swift surety of veterans of many a running fight. They reached
+their objective unwounded; and when they reached it a fringe of dead
+foes marked their passage along the face of the hostile array. Once
+within the door, they rapidly reloaded and sprayed lead along the
+trenches, which, though now nearly full, had become a dead-line past
+which no Red Bone sought to go.
+
+Up on the earth embankments within the chief's house the four Americans
+fought steadily on; the soldiers shooting as coolly as if engaged merely
+in rapid-fire target practice, the silent Rand methodically driving
+arrows in swift succession from his wall-slit. Arrows thudded thickly
+into the logs masking them. Bullets, too, slammed into their
+rampart--bullets from the heavy revolvers of Schwandorf, who, ever
+keeping himself protected by the bodies of his cannibal allies, shot
+with both hands as the chance came. And the German could shoot. With
+only the small gun muzzles as targets, he planted bullets so close as to
+knock dirt more than once into the eyes of the riflemen and render them
+momentarily useless. After a time he got a bullet fair into a loophole.
+
+Knowlton grunted suddenly, swayed back, toppled, fell down the parapet.
+For a few seconds he lay still.
+
+"Looey!" howled Tim. "How ye fixed? Hurt bad?"
+
+The lieutenant heaved himself into a sitting position, stared around,
+clapped a hand to his right shoulder, looked at the red smear his palm
+brought away, reeled up, and scrambled back to his rifle. Schwandorf's
+bullet had drilled clear through the shoulder, and in falling his head
+had struck one of the upright poles. Without a word he got his gun into
+action once more, shooting now from the left shoulder. Tim, with a tight
+grin of relief, devoted himself once more to trying to shoot down the
+dodging German.
+
+The encircling Mayorunas, their first paroxysm of fury vented, now
+settled in cold hate to their work. On all sides their clubmen and
+spearmen were bludgeoning and stabbing at the close-packed Red Bones,
+leaping in, killing, springing back and onward with terrible efficiency.
+Beyond these a thin but deadly line of bowmen poured arrows in
+high-looping curves over the heads of the hand-to-hand combatants, the
+shafts whizzing far up, turning, and plunging down unerringly into the
+center of the enemy force. Each of those arrows could, and many did, end
+the lives of two or three adversaries by gouging their skins and letting
+the fearful wurali into their blood. The blowgun men too were darting
+into every opening, handling their clumsy weapons like feathers and
+constantly moving to spy out fresh targets.
+
+But the men of Monitaya were by no means escaping unscathed. The Red
+Bones, assailed from every quarter and milling about in hopeless
+disorder, were fighting now with desperate frenzy. Their own clubbers
+and stabbers were charging out and smashing skulls or piercing abdomens,
+their arrows rose in all directions at once, and some into whose veins
+the wurali had struck sprang in the last moments of life on nearby foes
+and bit like mad dogs. With a leader and a chance to form into any sort
+of flying wedge they might have broken through with comparative ease and
+taken a far heavier toll. But they had no leader: for Umanuh, whose name
+meant "corpse," now was a corpse in truth, his merciless brain oozing
+from a skull shattered by a Mayoruna clubman; and Schwandorf was very
+busy looking out for Schwandorf. So it was every man for himself, with
+the devil rapidly taking not only the hindmost, but the foremost as
+well.
+
+Thicker and thicker fell the dead. The trenches now not only were filled
+to the level of the ground, but piled with a windrow of bullet-torn
+bodies knocked down by the ever-spitting rifles. José, Pedro, and
+Lourenço abandoned all shelter and knelt in plain sight before the door
+which they had kept clear of all close attack. Monitaya, until now a
+field general who strode up and down roaring commands and encouragement,
+suddenly cast away his regal role and, seizing a club from one of his
+bodyguard, hurled himself on the nearest Red Bones--a raving, ravening
+demon of destructiveness whose glaring eyes smote terror into those
+fronting him and whose weapon swung like the club of Hercules. His
+bowmen and blowgun men, at last out of missiles, came charging in with
+bare hands or weapons seized from fallen warriors. Maneuvering had
+ended. Henceforth the fight was a grappling mêlée.
+
+Then the gunfire dwindled and died. The rifle cartridges were spent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+THE PASSING OF SCHWANDORF
+
+
+The three soldiers flung down their hot, empty guns.
+
+"Nothin' left but the gats and the steel," rumbled Tim. "Me, I'm goin'
+out and git some fresh air."
+
+With which he drew pistol and machete, leaped down, and lunged through
+the door. McKay bounded at his heels.
+
+"Merry! Rand! Stay here!" he commanded. Then he was outside, his pistol
+roaring in unison with Tim's.
+
+Knowlton and Rand looked at each other. The lieutenant fumbled his
+pistol from its holster, got it firmly in his left hand, slid down the
+embankment, and staggered out. Rand coolly walked over to Tim's
+discarded gun, picked it up, and followed.
+
+Over at the other doorway the bushmen threw aside their useless guns and
+drew their machetes. José, grinning like a death's-head, whirled the
+bush knife aloft and mockingly dared the Red Bones still fronting him to
+come and take it from him. Pedro and Lourenço indulged in no such
+bravado, but leaped like jaguars at their foes. Whereupon José,
+muttering a curse on them for getting the jump on him, dashed forward
+with furious abandon.
+
+Their pistols emptied, the Americans also drew machetes--all except
+Rand, who had no weapon but the bulletless rifle--and waited. Few
+unwounded Red Bones now were left; but among those few Schwandorf still
+lived.
+
+"Schwandorf!" bellowed McKay. "You yellow cur--you _Schweinhund_! Come
+and fight!"
+
+"Yeah!" taunted Tim. "The women and kids are inside. Come and git 'em!"
+
+Schwandorf came. He came not because he wanted to, however, for his
+guns, too, were empty. He came because the Red Bones, sensing the
+challenge and loathing the Blackbeard who had shielded himself so long
+among them, threw him out bodily. They had no time to stand and watch
+what might happen to him, but they took time to cast him out where he
+must stand on his own legs. Then, snarling, they resumed their now
+hopeless battle against their encompassing executioners.
+
+For a moment the German stood glowering at McKay. Then, with a dramatic
+gesture, he threw aside his useless revolvers and advanced empty handed.
+
+"Man to man?" he growled.
+
+"Man to man!" echoed McKay, passing his pistol to Tim and sheathing his
+machete. Fists clenched, he sprang forward.
+
+Schwandorf halted. His hands remained empty--until the captain was
+within eight feet of him. Then he leaped back, his machete jumped into
+his fist, and its point stabbed for his antagonist's abdomen.
+
+An instantaneous side-step and twist of the body saved the captain from
+evisceration. The blade ripped through breeches and shirt and scraped
+the skin. As Schwandorf yanked it back for another thrust McKay struck
+it away with one hand and, without drawing his own steel, jumped again
+at his assailant. An instant later the two blackbeards were clenched in
+a death grapple.
+
+Schwandorf found his long knife useless and dropped it. He strove for a
+back-breaking hold, but found it blocked. McKay, though an indifferent
+swordsman, was a formidable wrestler and fist fighter, and the German's
+advantage in weight was more than offset by the American's quickness and
+wiry strength. Science was thrown to the winds. A heaving, choking,
+wrenching man-fight it was, stumbling over bodies, each straining every
+muscle, trying every hold to twist and break the other and batter him
+down to death.
+
+Smashing fist blows brought blood dripping from their faces.
+Bone-wringing grips forced gasps from their lungs and superhuman spasms
+of resistance from their outraged nerve centers. They fell across a
+corpse, rolled on the ground, throttled, kicked, struck, and tore.
+Finally, in a furious outburst of energy, the American fought his enemy
+down under him, clamped his body with iron knees, and crashed a terrific
+punch squarely between the German's glaring eyes. Schwandorf went limp.
+
+At that instant a backward eddy of the battle surged over the pair. The
+maniacal Red Bones, fighting to the last bitter drop of doom, found two
+white men under their feet. Screeching, snarling, they fell on them like
+wild beasts, tearing with tooth and nail. Their arrows were gone, their
+darts exhausted, and no spearman was among them; they fought with
+nature's weapons, while above them one lone clubman struggled to swing
+down his lethal bludgeon without killing his fellows.
+
+McKay, wrenching his machete loose and gripping it with both hands, got
+its point upward and jabbed blindly at the weight of flesh bearing him
+down. Faintly to his ears came yells of rage and the impact of
+blows--the battle roars of Tim and Knowlton, who with their machetes
+were cleaving a way to their captain. But the beastly demons over him
+still crushed him down on Schwandorf, smothering him under the burden of
+bodies dead and alive. His stabs grew weak. Exhaustion and lack of air
+were killing him more surely than the savages.
+
+Pedro, Lourenço, José and the inexplicable Rand came slashing and
+clubbing a path of their own to the beleaguered Scot--the Brazilians
+cutting straight ahead with deadly surety, the painted Peruvian chopping
+and thrusting with a fixed grin, Rand swinging the gun butt down on head
+after head. From still another direction Yuara and his satellite came
+boring in with spears snatched from dead hands. The three rescue parties
+reached the squirming heap at almost the same moment. But Yuara was the
+one whose arrival counted most.
+
+In one last convulsive struggle McKay heaved himself up until he was
+once more on his knees. His head came out of the welter, his mouth wide
+and gulping for breath. The lone clubman grunted, swung his weapon high,
+and with all the power of his muscular body drove it down at that
+upturned, unprotected face.
+
+With a mighty plunge Yuara threw himself over the captain. His spear
+sank into the stomach of the clubman. But the heavy wooden war hammer
+fell with crushing force. As the Red Bone collapsed with the spear head
+buried in his middle, his slayer also dropped under that terrible stroke
+with head mangled beyond recognition.
+
+Yuara, son of Rana, warrior of Suba, who owed his life to McKay's rough
+surgery, had paid his debt.
+
+Under the impact of his body McKay also slumped forward, senseless.
+
+Over them now burst the bloodiest berserk battle of that bloody day. The
+soldiers, the bushmen, and the reclaimed Raposa, already smeared from
+head to foot with red stains from their own veins and those of foemen,
+went stark mad. Before their united ferocity the men of Umanuh dropped
+as if rolled under by an inexorable machine of war. Backward they
+reeled, striving now to escape the red wall of cold steel surging at
+them--only to fall under a fresh attack of ravening Mayorunas who came
+pouring in upon them from the sides. The last of the group lurched
+headless to the ground under a decapitating side-swing from the awful
+club of Monitaya himself.
+
+Then Knowlton, his lifeblood still draining slowly but surely away
+through his wounded shoulder, pitched on his face and was still.
+
+"Back!" gasped Tim. "Git looey and cap out o' this! Here, you Raposy!
+Lend a hand!"
+
+The Raposa, his green eyes ablaze and his obdurate calmness totally
+gone, glared around as if seeking one more Red Bone to kill. Then, as
+Tim heaved the lieutenant across his shoulders and went lunging across
+contorted bodies toward the _malocas_, he ran back to the heap where
+McKay lay and dug him clear. Lourenço aided him in lifting the captain,
+and they bore him off after Knowlton.
+
+Pedro and José shoved the other bodies aside until they uncovered the
+prone figure of Schwandorf--a ghastly form dyed from hair to heels with
+the blood of the cannibals whom he had led there. To all appearances he
+was dead. Yet the Brazilian and the Peruvian looked keenly at him, then
+at each other.
+
+"There is a saying, is there not, that the devil takes care of his own?"
+grinned José. "It would be sad if this man should yet live and escape.
+See! What is that tall Red Bone doing over yonder?"
+
+Pedro followed his pointing finger. He saw no such Red Bone as José had
+mentioned. But when he looked back at Schwandorf he noticed something
+that made him glance quickly at José once more.
+
+"Ah yes, Señor Schwandorf is truly dead," the Peruvian added, wiping his
+machete carelessly on one bare leg. "Whether or not the devil takes care
+of his own, as I was saying, there is no doubt that _el Aleman_ now is
+with the devil. So, since we can do nothing for him, let us look after
+the two North American señores."
+
+Pedro, with a grim smile, turned with him toward the tribal houses.
+There was nothing else for them to do, for the Mayorunas now were
+dispatching the last survivors of the attacking force. Before the pair
+entered the low doorway a long, triumphant yell burst from the hoarse
+throats of the men of Monitaya. Of all the Red Bones who had swept in
+such ghoulish glee into that clearing not one now remained alive.
+
+At that shout of victory and the entrance of the men to whose
+precautions and prowess they owed so much, the women flocked again into
+the center of the _maloca_ and the children dived out through the
+tunnels to behold the battlefield. Though bullets and arrows had come
+through the doorway, those inside had escaped all injury by hugging the
+protective earth embankment or taking refuge in the vacant shafts under
+the walls. Now the older women, experienced in treatment of wounds,
+busied themselves with the white warriors, while the younger ones
+fetched water and pieces of isca--a natural styptic made by ants--or
+made up pads of poultices of healing herbs.
+
+Tim, who had expected to play surgeon with his crude knowledge of first
+aid, found himself not only relieved of his job, but being bathed and
+plastered with the others. He, José, Pedro, Lourenço, and even Rand were
+gashed by thrusts from broken spear hafts, bleeding from open bites,
+ripped by glancing sweeps of tooth-set clubs, bruised by fierce
+blows--minor injuries all, but such as might easily have resulted in
+blood poisoning unless given prompt attention. Later on they were to be
+thankful for those ministrations, but now they tolerated them only
+because they could do nothing for the captain and the lieutenant.
+
+McKay and Knowlton were under the direct and capable treatment of the
+wives of the great chief. Of the two McKay looked by far the worse, but
+actually was in much better condition. From the waist up he was clawed,
+bitten, and bruised so badly that he was a fearsome spectacle; his left
+arm was dislocated, three fingers of his right hand were broken, and his
+muscles were so wrenched that for a week afterward he moved like a
+cripple; but his present unconsciousness was largely due to exhaustion
+and partial asphyxiation. Knowlton, whose skin was comparatively
+unmarked, but whose veins had continued to pour vital fluid from his
+gaping bullet wound during his stubborn fight, now was badly weakened.
+But whatever could be done for him was being done, and the others could
+only stand by.
+
+The women not engaged in caring for the fighting visitors soon found
+themselves busy with their own male relatives, who came stumbling in by
+themselves or were carried by others. The Red Bones, though finally
+annihilated, had made their mark in the Mayoruna tribe. At that moment
+thirty-six of Monitaya's warriors lay dead among the bodies of their
+enemies, and before the next sunrise several more passed on to join the
+spirits of their comrades in arms. Yet all who survived, though some
+were crippled for life, thought only of the victory and gloated on their
+scars of combat. As for those who had fallen, they were dead, had died
+as Mayorunas should, and so needed no sympathy or regret. Even now their
+bodies were being collected for immediate transportation into the
+forest, where, in accordance with the tribal custom, they would be
+burned.
+
+Some of the men who brought in the wounded men continued on to the
+bushmen and, in significant sign manual, requested a loan of their
+machetes. Having received them, they hastened out to join those who,
+equipped with hardwood knives, were gathering the sinister trophies of
+triumph before heaving the dead Red Bones out to the waiting vultures.
+
+"Urrrgh!" growled Tim. "'Twas a lovely scrap, but I wisht I was
+somewheres else, now it's over. While ye was away they brought in the
+fists and feet o' some guy they caught in a trap--"
+
+"We know," nodded Pedro.
+
+"Yeah. Wal, I s'pose we got to look pleasant. Dog eat dog, as the feller
+says. Long as somebody has to git et, I'm glad it ain't us." Wherewith
+he turned to the Raposa and changed the subject. "Raposy, old sport, ye
+sure done some good work, for a crazy guy. I'll tell the world ye
+cracked heads like a Bowery cop full o' bootleg booze."
+
+The Raposa's green eyes glimmered. In fact, they almost twinkled. And
+for the second time the wild man spoke.
+
+"I am not crazy."
+
+"Huh? My gosh! Ye spoke four whole words! That makes six in a week. Be
+careful, feller, or ye'll strain yerself. And as far's bein' crazy's
+concerned, don't let it worry ye none. We're all crazy, too, or we
+wouldn't be here."
+
+Under cover of his banter the veteran eyed the other sharply. As he
+turned his gaze aside to the moving figures about him he thought:
+"Begorry! he don't look like a nut, at that. Mebbe somethin's
+unscrambled his brains again. Here's hopin', anyways."
+
+The big tribe house now was full of life. Small groups of warriors,
+their hurts dressed with primitive poultices, gathered around the
+hammocks of those more seriously injured and discussed the battle.
+Others came in bearing armfuls of severed Red Bone hands and feet, which
+were distributed among the family triangles. The women, their remedial
+work done, now turned to the clay cooking vessels, freshened the fires,
+stripped the flesh of their enemies from the bones, and set it to boil.
+Among the hammocks moved the subchiefs, their eyes still shining with
+the light of battle, examining the wounded men and glancing at the
+preparations for the dire feast to come.
+
+Over all drifted a steadily thickening smoke which rolled up and out
+through the vent in the peak of the roof, where the setting sun smote it
+with rays of gleaming red. Around the _maloca_ gleamed the red light of
+the cooking fires among whose burning fagots bubbled the red pots and
+pans. Red men and women passing about in a crimson setting--the scene
+formed a fitting end to the reddest day in the unwritten records of the
+tribe, who since noon had proved themselves worthy champions of the
+ancient god whose name they never had heard, but who nevertheless ruled
+their lives--the red god Mars.
+
+Monitaya himself, head high and chest swelling with pride, now came
+striding lithely in, followed by a young warrior carrying something. He
+stopped between the hammocks of McKay and Knowlton, studied their faces
+gravely, listened as his wives told of what had been done. At almost the
+same moment the eyes of the pair slowly opened and stared up at him.
+
+The face of the great chief melted in one of its transforming smiles.
+The captain and the lieutenant grinned pluckily back. With a nod of
+silent comradeship the big savage turned to his own hammock and sat
+down. Two of his women built up the royal fire and fell to work on the
+things handed over by the young warrior. Tim and his mates took one
+squint at what they were doing. Then they moved between the fire and the
+two officers, blocking the view.
+
+"'Bout time ye woke up and listened to the birdies," Tim chaffed.
+"Fight's over, and we been hangin' round waitin' for ye to quit snorin'
+so's we could hear ourselves think. Lay still, now! Ye're all plastered
+up nice and comfy--and don't preach to me no more about the girls. Ye
+had every dang one o' the big chief's wives hangin' over ye and kissin'
+ye so hard it sounded like a machine gun. Ain't that right, fellers? Me,
+I'm so jealous I could bite the both of ye."
+
+"Schwandorf dead?" hoarsely queried McKay.
+
+"Huh? Oh, him? Sure. Ye fixed him right, Cap. The pretty li'l'
+blackbirds has flew away with him by now. Say, ye mind that feller
+Yuarry? Know what he done? Wal--"
+
+And while he talked, behind his back the wives of Monitaya completed
+their task and dropped into the great chief's stewpot the flesh of the
+black-bearded slaver and slayer who would menace them no more.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+PARTNERS
+
+
+Seven men squatted around a camp fire on the river bank. Beyond them,
+half revealed by the flickering light of the flames, rose the poles of a
+_tambo_ wherein empty hammocks hung waiting. At the edge of the water
+lay two canoes.
+
+Five of the men wore the habiliments of civilized beings, though their
+shirts and breeches were so tattered and stained that a civilized
+community would have looked askance at them. The other two were nude as
+savages, but their beards and tanned skins were those of white men.
+Beards of varying length seemed, in fact, to be the fashion, for
+everyone present wore one, and all but two were very dark. Of the odd
+pair, one's thin face was partly covered by stubby, blond hair, while
+the other's jaw was masked by a growth of unmistakable red.
+
+Lifting their cigarettes, the blond man and a tall, eagle-faced comrade
+moved their arms stiffly, as if still hampered by injuries. Newly healed
+scars showed on the skins of the rest.
+
+"Injuns are a funny lot," declared the red-haired one. "There's
+Monitaya, now. Keeps us a couple weeks, doctors us half to death, feeds
+us till we gag, gives us new canoes, sends a platoon o' hard guys with
+us to see that we git to the river safe--and don't even say good-by. No
+handshake, no 'Good luck, fellers'--jest a grin like we was goin' to
+walk round the house and come right back. And the lads that come out
+with us done the same--turned round and quit us without a word. I bet if
+we lived amongst 'em long we'd git to be dummies, too."
+
+For a moment there was silence. For no apparent reason all glanced at
+one of the naked men, on whose skin faintly showed reddish streaks.
+
+"You would," he said.
+
+"Huh! Gee! Rand's talkin' again! First time since we licked them Red
+Boneheads. Two whole words. Go easy, feller, easy!"
+
+"I will be easy. But it's time I talked. I am not dumb. I am not crazy."
+
+The green-eyed man spoke slowly, as if forming each word in his mind
+before pronouncing it. The rest squatted with eyes riveted on his face.
+
+"I have not talked before because I had to find myself. I had to hear
+English spoken and become used to it. I had to put things together in my
+mind. Even now some things are not clear. But I can talk and make sense
+of my talk. I will tell what I can remember. First tell me one thing.
+McKay, am I a murderer?"
+
+"A murderer? You? If you are we never heard of it."
+
+"A man named Schmidt. Gustav Schmidt. German merchant at Manaos."
+
+"Gustav Schmidt? Piggy little runt, bald and fat, with a scar across his
+chin?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"He's dead, but you didn't kill him. He was shot a little while ago by a
+young Brazilian for getting too intimate with the young fellow's wife.
+We heard about it while we were in Manaos, and saw his picture. What
+about him?"
+
+"I thought I killed him. I struck him with a bottle. I was told he was
+dead. How long have I been here?"
+
+"You left the States in 1915. It is now 1920."
+
+"Five years? My God! What has happened in that time? Is my mother well?"
+
+The others looked pityingly at him. Slowly Knowlton spoke.
+
+"Your mother died two years ago from heart trouble. Your uncle, Philip
+Dawson, also is dead."
+
+Rand's jaw set. The others shifted their gaze and busied themselves with
+making new cigarettes, spending much time over the simple task.
+
+"Poor mother!" Rand said, huskily. "Uncle Phil--he was a good old scout.
+And I was here--buried alive--only half alive! My head--Tell me, what
+happened on the night before you dressed my lame foot? I remember
+clearly everything from the time I woke in the canoe before daylight
+that morning. Before that there is a blur."
+
+Knowlton sketched the events of that night, and told also of the glimpse
+which he and Pedro had caught of the "wild man" while waiting outside
+the house of the Red Bone chief. A flash lit up Rand's face.
+
+"So that is how I got my sore head. You struck me with your rifle butt.
+That explains much. Before I became a wild beast I was shot in the head.
+The bullet did not go through the skull. It struck me a terrible blow on
+the crown. When I recovered consciousness I was not myself. I have never
+been the same until--"
+
+"Gee cripes!" exploded Tim. "That's it. I seen that same thing up home.
+Bug Sullivan, it was. When he was a li'l' feller he tumbled downstairs
+and hit his head, and for 'most ten years he was foolish. Then a brick
+fell off a buildin' and landed on his bean. It knocked him for a gool,
+but when he come out of it he was bright as a new dime. Looey, when ye
+busted Rand with yer gun ye jarred somethin' loose inside, and now he's
+good as any of us."
+
+"By George! You're right!" cried the lieutenant. "Things like that do
+happen. I've heard of them. Haven't you, Rod?"
+
+McKay nodded.
+
+"That is it," affirmed the Raposa. "I have not been insane. But much was
+gone from me. My mind was a house full of closed doors which I could not
+open. I knew who I was and why I was here, but I knew also that
+something had happened to my brain; knew I was defective; believed I was
+wanted for murder. So I could not go out. I could only stay here, prowl
+the jungle, live the jungle life.
+
+"Now that the closed doors have opened again, others have swung shut. I
+cannot remember much of my wild-beast life here. Some things are clear.
+Too clear. Torturings and horrible feasts. Perhaps I should be grateful
+that some things are forgotten.
+
+"But now my life up to the time I was shot is plain again. I talked with
+a man who had traveled the Amazon and the Andes. I never had seen
+either, and I was ripe for something new. A steamer was just sailing
+south, and I got aboard in a hurry. No baggage but a suitcase and five
+thousand dollars. I had traveled a good deal--Europe, Canada, Japan--and
+always found that plenty of money was all a man needed. Thought it was
+the same way here. I've learned better.
+
+"I visited Rio--a few hours--and then came up along the coast and
+inland. At Manaos I got into trouble. Went ashore and got to drinking
+with two Germans. One of them--Schmidt--grew ugly and said a lot of
+rotten things about the States. Tell me something, men--is the war over
+and did our country get into it?"
+
+"It is, and it did." And Knowlton outlined the epochal occurrences of
+the world conflict.
+
+"And I missed that, too!" mourned Rand. "But I started a war of my own
+down here, anyway. When I quit seeing red I had a bottle neck in my hand
+and both the Germans were down. Somebody said Schmidt was dead. A couple
+of men tried to grab me. I fought my way clear, hid awhile, got back on
+the boat without being noticed, and paid one of the crew well to hide me
+in the hold and feed me. Nearly died from heat and suffocation down
+there, but lived to reach Iquitos, where my man smuggled me ashore. I
+thought I was safe there. But before I could make a move to travel on I
+fell into the hands of that cursed Schwandorf."
+
+"Schwandorf!"
+
+"Schwandorf. He was in Iquitos. The sailor who hid me must have sold me
+out to him. Schwandorf told me he was a police officer in Brazilian
+employ. Said he would take me back to stand trial for murdering Schmidt.
+The dirty blackmailer took all my money to keep his mouth shut and take
+me to a 'safe place.' The safe place was up this river. I came up here
+with him in a canoe paddled by some tough Peruvians. Then he began
+trying to bully me into doing dirty work for him--running women into
+Peru. I saw red again and jumped for him. He gave me that bullet on the
+head.
+
+"After that things are badly blurred. I found myself among savages. How
+I got there, why I wasn't killed, I don't know. Schwandorf was there
+awhile. Then he went away with his gang, leaving me very sure of only
+one thing--I was a murderer and would be executed if caught. And--well,
+that's about all, except that the savages seemed rather afraid of me and
+didn't want me around."
+
+There was another silence. Then Lourenço remarked:
+
+"Between Schmidt and Schwandorf you have suffered much. It is possible
+that there was a connection of some sort between them. But neither can
+ever trouble you again. I do not see why Schwandorf took the trouble
+even to put you among the Red Bones. One more bullet would have ended
+you."
+
+"Any ideas on that subject, José?" asked McKay.
+
+"Only a guess, Capitan. I was not here five years ago, and I knew
+nothing of Schwandorf then. But I know he always schemed for his own
+good and overlooked no chances. So perhaps, finding this man not dead,
+but darkened in mind by his bullet, he thought he might be able to use
+him in some way at some future time. A dead man is not useful to anyone.
+If this man should never become valuable he could live and die forgotten
+among savages, where he could do Schwandorf no harm. If worth something
+he could be found again."
+
+"Cold-blooded Prussian efficiency," nodded McKay. Then he spoke directly
+to Rand.
+
+"Since you're mentally sound," he went on, "we may as well tell you how
+you happen to be among us. We three--Merry, Tim, and I--came here to
+find you. The settlement of the Dawson estate hinges on you."
+
+"On me? How? I've no claim to it. Paul Dawson, Uncle Phil's son--"
+
+"Is dead, too. Killed in action in the Argonne, You're next in line."
+
+McKay watched him keenly. So did Knowlton. The half-expected jubilance
+did not come.
+
+"So Paul's gone," was Rand's reply. "Hard luck. Suppose I hadn't been
+found--then what?"
+
+"In due time the money would go to a school. Boys' school."
+
+"Orphans? Blind? Cripples?"
+
+"Hardly." McKay's mouth curved sardonically. He named a preparatory
+school of the "exclusive" type. Rand's mouth also twisted.
+
+"That hotbed of snobbery? That twin sister to a society girls' finishing
+school? Might have known it, though. Uncle Phil was fond of the sort of
+education that doesn't educate. I'm glad you fellows found me. I'll go
+home and collect every red cent, just to keep it out of the hands of the
+supercilious bunch of bishops that run that sissy-spawner."
+
+Knowlton chuckled appreciatively.
+
+"It's not the sort of school that breeds he-men, for a fact," he agreed.
+"But you don't seem much enthused over having a couple of millions
+dropped into your lap."
+
+Rand sat still. His face remained cheerless, impassive.
+
+"What is money?" he said, presently. "I've always had plenty of it.
+What's it done for me? When you have it you can't tell whether people
+are friends to you or only friends to your money. It makes you cynical,
+suspicious. What's worse, you depend too much on it. You think it will
+do everything. Then if you land in a place where it's no good and you
+haven't got it, anyway, you're up against it a good deal harder than the
+fellow who never had it but knows how to handle himself without it."
+
+"True for ye," Tim concurred, heartily. "All the same, I bet ye'll
+change yer tune after ye git home."
+
+"Will I?" The green eyes impaled him. "Maybe. But I don't think so. I've
+had my run at blowing in money on myself alone. Now I'm going to blow
+some on other folks. I missed out on the war, but--There must be quite a
+few of our fellows lamed and crippled by that war. And I'll gamble that
+the government isn't treating them all like princes. I know something
+about governments."
+
+"Princes? Say, feller, there's many a dog that's took better care of
+than some of our boys back home!"
+
+"So I thought. The income from a couple of millions, along with some of
+the principal, will do a lot of good if used right. And--" His eyes
+turned to the three bushmen.
+
+"Do not look at us in that way," said Lourenço, reading his thought. "We
+can make all the money we need, and we came with the capitao and his
+comrades only because we wanted excitement. Use your money for the
+crippled men who need it."
+
+"And José Martinez also is well able to provide for his wants," coolly
+added the other naked man. "I am here only to settle old scores, and now
+they are settled. Each man is goaded by his own spur--money, wine,
+women, excitement, revenge. Money is not mine."
+
+He yawned, arose, stretched like a cat, and stepped toward his hammock.
+The two Brasilians also moved toward the _tambo_. The others stood a
+moment longer beside the fire.
+
+"Well, since we three didn't come here because of wine, women, or
+revenge," Knowlton said, whimsically, "it must have been for money and
+excitement. Don't know which was the stronger lure, but if we could have
+only one of the two I think we'd let the money slide. How about it,
+Rod?"
+
+"Right! And, Rand, let me say this: Before we knew you we had an
+impression that you were more or less of a worthless pup. We've changed
+our ideas. If you ever go broke and want to hit a trail into some new
+place to make a strike of your own, and you need partners, let us know."
+
+And he held out his hand.
+
+The naked millionaire took it. For the first time a faint smile
+lightened his face.
+
+"I'll do that, partners!" he promised.
+
+"Yeah! That's the word. Pardners! Only, li'l' Timmy Ryan bucks at ever
+travelin' back into this here, now, Ja-va-ree jungle. I got enough of
+it. Right now I'm homesick."
+
+"So say we all," affirmed Knowlton. "Now let's turn in."
+
+But Tim stood a little longer looking out at the moonlit river and the
+two waiting canoes. His gaze roved along the stream, northward. He
+lifted his head, opened his mouth, expanded his lungs, and then the
+astounded denizens of forest and stream cut short their discordant
+concert to listen to something they never had heard before and never
+would hear again--a great voice thundering a censored version of a North
+American army song.
+
+ "Home, boys, home! Home we want to be!
+ Home, boys, home, in God's countree!
+ We'll raise Ol' Glory to the top o' the pole
+ And we'll all come back--not a dog-gone soul!"
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30324 ***
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+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30324 ***</div>
+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Pathless Trail, by Arthur O. (Arthur
+Olney) Friel</h1>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figleft">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt=""/>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figright">
+<img src="images/spine.jpg" alt=""/>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h1>THE PATHLESS TRAIL</h1>
+
+<h2>BY ARTHUR O. FRIEL</h2>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h3>NEW YORK<br />
+GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP<br />
+PUBLISHERS</h3>
+
+<h3>Made in the United States of America</h3>
+
+<h3>THE PATHLESS TRAIL</h3>
+
+<h3>Copyright, 1922, by Harper &amp; Brothers<br />
+Printed in the United States of America</h3>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h4>TO<br />
+THE MEMORY OF<br />
+MY FATHER<br />
+GEORGE WILLIAM FRIEL</h4>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
+<p>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I. <span class="smcap">Sons of the North</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II. <span class="smcap">At Sundown</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III. <span class="smcap">The Voice of the Wilds</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV. <span class="smcap">The German</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V. <span class="smcap">Into the Bush</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI. <span class="smcap">In the Night Watch</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII. <span class="smcap">Cold Steel</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII. <span class="smcap">The Double-cross</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX. <span class="smcap">Fiddlers Three</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X. <span class="smcap">By the Light of Storm</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI. <span class="smcap">Out of the Air</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII. <span class="smcap">The Arrow</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII. <span class="smcap">The Way of the Jungle</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV. <span class="smcap">A Duel with Death</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV. <span class="smcap">The Cannibals</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI. <span class="smcap">Blackbeard</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII. <span class="smcap">Fever</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII. <span class="smcap">Fruit of the Trap</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX. <span class="smcap">The Red Bones</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX. <span class="smcap">The Raposa</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI. <span class="smcap">Shadows of the Night</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII. <span class="smcap">The Siren of War</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII. <span class="smcap">Strategy</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV. <span class="smcap">The Battle of the Tribes</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV. <span class="smcap">The Passing of Schwandorf</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI. <span class="smcap">Partners</span></a><br />
+</p>
+<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>THE PATHLESS TRAIL</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<h3>SONS OF THE NORTH</h3>
+
+
+<p>Three men stood ankle deep in mud on the shore of a jungle river,
+silently watching a ribbon of smoke drift and dissolve above the somber
+mass of trees to the northwest.</p>
+
+<p>Three men of widely different types they were, yet all cradled in the
+same far-off northern land. The tallest, lean bodied but broad
+shouldered, black of hair and gray of eye, held himself in soldierly
+fashion and gazed unmoved. His two mates&mdash;one stocky, red faced and red
+headed; the other slender, bronzed and blond&mdash;betrayed their thoughts in
+their blue eyes. The red man squinted quizzically at the smoke feather
+as if it mattered little to him where he was. The blond watched it with
+the wistfulness of one who sees the last sign of his own world fade out.</p>
+
+<p>Behind them, at a respectful distance, a number of swarthy individuals
+of both sexes in nondescript garments smoked and stared at the trio with
+the interest always accorded strangers by the dwellers of the Out
+Places. They eyed the uncompromising back of the tall one, the easy
+lounge of the red one, the thoughtful attitude of the light one. The
+copper-faced men peered at the rifles hanging in the right hands of the
+newcomers, their knee boots, khaki clothing, and wide hats. The women
+let their eyes rove over the boxes and bundles reposing in the mud
+beside the three.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Ingles?</i>" hazarded a woman, speaking through the stem of the black
+pipe clutched in her filed teeth.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Notre-Americano</i>," asserted a man, nodding toward the broad hats.
+"Englishmen would wear the round helmets of pith."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Mercadores?</i> Traders?" suggested the woman, hopefully running an eye
+again over the bundles.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Exploradores</i>," the man corrected. "Explorers of the bush. Have you no
+eyes? Do you not see the guns and high boots?"</p>
+
+<p>The woman subsided. The others continued what seemed to be their only
+occupation&mdash;smoking.</p>
+
+<p>The smoke streamer in the north vanished. As if moved by the same
+impulse, the three strangers turned their heads and looked
+south-westward, upriver. The red-haired man spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"So we've lit at last, as the feller said when him and his airyplane
+landed in a sewer. Faith, I dunno but he was better off than us, at
+that&mdash;he wasn't two thousand miles from nowheres like we are. The
+steamer's gone, and us three pore li'l' boys are left a long ways from
+home."</p>
+
+<p>Then, assuming the tone of a showman, he went on:</p>
+
+<p>"Before ye, girls, ye see the well known Ja-va-ree River, which I never
+seen before and comes from gosh-knows-where and ends in the Ammyzon.
+Over there on t'other side the water is Peru. Yer feet are in the mud of
+Brazil. This other river to yer left is the Tickywahoo&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Tecuahy," the blond man corrected, grinning.</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah. And behind ye is the last town in the world and the place that
+God forgot. What d'ye call this here, now, city?"</p>
+
+<p>"Remate de Males. Which means 'Culmination of Evils.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah. It looks it. Wonder if it's anything like Hell's Kitchen, up in
+li'l' old N'Yawk."</p>
+
+<p>They turned and looked dubiously at the town&mdash;a row of perhaps seventy
+iron-walled and palm-roofed houses set on high palm-trunk poles, each
+with its ladder dropping from the doorway to the one muddy street. Then
+spoke the tall man.</p>
+
+<p>"Before you see it again, Tim, you'll think it's quite a town. Above
+here is nothing but a few rubber estates, seven hundred miles of unknown
+river, and empty jungle."</p>
+
+<p>"Empty, huh? Then they kidded us on the boat. From what they said it's
+fair crawlin' with snakes and jaggers and lizards and bloody vampires
+and spiders as big as yer fist. And the water is full o' man-eatin' fish
+and the bush full o' man-eatin' Injuns. If that's what ye call empty,
+Cap, don't take me no place where it's crowded."</p>
+
+<p>A slight smile twitched the set lips of the tall "cap."</p>
+
+<p>"They're all here, Tim, though maybe not so thick as you expect. Lots of
+other things too. Who's this?"</p>
+
+<p>Through the knot of pipe-puffing idlers came a portly coppery man in
+uniform.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll be&mdash;Say, he's the same chap who came onto the boat in a
+police uniform. Now he's in army rig," the light-haired member of the
+trio exclaimed. "O Lordy! I've got it! He's the police force and the
+army! The whole blooming works! Ha!"</p>
+
+<p>Tim snickered and stepped forward.</p>
+
+<p>"Hullo, buddy!" he greeted. "What's on yer mind?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Boa dia</i>, senhor," responded the official, affably. With the words he
+deftly slipped an arm around Tim's waist and lifted the other hand
+toward his shoulder. But that hand stopped short, then flew wildly out
+into the air.</p>
+
+<p>Tim gave a grunt and a heave. The official went skidding and slithering
+six feet through the mud, clutching at nothing and contorting himself in
+a frantic effort to keep from sprawling in the muck. By a margin thin as
+an eyelash he succeeded in preserving his balance and stood where he
+stopped, amazement and anger in his face.</p>
+
+<p>"Lay off that stuff!" growled Tim, head forward and jaw out. "If ye want
+trouble come and git it like a man, not sneak up with a grin and then
+clinch. Don't reach for no knife, now, or I'll drill ye&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Tim!" barked the black-haired one. "Ten-<i>shun</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>Automatically Tim's head snapped erect and his shoulders went back. He
+relaxed again almost at once. But in the meantime the tall man had
+stepped forward and faced the raging representative of the government of
+Brazil.</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon, comrade," he said with an engaging smile. "My friend is a
+stranger to Brazil and not acquainted with your manner of welcome. In
+our own country men never put the arm around one another except in
+combat. He has been a soldier. You are a soldier. So you can understand
+that a fighting man may be a little abrupt when he does not understand."</p>
+
+<p>The smile, the apology, and most of all the subtle flattery of being
+treated as an equal by a man whose manner betokened the North American
+army officer, mollified the aggrieved official at once. The hot gleam
+died out of his eyes. Punctiliously he saluted. The salute was as
+punctiliously returned.</p>
+
+<p>"It is forgotten, Capitao. As the capitao says, we soldiers are
+sometimes overquick. I come to give you welcome to Remate de Males. My
+services are at your disposal."</p>
+
+<p>"We thank you. Why do you call me capitao?"</p>
+
+<p>"My eyes know a capitao when they see him."</p>
+
+<p>"But this is not a military expedition, my friend. Nor are any of us
+soldiers now&mdash;though we all have been."</p>
+
+<p>"Once a capitao, always a capitao," the Brazilian insisted. Then he
+hinted: "If the capitao and his friends wish to call upon the
+superintendente they will find him in the intendencia, the blue building
+beyond the hotel. It will soon be closed for the day."</p>
+
+<p>The tall American's keen gray eyes roved down the street to the
+weather-beaten house whose peeling walls once might have been blue. He
+nodded shortly.</p>
+
+<p>"Better go down there," he said. "Come on, Merry. Tim, stick here and
+keep an eye on the stuff. And don't start another war while we're gone."</p>
+
+<p>"Right, Cap." Tim deftly swung his rifle to his right shoulder. "I'll
+walk me post in a military manner, keepin' always on the alert and
+observin' everything that takes place within sight or hearin', accordin'
+to Gin'ral Order Number Two. There won't be no war unless somebody
+starts somethin'. Hey, there, buddy, would ye smoke a God's-country
+cigarette if I give ye one?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si</i>," grinned the soldier-policeman, all animosity gone. And as the
+other two men tramped away through the mud they also grinned, looking
+back at the North and the South American pacing side by side in
+sentry-go, blowing smoke and conversing like brothers in arms.</p>
+
+<p>"Tim likes to remember his 'general orders,' but he's forgotten Number
+Five," laughed the blond man.</p>
+
+<p>"Five? 'To talk to no one except in line of duty.' Don't need it here,
+Merry."</p>
+
+<p>"Nope. The <i>entente cordiale</i> is the thing. Here's hoping nobody makes
+Tim remember his 'Gin'ral Order Number Thirteen' while we're gone, Rod."</p>
+
+<p>He of the black hair smiled again as his mate, mimicking Tim's gruff
+voice, quoted:</p>
+
+<p>"'Gin'ral Order Number Thirteen: In case o' doubt, bust the other guy
+quick.'"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<h3>AT SUNDOWN</h3>
+
+
+<p>Past the loungers in the street, past others in the doorways, past
+children and dogs and goats, the pair marched briskly to the faded blue
+house whence the federal superintendent ruled the town with tropic
+indolence. There they found a thin, fever-worn, gravely courteous
+gentleman awaiting them.</p>
+
+<p>"Sit, senhores," he urged, with a languid wave of the hand toward
+chairs. "I am honored by your visit, as is all Remate de Males. In what
+way can I serve you?"</p>
+
+<p>The blond answered:</p>
+
+<p>"We have come, sir, both for the pleasure of making your acquaintance
+and for a little information. First permit me to introduce my friend Mr.
+Roderick McKay, lately a captain in the United States army. I am
+Meredith Knowlton. There is a third member of our party, Mr. Timothy
+Ryan, who remained on the river bank to talk with&mdash;er&mdash;a soldier of
+Brazil."</p>
+
+<p>The federal official nodded, a slight smile in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"We are here ostensibly for exploration," Knowlton continued, candidly,
+"but actually to find a certain man. I think it quite probable that we
+shall have to do considerable exploring before finding him."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," the other murmured, shrewdly. "It is a matter of police work,
+perhaps?"</p>
+
+<p>"No&mdash;and yes. The man we seek is not wanted by the law, and yet he is.
+He has committed no crime, and so cannot be arrested. But the law wants
+him badly because the settlement of a certain big estate hinges upon the
+question of whether he is alive or dead. If alive, he is heir to more
+than a million. If not&mdash;the money goes elsewhere."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," repeated the official, thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"I might add," McKay broke in with a touch of stiffness, "that neither I
+nor either of my companions would profit in any way by this man's death.
+Quite the contrary."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," reiterated the other, his face clearing. "You are commissioned,
+perhaps, to find and produce this man."</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly," Knowlton nodded. "From our own financial standpoint he is
+worth much more alive than dead. On the other hand, any absolute proof
+of his death&mdash;proof which would stand in a court of law&mdash;is worth
+something also. Our task is to produce either the man himself or
+indisputable proof that he no longer lives.</p>
+
+<p>"The man's name is David Dawson Rand. If alive, he now is thirty-three
+years old. Height five feet nine. Weight about one hundred sixty. Hair
+dark, though not black. Eyes grayish green. Chief distinguishing marks
+are the green eyes, a broken nose&mdash;caused by being struck in the face by
+a baseball&mdash;and a patch of snow-white hair the size of a thumb ball, two
+inches above the left ear. Accustomed to having his own way, not at all
+considerate of others. Yet not a bad fellow as men go&mdash;merely a man
+spoiled by too much mothering in boyhood and by the fact that he never
+had to work. This is he."</p>
+
+<p>From a breast pocket he drew a small grain-leather notebook, from which
+he extracted an unmounted photograph. The superintendent looked into the
+pictured face of a full-cheeked, wide-mouthed, square-jawed man with a
+slightly blas&eacute; expression and a half-cynical smile. After studying it a
+minute he nodded and handed it back.</p>
+
+<p>"As you say, senhor, a man who never has had to work."</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly. For five years this man has been regarded as dead. It was his
+habit to start off suddenly for any place where his whims drew him,
+notifying nobody of his departure. But a few days later he would always
+write, cable, or telegraph his relatives, so that his general
+whereabouts would soon become known. On his last trip he sent a radio
+message from a steamer, out at sea, saying he was bound for Rio Janeiro.
+That was the last ever heard from him."</p>
+
+<p>"Rio is far from here," suggested the Brazilian.</p>
+
+<p>"Just so. We look for Rand at the headwaters of the Amazon, instead of
+in Rio, because Rio yields no clew and because of one other thing which
+I shall speak of presently.</p>
+
+<p>"It has been learned that he reached Rio safely, but there his trail
+ended. As he had several thousand dollars on his person, it was
+concluded that he was murdered for his money and his body disposed of.
+This belief has been held until quite recently, when a new book of
+travel was published&mdash;<i>The Mother of Waters</i>, by Dwight Dexter, an
+explorer of considerable reputation."</p>
+
+<p>The Brazilian's brows lifted.</p>
+
+<p>"Senhor Dexter? I remember Senhor Dexter. He stopped here for a short
+time, ill with fever. So he has published a book?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. It deals mainly with his travels and observations in Peru, along
+the Mara&ntilde;on, Huallaga, and Ucayali. But it includes a short chapter
+regarding the Javary, and in that chapter occurs the following, which I
+have copied verbatim."</p>
+
+<p>From the notebook he read:</p>
+
+<p>"'It falls to the lot of the explorer at times to meet not only hitherto
+unclassified species of fauna and flora, but also strange specimens of
+the <i>genus homo</i>. Such a creature came suddenly upon my camp one day
+just before a serious and well-nigh fatal attack of fever compelled me
+to relinquish my intention to proceed farther up the Javary.</p>
+
+<p>"'While my Indian cook was preparing the afternoon meal, out from the
+dense jungle strode a bearded, shaggy-haired, painted white man, totally
+nude save for a narrow breechclout and a quiver containing several long
+hunting arrows. In one hand he carried a strong bow of really excellent
+workmanship. This was his only weapon. He wore no ornament, unless
+streaks of brilliant red paint be considered ornaments. He was wild and
+savage in appearance and manner as any cannibal Indian. Yet he was
+indubitably white.</p>
+
+<p>"'To my somewhat startled greeting he made no response. Neither did he
+speak at any time during his unceremonious visit. Bolt upright, he stood
+beside my crude table until the Indian stolidly brought in my food.
+Then, without a by-your-leave, the wild man rapidly wolfed down the
+entire meal, feeding himself with one hand and holding his bow ready in
+the other. Though I questioned him and sought to draw him into
+conversation, he honored me with not so much as a grunt or a gesture.
+When the table was bare he stalked out again and vanished into the dim
+forest.</p>
+
+<p>"'After he had gone my Indian urged that we leave the place at once. The
+man, he said, was "The Raposa"&mdash;a word which denotes a species of wild
+dog sometimes found on the upper Amazon. He knew nothing of this
+"Raposa" except that he apparently belonged to a wild tribe living far
+back in the forest, perhaps allied with the cannibal Mayorunas, who were
+very fierce; and that he appeared sometimes at Indian settlements,
+where, without ever speaking, he would help himself to the best food and
+then leave. My man seemed to fear that now some great misfortune would
+come to us unless we shifted our base. When the fever came upon me soon
+afterward, the superstitious fellow was convinced that the illness was
+attributable directly to the visit of the human "wild dog."</p>
+
+<p>"'Aside from the nudity and barbarism of the mysterious stranger,
+certain personal peculiarities struck me. One was that his eyes were
+green. Another was a streak of snow-white hair above one ear.
+Furthermore, the red paint on his body outlined his skeleton. His ribs,
+spine, arm- and leg-bones all were portrayed on his tanned skin by those
+brilliant red streaks. In this connection my Indian asserted that in the
+tribe to which "The Raposa" probably belonged it was the custom to
+preserve the bones of the dead and to paint them with this same red dye,
+after which the bones were hung up in the huts of the deceased instead
+of being given burial. Beyond this my informant knew nothing of the "Red
+Bone" people, except that to enter their country was death.'"</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton returned the book to his pocket and carefully buttoned the
+flap.</p>
+
+<p>"When that appeared," he continued, "efforts were made to get hold of
+Dexter, with the idea of showing him the photograph of the missing man
+and learning any additional details. Unfortunately, by the time the book
+was published Dexter had gone to Africa to seek a race of dwarfs said to
+exist in the Igidi Desert, and thus was totally out of reach. Then we
+were called upon to follow up this clew and find the Raposa if possible.
+Men with green eyes and patches of white hair above one ear are not
+common. So, though our knowledge of this strange wild man is confined to
+those few words of Dexter's, we are here to learn more of him and to get
+him if we can."</p>
+
+<p>He looked expectantly at the official. The latter, after staring out
+through the doorway for a time, shook his head slightly.</p>
+
+<p>"Something of this Raposa and of those red-streaked people has come to
+my ears, senhores, but only as rumors," he said, slowly. "And one does
+not place great faith in rumors. Yet I have repeatedly been surprised to
+learn, after dismissing a story as an empty Indian tale, that the tale
+was true.</p>
+
+<p>"Of the Mayorunas more is known. They are eaters of human flesh,
+inhabiting both sides of the Javary, deadly when angered, and very
+easily angered. Their country is not many days distant from here, but as
+they never attack us we do not attack them. It is an armed neutrality,
+as you senhores would say. True, we have to be careful in drinking
+water, for they sometimes poison the streams against real or imaginary
+enemies, and the poisoned waters flow down to us, causing those who
+drink it to die of a fever like the typhoid. Yet," and he smiled, "there
+is a saying, is there not, that water is made not to drink, but to bathe
+in?"</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton laughed. McKay's eyes twinkled.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry to say that water's about all a fellow can get to drink in
+the States now," the blond man said, ruefully. "That is, of course,
+unless a man knows where to go."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i> It is a pity. But here in Brazil one need not drink water unless
+he wishes, and often it is better not to. Of the Mayorunas, senhor&mdash;you
+do not intend to go among them, seeking this wild man of the red bones?
+If you should do so it would be a matter of regret to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Meaning that we should not come out again? That's a risk we have to
+face. We go wherever it is necessary."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry. I regret also that I can give you no definite information.
+Yet I wish you all success, senhores, and a safe return. This much I can
+do and gladly will do: I can send word to another white man who now is
+in the town and who knows much of the upper river. He may be able to
+assist you, and without doubt will be eager to do so. He is staying at
+the hotel, just below here&mdash;Senhor Schwandorf."</p>
+
+<p>The eyes of the two Americans narrowed. The official coughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Senhor McKay has been a soldier. And Senhor Knowlton&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I was a lieutenant."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! But the war has passed, senhores. Senhor Schwandorf was not a
+soldier of Germany&mdash;he has been in Brazil for more than six years."</p>
+
+<p>"War's over. That's right," McKay agreed. "But don't bother to send
+word. We'll find him if he's at the hotel. Going there ourselves. Glad
+to have met you, sir. Good luck!"</p>
+
+<p>"And to you also luck, Capitao and Tenente," smiled the official. McKay
+and Knowlton strode out.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess this is the hotel," hazarded McKay, glancing at a house which
+rose slightly above the others. "I'll go in and charter rooms. You get
+Tim and have somebody rustle our impedimenta up here."</p>
+
+<p>He turned aside. Knowlton trudged on through the glare of sunset to the
+river bank where Tim and the army of Remate de Males still loafed up and
+down, the admired of all beholders.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, Tim. We're moving to the hotel. No more war, I see."</p>
+
+<p>"Lord love ye, no," grinned Tim. "Me and this feller are gittin' on
+fine. He's Joey&mdash;I forgit the rest of his names; he's got about a dozen
+more and they sound like stones rattlin' around inside a can. But Joey's
+a right guy. After me tour o' duty ends he's goin' to buy me a drink and
+maybe introjuce me to a lady friend o' his. Want to join the party,
+Looey?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not unless the ladies are better looking than these," laughed the
+ex-lieutenant, moving his head toward the pipe-smoking females.</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, I was thinkin' that same meself. Unless he can dig up somethin'
+fancier 'n what I see so far, I'd as soon have Mademoiselle."</p>
+
+<p>"Who?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mademoiselle of Armenti&egrave;res. Sure, ye know that one, Looey. Goes to the
+tune o' 'Parley-Voo.'"</p>
+
+<p>Wherewith he lifted up a foghorn voice and, much to the edification of
+"Joey" (whose name really was Joao) and the rest of Remate de Males,
+burst into song:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Mademoiselle of Armenteers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Pa-a-arley-voo!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">She smoked our butts and bummed our beers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Pa-a-arley-voo!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">She had cockeyes and jackass ears<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And she hadn't been kissed for forty years,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Rinkydinky-parley-voo!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>As his musical effort ended, out from the dense jungle hemming in the
+town burst a hideous roaring howl. Again and again it sounded in a
+horrible crash of noise.</p>
+
+<p>"Holy Saint Pat!" gasped Tim, throwing his rifle to port and bracing his
+feet. "Now look what I went and done! Is that the echo, or a couple
+dozen jaggers all fightin' to oncet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Guariba, Senhor Ree-ann," snickered Joao. "Not jaguars&mdash;no. Only one
+little guariba monkey. The howler."</p>
+
+<p>"G'wan! Ye're kiddin'!"</p>
+
+<p>"But no, <i>amigo</i>. It is as I tell you. One monkey. It is sunset, and the
+jungle awakes."</p>
+
+<p>"My gosh! I'll say it does. Sounds like a Sat'day night row in a Second
+Av'noo saloon, except there ain't no shootin'. Guess you boys have some
+night life, too, even if ye are away back in the bush."</p>
+
+<p>"Time for us to move, Tim," laughed Knowlton. "It'll be dark in no time.
+Joao, will you have our baggage moved to the hotel?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si</i>, senhor. <i>Immediatamente.</i> Antonio&mdash;Jorge&mdash;Rosario! And you, too,
+Meldo&mdash;<i>vem c&agrave;</i>! Carry the bundles of the gentlemen to the hotel,
+presto! Proceed, senhores. I, Joao d'Almeida Magalhaes Nabuco Pestana da
+Fonseca, will remain here on guard until all your possessions have been
+transported. Proceed without fear."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE VOICE OF THE WILDS</h3>
+
+
+<p>McKay, eyes twinkling again, awaited them at the top of the hotel's
+street ladder.</p>
+
+<p>"Rooms any good, Rod?" hailed Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"Best in the house, Merry."</p>
+
+<p>"See any insects in the beds?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nary a bug&mdash;in the beds." The twinkle grew. "Didn't look in the bureaus
+or behind the mirrors. Come look 'em over."</p>
+
+<p>Entering a sizable room evidently used for dining&mdash;for its chief
+articles of furniture were two tables made from planed palm
+trunks&mdash;McKay waved a hand toward a row of four doorways on the right.</p>
+
+<p>"First three are ours," he explained. "Only vacancies here. Eight rooms
+in this hotel&mdash;the other four over there." He pointed across the room,
+on the other side of which opened four similar doors. "They're occupied
+by two sick men, one drunk&mdash;hear him snore?&mdash;and one she-goat which is
+kidding."</p>
+
+<p>"Huh?" Tim snorted, suspiciously. "I think ye're the one that's kiddin',
+Cap."</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit. I looked. The last room on this side is the Dutchman's, and
+these are ours. Take your pick. They're all alike."</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton stepped to the nearest and looked in. For a moment he said no
+word. Then he softly muttered:</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll be spread-eagled!"</p>
+
+<p>"Me, too," seconded Tim, who had been craning his neck.</p>
+
+<p>The room was absolutely empty. No bed, no chair, no bureau, no
+rug&mdash;nothing at all was in it except two iron hooks. Its floor consisted
+of split palm logs, round side up, between which opened inch-wide
+spaces. Its walls were rusty corrugated iron, guiltless of mirrors or
+pictures, which did not reach to the roof.</p>
+
+<p>"Observe the excellent ventilation," grinned McKay. "Wind blows up
+through the floor&mdash;if there is any wind&mdash;and then loops over the
+partition into the next fellow's room."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah. And I'll say any guy that drops his collar button is out o' luck.
+It goes plunk into the mud, seven foot down under the house. But say,
+Cap, how the heck do we sleep? Hang ourselves up on them hooks?"</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly."</p>
+
+<p>"Kind o' rough on a feller's shirt, ain't it? And the shirt would likely
+pull off over yer head before mornin'."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, probably would. But the secret is this&mdash;you're supposed to hang
+your hammock on those hooks. You provide the hammock. The hotel provides
+the hooks. What more can you ask of a modern hotel?"</p>
+
+<p>"Huh! And if a guy wants a bath, there's the river, all full o' 'gators
+and cattawampuses and things. And if ye eat, I s'pose ye rustle yer own
+grub and pay for eatin' it off that slab table there. There's jest one
+thing ye can say for this dump&mdash;a feller can spit on the floor. But with
+all them cracks in it he might not hit it, at that. Mother of mine! To
+think Missus Ryan's li'l' boy should ever git caught stayin' in a hole
+like this, along o' drunks and skiddin' she-goats and&mdash;did ye say a
+Dutchman?"</p>
+
+<p>"German. Chap named Schwandorf."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah?" Tim's tone was sinister. "Say, Cap, gimme the room next that
+guy. And if ye hear anybody yowlin' before mornin' don't git worried. It
+won't be me."</p>
+
+<p>"None of that, Tim," warned Knowlton. "The war's over&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Since when? There wasn't no peace treaty signed when we left the
+States."</p>
+
+<p>"Er&mdash;ahum! Well, technically you're right. But this fellow may be useful
+to us. He knows the upper river, they say."</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, well, if ye can use him I'll lay off him. Where is he?"</p>
+
+<p>"Out somewhere," answered McKay. "I haven't seen him yet. Want this
+first room, Merry?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just to play safe, I'll take the one next the German. And if I hear any
+war in the night, Tim, I'm coming over the top with both hands going."</p>
+
+<p>"Grrrumph!" growled Tim.</p>
+
+<p>"That goes, Tim," warned McKay. "I'll take this room and you can have
+the one between us. Here comes the baggage train with our stuff. In
+here, men!"</p>
+
+<p>Puffing and grunting, Antonio and Jorge and Rosario and Meldo shuffled
+in with the boxes and bundles. Under the directions of McKay and
+Knowlton, these were stowed in the bare rooms. Then the four shuffled
+out again, grinning happily over a small roll of Brazilian paper reis
+which McKay had peeled from a much larger roll and handed to them.
+Immediately following their departure, in came a youth carrying three
+new hammocks.</p>
+
+<p>"Our beds," McKay explained. "I sent this lad to a trader's store for
+them. He's the proprietor's son. Thank you, Thomaz. Tell your father to
+put these on our bill, and take for yourself this small token of our
+appreciation."</p>
+
+<p>More reis changed hands. The young Brazilian, with a flash of teeth,
+informed them that the evening meal would soon be ready and disappeared
+through a rear door.</p>
+
+<p>"Do they really feed us at this here, now, hotel?" Tim demanded. "Then
+the goat's safe."</p>
+
+<p>"Meaning?" puzzled Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"Meanin' I didn't know but we had to kill our supper, and I was goin' to
+git the cap'n's goat. That is, the goat the cap'n's kiddin'&mdash;I mean the
+goat that's kiddin' the cap&mdash;the skiddin' she-goat&mdash;Aw, rats! ye know
+what I'm drivin' at. Me tongue so dry it don't work right."</p>
+
+<p>Wherewith Tim retreated in disorder to his room and began wrestling with
+his new hammock and the iron hooks.</p>
+
+<p>Swift darkness filled the rooms. The sun had slid down below the bulge
+of the fast-rolling world. Thomaz re-entered, lit candles stuck in empty
+bottles, and, with a bow, placed one of these crude illuminants at the
+door of each of the strangers. By the flickering lights McKay and
+Knowlton disposed their effects according to their individual desires,
+bearing in mind Tim's observation that any small article dropped on the
+floor would land in the mud under the house, whence sounded the grunts
+of pigs. Their work was soon completed, and they sauntered together to
+the small piazza.</p>
+
+<p>"Nice quiet little place," commented Knowlton. "Make a good sanitarium
+for nervous folks."</p>
+
+<p>The comment was made in a tone which, in the daytime, would carry half a
+mile. McKay nodded to save a similar effort. The outbreak of the howling
+monkey which so startled Tim had been only the first note of the night
+concert of the jungle. Now that the sun was gone the chorus was in full
+swing.</p>
+
+<p>Beasts of the village, the jungle, the river, all hurled their voices
+into the uproar. From the gloom around the houses rose the bellowing of
+cows and calves, the howls and yelps of dogs, the yowling of cats, the
+grunts and squeals of hogs. In the black river, flowing past within a
+stone's throw of the hotel door, sounded the loud snorts of dolphins and
+the hideous night call of the foul beast of the mud&mdash;the alligator. Out
+from the matted tangle of trees and brush and great snakelike vines
+behind the town rolled the appalling roars of guaribas, raucous bird
+calls, dismal hoots, sudden scattered screams. And over all, whelming
+all other sound by the sheer might of its penetrating power, throbbed
+the rapid-fire hammering of millions of frogs.</p>
+
+<p>"Frogs sound like a machine-gun barrage," the blond man added.</p>
+
+<p>"Or thousands of riveting hammers pounding steel."</p>
+
+<p>"Queer how much worse it is when you're right in it. We've heard it all
+the way up two thousand miles of Amazon, but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But you're right beside the orchestra now. Position is everything in
+life."</p>
+
+<p>The double-edged jest made Knowlton glance sidelong at his mate. Of the
+tall, eagle-faced Scot's past he knew little beyond what he had seen of
+him in war, where he had met him and learned to respect him
+whole-heartedly. From occasional remarks he had learned that McKay had
+been in all sorts of places between Buenos Aires and Nome; and from a
+few intangible hints he suspected that his "position in life" had once
+been much higher socially than at present. But he asked no questions.</p>
+
+<p>"Some orchestra, all right," he responded, casually. "Plenty of jazz.
+It'll quiet down after a while."</p>
+
+<p>For a time they stood leaning against the wall, staring abstractedly out
+at the dark. One by one the domestic animals ceased their clamor and
+settled themselves for the night. The jungle din, too, seemed to
+diminish, though perhaps this was because the ears of the men had become
+accustomed to it. At length through the discordant symphony boomed the
+voice of Tim.</p>
+
+<p>"By cripes! I know now what folks mean when they talk about a howlin'
+wilderness. Always thought 'twas one o' them figgers o' speech, but I'll
+tell the world it ain't no joke! Gosh! Think of all the things that's
+layin' out there and bellerin' and waitin' for us pore li'l' fellers to
+come in amongst 'em and git et up."</p>
+
+<p>"You'll find the same things in the cities up home," said Knowlton, a
+bit cynically. "Different bodies and different methods of attack, but
+the same merciless animals under the skin. Snakes in silk
+suits&mdash;foul-mouthed alligators in dinner jackets&mdash;hunting-cats and
+vampires, painted and powdered&mdash;and all the rest of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah. Ye said a mouthful, Looey. But say, Tommy's shovin' some grub on
+the table. Mebbe we better hop to it before the flies git it all."</p>
+
+<p>After a glance at the vicious attack already begun by the aforesaid
+flies, the pair adopted Tim's suggestion and hopped to it. Manfully they
+assailed the rubbery jerked beef, black beans, rice, farinha, and thick,
+black, unsweetened coffee which comprised the meal. All three were
+wrestling with chunks of the meat when Tim, facing the door, stopped
+chewing long enough to mutter:</p>
+
+<p>"Dutchland overalls. Here's the goose stepper."</p>
+
+<p>The heads of the other two involuntarily moved a little. Then their
+necks stiffened and they continued eating. Tim alone stared straight at
+a burly, black-whiskered Teuton who had halted in the outer doorway. And
+Tim alone saw the ugly look crossing the newcomer's visage as he gazed
+at the khaki shirts, the broad shoulders under them, and the
+unmistakably Irish&mdash;and hostile&mdash;face of Tim himself.</p>
+
+<p>Catching the hard stare of the red-haired man, he of the black beard
+advanced at once, his eyes veering to the door of his own room. Straight
+to that room he marched with heavy tread. He opened the door with a
+kick, shut it behind him with a slam. The three at the table glanced at
+one another.</p>
+
+<p>"Say what ye like," grumbled Tim, "but me and that guy don't hold no
+mush party. I don't like his map. I don't like his manners. And he looks
+too much like the Fritz that shot me in the back with a kamerad gun
+after surrenderin'. I was in hospital three months. D'ye mind that time,
+Looey?"</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton nodded. He remembered also that Tim, shot down from behind and
+almost killed, had reeled up to his feet and bayoneted his man before
+falling the second time. Wherefore he replied:</p>
+
+<p>"He isn't the same one, Tim."</p>
+
+<p>"Nope," grimly. "That one won't never come back. All the same, if you
+gents want to chew the fat with this feller I'm goin' slummin' with me
+friend Joey Mouthgargle Nabisco Whoozis. Then I won't be round here to
+make no sour-caustic remarks and gum up yer party."</p>
+
+<p>"Might be a good idea," McKay conceded.</p>
+
+<p>"There he is now, the li'l' darlin'! Hullo, Joey, old sock! Stick around
+a minute while I scoop a few more beans. Be with ye toot
+sweet&mdash;vite&mdash;presto&mdash;P.D.Q."</p>
+
+<p>Wherewith he demolished the rest of his meal with military dispatch,
+proceeded doorward, smote the grinning army of Remate de Males a buffet
+on the shoulder, and vanished into the night. A moment later his
+stentorian voice rolled back through the nocturnal racket in an
+impromptu paraphrase of an old and highly improper army song:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"We're in the jungle now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We ain't behind the plow;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">We'll never git rich,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">We'll die with the itch.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We're in the jungle now!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE GERMAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>The door of the German's room opened. The German came out and marched to
+the table. Two paces away he halted and faced the Americans, ready to
+speak if spoken to, equally ready to sit and ignore them if not greeted.
+McKay and Knowlton rose.</p>
+
+<p>"Herr von Schwandorf?" inquired Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf. Neither Herr nor von. Plain Schwandorf."</p>
+
+<p>The reply came in excellent English, though with a slight throaty
+accent.</p>
+
+<p>"Knowlton is my name. Mr. McKay. The third member of our party, Mr.
+Ryan, has just left."</p>
+
+<p>Schwandorf bowed stiffly from the waist.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a pleasure to meet you. White men are all too few here."</p>
+
+<p>Seating himself at a place beyond that just vacated by Tim, he
+continued, "You stay here for a time?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not long." They reseated themselves. "We go up the river as soon as we
+can arrange transportation."</p>
+
+<p>The black brows lifted slightly.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a dangerous river. You would do well to travel elsewhere unless
+you have some pressing reason to explore this stream."</p>
+
+<p>With an accustomed sweep of the hand he shooed the flies from the bean
+dish and helped himself to a big portion. Over the legumes he poured
+farinha in the Brazilian fashion.</p>
+
+<p>"We have. We are seeking a tribe of people who paint their bones red."</p>
+
+<p>Schwandorf's hand, conveying the first mouthful of beans upward, stopped
+in air. His black eyes fixed the Americans with an astounded stare. He
+lowered the beans, stabbed absently at a chunk of beef, sawed it apart,
+popped a piece of it into his mouth, and sat for a time chewing. When
+the meat was down he spoke bluntly:</p>
+
+<p>"Are there not ways enough to kill yourselves at home instead of
+traveling to this place to do it?"</p>
+
+<p>McKay smiled. The directness of the man amused him.</p>
+
+<p>"As bad as that?" asked Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"As bad as that. Blow your head off if you like. Cut your throat. Take
+poison. Jump into the river among the alligators. Step on a snake. But
+keep away from the Red Bones."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?" shot McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Cannibals&mdash;and worse."</p>
+
+<p>"Worse?"</p>
+
+<p>"Truly. Most of the Brazilian savages do not torture. The Red Bones do."</p>
+
+<p>"Pleasant prospect."</p>
+
+<p>"Very. Nothing to be gained among them, either. If you're hunting gold,
+try the hills over west of the Huallaga. None here."</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton filled and lit a pipe. McKay slowly drank the last of his
+syrupy coffee and rolled a cigarette. Schwandorf continued shoveling
+food into his capacious mouth.</p>
+
+<p>"Know anything about the Raposa?" Knowlton asked.</p>
+
+<p>The Teuton's eyelashes flickered. He ground another chunk of meat
+between his jaws before answering.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," he said then. "Wild dog. Sharp snout, gray hair, bushy
+tail. I've shot a couple of them."</p>
+
+<p>"This one is a man. Green eyes, streak of white hair over the left ear.
+Paints himself like the Red Bones, as you call them, but is a white
+man."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! That one? Heard of him, yes. Wild man of the jungle. Want to catch
+him and put him in a circus?"</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe. We'd like to see him, anyhow. Heard about him awhile ago. Any
+way to get him that you know of?"</p>
+
+<p>"Might try a steel trap," the German suggested, callously. "But I don't
+know where you'd set it. Best way to get a wild dog is to shoot him, and
+he isn't much good dead. Or would this one be worth something&mdash;dead?" A
+swift sidelong glance accompanied the question.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a cent!" snapped McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"And perhaps he'd be worth nothing alive," added Knowlton. "But we have
+a healthy curiosity to look him over. Guess the Red Bone country would
+be the likeliest place. How far is it from here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Keep out of it," was the stubborn reply.</p>
+
+<p>The Americans rose.</p>
+
+<p>"We are not going to keep out of it," Knowlton declared, coldly. "We are
+going straight into it. Thank you for your assistance."</p>
+
+<p>"Not so fast," Schwandorf protested. "If you are determined to go I will
+help you if I can. Shall we sit on the piazza with a small bottle to aid
+digestion? So! Thomaz! Bring from my stock the k&uuml;mmel. Or would you
+prefer whisky, gentlemen?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ginger-ale highballs are my favorite fruit," admitted Knowlton. "Can
+ginger ale be bought here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed yes. At one milrei a bottle."</p>
+
+<p>"Cheap enough. Thomaz, three bottles of ginger ale and one of North
+American whisky&mdash;the best. Cigars also. Out on the piazza."</p>
+
+<p>"Si, senhores."</p>
+
+<p>Schwandorf got up.</p>
+
+<p>"If you will pardon me, I will drink my k&uuml;mmel. Frankly, I do not like
+whisky."</p>
+
+<p>"And frankly, we do not like k&uuml;mmel. All a matter of taste."</p>
+
+<p>"Truly. So let each of us drink his own preference. I will join you in a
+moment."</p>
+
+<p>The Americans sauntered to the door, while the German strode into his
+room.</p>
+
+<p>"Blunt sort of cuss," Knowlton commented.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, blunt. But not candid. Knows more than he's telling."</p>
+
+<p>Disposing themselves comfortably, they sat watching the lights of the
+town and the jungle&mdash;the first pouring from windows and open doors, the
+latter streaking across the darkness where the big fire beetles of the
+tropics winged their way. As Knowlton had predicted, the night noise of
+forest and stream had diminished; but now from the village itself rose a
+new discord&mdash;a babel of vocal and instrumental efforts at music
+emanating from the badly worn records of dozens of cheap phonographs
+grinding away in the stilt-poled huts.</p>
+
+<p>"Good Lord!" groaned McKay. "Even here at the end of the world one can't
+get away from those beastly instruments."</p>
+
+<p>A throaty chuckle from the doorway followed the words. Schwandorf
+emerged, carrying a big bottle.</p>
+
+<p>"Yet there is one thing to be thankful for, gentlemen," he said. "In all
+this town there is not one man who attempts to play a trombone."</p>
+
+<p>The others laughed. Thomaz appeared with bottles and thick cups. Corks
+were drawn, liquids gurgled, matches flared, cigars glowed. Without
+warning Schwandorf shot a question through the gloom:</p>
+
+<p>"Have you seen Cabral&mdash;the superintendent?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Ask him about the wild man?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Get any information?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing definite. He suggested that we see you."</p>
+
+<p>"So."</p>
+
+<p>A pause, while Schwandorf's cigar end glowed like a flaming eye.</p>
+
+<p>"The Red Bones live well up the river," he began, abruptly. "Twenty-four
+days by canoe, five days through the bush on the east shore. That would
+bring you to their main settlement&mdash;if you were not wiped out before
+then. They're a big tribe, as tribes go. Ever been here before?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. Not here," Knowlton told him. "I've been in Rio, and McKay here has
+knocked around in&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>A stealthy kick from McKay halted him an instant. Then, deftly shifting
+the sentence, he concluded, "&mdash;in a number of places."</p>
+
+<p>"So." Another pause. "Then I should explain about tribes. Tribes here
+generally consist of from fifty to five hundred or more persons living
+in big houses called '<i>malocas</i>.' Unless the tribe is very big, one
+house holds them all. There may be any number of <i>malocas</i>, the
+inhabitants of which are all of the same racial stock; yet each <i>maloca</i>
+is, as far as government is concerned, a tribe to itself, controlled by
+a chief. No <i>maloca</i> owes any duty to any other <i>maloca</i>. There is no
+supreme ruler over all, nor even a federation among them. They live
+merely as neighbors&mdash;distant neighbors. At times they fight like
+neighbors. You understand."</p>
+
+<p>"'When Greek meets Greek&mdash;'" quoted McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Just so. When I say, then, that the Red Bones are a big tribe, I mean
+that there are about five hundred&mdash;maybe more&mdash;individuals in their main
+settlement. They live in huts, not in one big tribe-house like the
+Mayorunas. They are not Mayorunas, in fact; they paint differently, are
+darker of skin, and more cruel.</p>
+
+<p>"The Mayorunas, by the way, are not so debased as you might think.
+Though cannibals, they do not kill for the sake of eating 'long pig,'
+like the cannibals of the South Seas. Neither do they eat the whole
+body. Only the hands and feet of their dead enemies are devoured. These
+are carefully cooked and eaten as delicacies along with monkey meat,
+birds, fish, and other things prepared for a feast in honor of a
+victory. The eating of human flesh seems to be symbolism rather than
+savagery. Furthermore, they do not range the jungle hunting for victims.
+They eat only those who come against them as enemies.</p>
+
+<p>"So it is quite possible, you see, that strangers might go among them
+and escape death. It would depend largely on the ability of the
+strangers to convince the savages that they were friends. The difficulty
+is that the savages consider all strangers to be enemies until
+friendship is proved."</p>
+
+<p>"A sizable difficulty," McKay remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"Almost insurmountable. Yet it might be done. Mind, I speak now of the
+Mayorunas, not of the Red Bones. I tell you again that the Red Bone
+country is closed."</p>
+
+<p>"And where is the Mayoruna region?"</p>
+
+<p>"In the same general section. The Mayorunas are much more widely
+distributed. They are on both banks of the Javary and extend as far west
+as the Ucayali.</p>
+
+<p>"Now if I sought to enter the Red Bone region&mdash;and again I say I would
+not&mdash;this would be my way of going at it. I would go first among the
+Mayorunas near the Red Bones and seek to convince them that I was their
+friend. I would make the Mayoruna chief as friendly to me as possible. I
+might even take a Mayoruna woman for a time&mdash;some of them are handsome,
+and such a step would make me almost a Mayoruna myself in their eyes.
+Then I would persuade the chief to send messengers to the Red Bones with
+word of me and a request that I be allowed to visit their settlement.
+The request, coming from the Mayoruna chief, probably would be granted.
+I would then go in with a bodyguard of Mayorunas, do my business, and
+come out via the Mayoruna route."</p>
+
+<p>A thoughtful silence ensued. Bottle necks clinked against the cups.</p>
+
+<p>"Something in that idea," conceded Knowlton. "A good deal in it. Barring
+the woman part, of course."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," spoke McKay, his tone casual as ever. "When you came out what
+would you do with your woman, <i>mein Herr</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>Schwandorf, tongue loosened a bit by his k&uuml;mmel, chuckled.</p>
+
+<p>"Ho-ho! The woman? Leave her, of course, when she had served my purpose.
+Why bother about a woman here and there?"</p>
+
+<p>"I see." McKay's face, indistinct in the gloom, was unreadable, but his
+tone had a caustic edge.</p>
+
+<p>Schwandorf laughed again. "You are fresh from the woman-worshiping
+United States and you disapprove. But this is the jungle, and all is
+different. '<i>Cada terra com seu uso</i>,' as these Brazilians say&mdash;each
+land with its own ways. Perhaps when you have met the Mayoruna women,
+looked on their handsome faces and shapely forms&mdash;they wear no clothing,
+by the way&mdash;you will change your ideas. More than one man along this
+border has risked his life to win one of those women. But that rests
+with you. And now if you will excuse me, gentlemen, I have an engagement
+with a man at the other end of town."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly. We are indebted to you for your interest."</p>
+
+<p>"It is nothing. Remember that I strongly advise you not to go. But if
+you will go, I shall gladly do whatever lies in my power to aid you in
+preparing for the trip. Do not hesitate to call on me."</p>
+
+<p>He passed into the house, returning almost at once.</p>
+
+<p>"By the way," he added, "one of you has the room next mine?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have it," said Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Are you a good sleeper? I sometimes snore most atrociously, I am
+told. So perhaps&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't worry. I can sleep in the middle of a bombardment."</p>
+
+<p>"You are fortunate. Good evening, gentlemen."</p>
+
+<p>When he was gone they sat for a time smoking, sipping now and then at
+their highballs. At length McKay said, "Humph!"</p>
+
+<p>"Amen. Pretty square sort of chap, though, don't you think?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not saying," was the Scot's cautious answer. "Seems to be trying to
+discourage us and egg us on at the same time. Something up his sleeve,
+perhaps."</p>
+
+<p>"Can't tell. But his line of talk rings true so far. Checks up all right
+with what we've heard about the Mayorunas and so on. And that scheme of
+working in through the Mayoruna country sounds about as sensible as
+anything. Desperate chance and all that, but it might work. Say, why did
+you kick me when I was going to tell him you'd been in British Guiana?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't know exactly. Had a hunch. Seems to me I've seen that fellow
+before somewhere, but I can't place him. None of his business where I've
+been, anyhow. We're boobs from the States hunting for a wild man. That's
+all he needs to know."</p>
+
+<p>But it was not enough for Schwandorf to know. At that very moment he was
+on his way to the home of Superintendent Cabral, with whom he had no
+engagement whatever, to learn all he could concerning the business of
+these military-appearing strangers; also to impress on that official the
+fact that he had sought to dissuade them from starting on their mad
+quest.</p>
+
+<p>And much later that night, when Knowlton was making good his boast that
+he was a sound sleeper, a black-bearded face rose silently above the
+iron partition between his room and that of the German. A hand gripping
+a small electric flashlight followed. A white ray searched the room,
+halting on the khaki shirt lying over a box. A tough withe with a barb
+at one end came over like a slender tentacle, hooked the shirt neatly,
+drew it stealthily up to the top. Shirt, stick, lamp, hand, face all
+dissolved into darkness.</p>
+
+<p>After a time they reappeared. The shirt came down, swung slowly back and
+forth, was dropped deftly where it had previously lain. The breast
+pocket holding the grain-leather notebook and the photograph of David
+Dawson Rand was buttoned as it had been, and the notebook bulged the
+cloth slightly as before. But the contents of that book and the pictured
+face of Rand now were stamped on the brain of Schwandorf. A sneering,
+snarling smile curled the heavy mouth of Schwandorf. And softly, so
+softly that none could hear it but himself, sounded the ironical
+benediction of Schwandorf:</p>
+
+<p>"Sleep well, <i>offizier americanisch</i>! Dream on, poor fool! In time you
+will wake up. <i>Ja</i>, you will wake up!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<h3>INTO THE BUSH</h3>
+
+
+<p>Sleepy eyed and frowzy haired, with shirt unbuttoned and breeches and
+boots unlaced, Tim emerged from his iron-walled cell into the
+cool-shadowed main room, blinked at McKay and Knowlton lounging over
+their morning coffee and cigarettes, stretched his hairy arms, and
+advanced sluggishly to the table.</p>
+
+<p>"Yow-oo-hum!" he yawned. "Ain't they cute! All dressed and shaved like
+they was goin' to visit the C. O. And here's pore Timmy Ryan lookin'
+like a 'drunk and dirty' jest throwed into the guardhouse, and feelin'
+worse. Top o' the mornin' to ye, gents!"</p>
+
+<p>"Same to you, Tim," McKay nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Who hit you?" asked Knowlton, squinting at bumps and scratches on Tim's
+forehead.</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody. Couple fellers tried to, but they was out o' luck. Oh, I see
+what ye mean! I done that meself while I was gittin' to bed."</p>
+
+<p>"Waves must have been running high on the ocean last night. Better drink
+some coffee. Thomaz, another cup&mdash;big and black."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, Looey. 'Twas kind of an active night, at that."</p>
+
+<p>"I heard you come in," vouchsafed McKay. "Were you trying some high
+diving in your room?"</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, I done some divin' without tryin', but 'twas ragged work&mdash;I
+pulled a belly smacker every time. I got to tame that hammick o' mine.
+It throwed me four times hand-running and the only way I could hold it
+down was to unhook it and lay it on the floor."</p>
+
+<p>"Sleep well then?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did not. Cap, I thought I knowed somethin' about cooties, but I take
+it back&mdash;I never knowed nothin' about them insecks till last night.
+Where they come from I dunno, but I'll tell the world they come, and if
+they wasn't half an inch long I'll eat 'em. They darn near dragged me
+off whole, and all the sleep I got ye could stick in a flea's eye.
+Lookit here."</p>
+
+<p>He extended an arm dotted with swollen red spots.</p>
+
+<p>"Ants!" said McKay, after one glance. "Ants, not cooties. They're
+everywhere. Especially under the floor. That's one reason why folks
+sleep in hammocks down here. Even then they're likely to come down the
+hammock cords and drive you out."</p>
+
+<p>"Ants, hey? Never thought o' that. And I'd sooner spend another night
+fightin' all the man-eatin' jaggers in the jungle than them bugs. It's
+the little things that count, as the feller said when his wife give him
+his fourteenth baby."</p>
+
+<p>He downed the thick coffee brought by Thomaz, demanded another cup,
+accepted cigarette and light from Knowlton, and sighed heavily.</p>
+
+<p>"Who tried to hit you?" Knowlton persisted.</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, I dunno. Two-three fellers took swipes at me with bottles and
+things. Me and Joey went to a place where they's card games and so
+on&mdash;only place in town where the village sports can git action. Joey
+offers to buy, and does. Stuff tastes kind o' moldy to me, so I asks
+have they got any American beer. They have. It's bottled and warm, but
+it's beer and tastes like home. It goes down so slick I buy another
+round, and then one more, lettin' in a thirsty-lookin' stranger on the
+third round. That makes seven bottles altogether. Then I think mebbe I
+better pay up now before I lose track. Looey, guess what them seven
+bottles o' suds come to in American money."</p>
+
+<p>"M-m-m! Well, say about three and a half or four dollars."</p>
+
+<p>"That's what I figgered," mourned Tim. "But them highbinders want
+thirty-two dollars and twenty cents, American gold."</p>
+
+<p>"What!"</p>
+
+<p>"Sad but true. Seems the stuff sells here for four bucks and sixty cents
+a bottle. Thinkin' I'm gittin' rooked because I'm a tenderfoot, I raise
+a row to oncet and start to climb the guy. Other folks mix in and things
+git lively right off. But after I've dropped a couple o' fellers Joey
+winds himself round me and begs me not to make him arrest me, and also
+tells me I'm all wrong&mdash;that's the regular price. So o'course that makes
+me out a cheap skate unless I come acrost, and I do the right thing."</p>
+
+<p>"Lucky you had the money on you," said McKay, eying him a bit oddly.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't," chuckled Tim. "All the dough I had was one pore lonesome
+ten-spot&mdash;the one I got from ye yesterday, Cap. But I don't tell 'em
+that. I jest wave my hand like thirty-two plunks wasn't nothin' in my
+young life, and start to work meself out o' the hole. After the two guys
+on the floor are brought back to their senses I order up drinks for all
+hands and git popular again. Then I git out the bones."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! I see!" McKay laughed silently.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure. Remember they told us on the boat that these guys will gamble on
+anything? And that a feller without shoes on may be some rubber worker
+packin' a roll that would choke a horse? Wal, I make a few passes with
+them dice o' mine and their eyes light up like somebody had switched on
+the current. Then I scrabble me hand around in me pants pocket, like I
+was peelin' a bill off a roll so big I didn't want to flash the whole
+wad, and haul out that pore li'l' ten and ask would anybody like to play
+a man's game.</p>
+
+<p>"They would. I'll say they would. And they got the coin to back up their
+play, too. Before I come home I was buyin' beer by the case instead o'
+the bottle. And it's all paid for, and I got more 'n a hundred dollars
+left, besides givin' Joey a fistful o' money jest for bein' a good
+feller. This ain't a bad town at all, gents. Outside o' that
+buckin'-broncho hammick and the man-eatin' ants I had a lovely evenin'."</p>
+
+<p>"How about Joao's lady friend?" quizzed Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"Huh? Oh, I didn't git to see her. When bones and beer are rollin' high
+and handsome I got no time for women. Besides, I found out she was
+mostly Injun and fat as a hog. Nothin' like that for li'l' Timmy Ryan.
+Oh, say, before I forgit it&mdash;I asked Joey about this Dutchman here, and
+he says&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>McKay scowled, shook his head, pointed toward the closed door of
+Schwandorf. Tim lifted his brows, winked understanding, and went on with
+a break: "&mdash;that this guy Sworn-off is a reg'lar feller and knows this
+river like a book. Says he's one fine guy and a man from hair to heels."</p>
+
+<p>Following which he grimaced as if something smelled bad, adding in a
+barely audible whisper, "And that's the worst lie I ever told."</p>
+
+<p>"We met Mr. Schwandorf last night after you went," Knowlton said,
+easily, drawing down one eyelid. "Very likable sort of chap. He's going
+to help us get started upriver."</p>
+
+<p>"Uh-huh. When do we go? To-day?"</p>
+
+<p>"If possible."</p>
+
+<p>"Glad of it. This big-town sportin' life would be the ruination of a
+simple country kid like me. Yo-hum! Wonder how all our neighbors are
+this mornin'&mdash;the goat and the drunk and the two sick fellers. Kind o'
+quiet over that side o' the room."</p>
+
+<p>Thomaz entered just then with more coffee. Knowlton turned to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Are the sick men better to-day, Thomaz?"</p>
+
+<p>"Much better, senhor," the lad said, carelessly. "They are dead."</p>
+
+<p>"Huh?" Tim grunted, explosively.</p>
+
+<p>"Dead," the youth repeated. "They were taken out at dawn. Do not be
+alarmed. It was the swamp fever, which is not&mdash;what you say?&mdash;catching."</p>
+
+<p>"Humph! Sort of a reg'lar thing to die of fever here, hey?"</p>
+
+<p>Thomaz shrugged as if hearing a foolish question.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i> Swamp fever, yellow fever, smallpox, beriberi&mdash;to-day we live,
+to-morrow we are dead."</p>
+
+<p>"True for ye. They's allays somethin' hidin' round the corner waitin' to
+jump ye, no matter where ye are. If 'tain't one thing, it's another."</p>
+
+<p>Despite his philosophical answer, however, Tim fell silent, his eyes
+going to the doors of the rooms where Death had stalked last night while
+he was gambling. Like most men in whose veins red blood runs bold and
+free, he had no fear of the sort of death befitting a fighter&mdash;sudden
+and violent&mdash;but a deep repugnance for those two assassins against which
+a victim could not fight back&mdash;disease and poison. The Brazilian youth's
+nonchalant fatalism aroused him to the fact that here both those forms
+of death were very near him; the one in the air, the other on the
+ground&mdash;fever and snakes.</p>
+
+<p>For the moment he was depressed. Then curiosity awoke.</p>
+
+<p>"If this here, now, Javary fever ain't catchin', how does a feller git
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mosquitoes," McKay enlightened him. "The <i>anopheles</i>. It bites a man
+who has fever, then bites a well man and leaves the fever in him. Inside
+of ten days he's sick, unless he takes a huge dose of quinine right
+away. Mosquito attacks perpendicular to the skin. That is, it stands on
+its head. If you ever notice one of them biting that way get busy with
+the quinine."</p>
+
+<p>"Huh! Fat chance a feller's got o' seein' just how all these bugs bite
+him. And one muskeeter standin' on its head does all that, hey?"</p>
+
+<p>"So they say. Also they say it's only the female that bites."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah. I believe it. I been stung more 'n once by females before now.
+How about the yeller fever? Git that the same way?"</p>
+
+<p>"Same way, only a different mosquito&mdash;the <i>stegomyia</i>. When you begin to
+vomit black you're gone. And if you get beriberi you're gone, too. First
+symptoms of that are numbness of the fingers and toes. Muscular
+paralysis goes on until your heart stops."</p>
+
+<p>"Uh-huh. Nice cheerful place to die in, this Ammyzon jungle. Aw well,
+what's the odds?"</p>
+
+<p>Wherewith he inhaled more coffee, flipped his cigarette butt at a small
+lizard on the floor not far away, yawned once more, and swaggered out to
+the piazza, bawling:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"And when I die<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Don't bury me a-tall,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But pickle me bones<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In alky-hawl&mdash;"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>When his roar had subsided and the two former officers had sat silent a
+moment, smiling over his nocturnal adventures, the door of Schwandorf's
+room opened abruptly and the German stepped out.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Morgen</i>," he grunted, striding to the table. "Thomaz!"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si</i>, Senhor Sssondoff." The youth faded away into the kitchen
+quarters.</p>
+
+<p>"Always feel grumpy until I eat," grumbled the blackbeard. "None of this
+coffee-cigarette breakfast for me. A real meal, coffee with gin in it, a
+cigar&mdash;then I feel human. Sleep well?"</p>
+
+<p>His bold gaze never flickered as it encountered Knowlton's.</p>
+
+<p>"Fine. If you snored I didn't know it. Didn't hear the bodies taken out
+this morning, either."</p>
+
+<p>"Bodies! Oh! Those fellows dead?" He tilted his head toward the doors
+behind which the sick men had lain. "Glad of it. Best for them and
+everybody else. Hate to have sick people in the place."</p>
+
+<p>The Americans said nothing. They lit new cigarettes and waited for the
+other to become "human." And when his substantial breakfast was down,
+his gin-flavored coffee had disappeared, and his big cigar was aglow, he
+did.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, gentlemen, have you decided to take good advice and let your
+Raposa alone?" he asked, affably.</p>
+
+<p>"Who ever follows good advice?" Knowlton countered. Schwandorf chuckled.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Niemand.</i> Nobody. So you will go." He shook his head solemnly. "I have
+said all I can without offense. But if you persist I can only help you
+to start. If possible I should like to go with you up the river to the
+place where you will take to the bush; but I must go to Iquitos, in
+Peru, on the monthly launch which is due in a day or two, so all my
+business is in the other direction. If now I can aid in the matter of a
+crew&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That is what we were about to ask of you."</p>
+
+<p>"So. Then let us be about it. I have been thinking, since you showed
+your determination last night, and have made inquiries about men. There
+are now in Nazareth, the little Peruvian town across the river, several
+men from whom you can pick an excellent crew. Men of the river and the
+bush, not worthless loafers like these townsmen here. Men who are not
+afraid of hell or high water, as the saying is. Not remarkable for
+either beauty or brains, but good men for your work&mdash;by far the best you
+can obtain. I would suggest a large canoe and six or eight of those men
+as crew."</p>
+
+<p>The others smoked thoughtfully. Then McKay said, "We should prefer
+Brazilians."</p>
+
+<p>"Not if you knew the people hereabouts as well as I. It, of course,
+makes no personal difference to me what sort of crew you get, but I tell
+you that these men are best. What does it matter which side of the river
+they come from? Men are men."</p>
+
+<p>"True," McKay conceded.</p>
+
+<p>"Can't be too fussy here," Knowlton added. "Let's see the men."</p>
+
+<p>All rose. But then Schwandorf suggested:</p>
+
+<p>"No need of your going to Nazareth. Better stay here, unless you want to
+go through a great deal of ceremonious foolishness over there. It's
+Peruvian ground and the barefooted ignoramuses of officials may insist
+on showing their importance by demanding your papers and all that. I can
+go across, get the men, and be back here before you'd be half through
+the preliminaries. Saves time."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, if it's not too much trouble."</p>
+
+<p>"A good deal less trouble than if you went, to be frank. I'm known, and
+I can go straight about the business. So sit down and wait. Thomaz! My
+hat!"</p>
+
+<p>Out he tramped to the piazza, where he paused a moment to run a swift
+eye over the disheveled figure of Tim, who had fallen sound asleep in a
+chair. Then, without a further word or glance, he descended the ladder
+and swung away down the street. The Americans, watching him from the
+doorway, observed that children in his path hastened to get out of it,
+and that he spoke to nobody.</p>
+
+<p>"Prussian," rasped McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"M-hm! Done time in the Kaiser's army, too, even if he has been here
+since before the war. But he's treating us pretty white."</p>
+
+<p>The captain made no answer. Their eyes followed the big figure until
+they saw it go sliding away toward Peru in a canoe propelled by two
+languid townsmen. Then McKay dropped a hand on Tim's shoulder. The
+red-lashed eyes flew open instantly.</p>
+
+<p>Briefly, quietly, Knowlton told of what had passed while he napped, then
+asked what information he had gleaned from Joao.</p>
+
+<p>"He says," answered Tim, "this guy is a queer duck. Been around here
+quite a while, but Joey don't know what's his game. He goes off on trips
+upriver, stays quite a while, comes back unexpected, and nobody knows
+where he's been or why. He don't use Brazilian boatmen&mdash;gits his men on
+the other side. And the Peru boys themselves dunno where he goes, or,
+anyways, they say they don't.</p>
+
+<p>"Two of 'em come over here awhile back and got drunk, and Joey tried to
+pump 'em, but all the dope he got was that this here Fritz goes away
+upstream to a li'l' camp, and from there he goes off into the bush
+alone, and the Peru guys jest hang around the camp till he gits back.
+Sounds kind o' fishy to me, and Joey says it does to him, too, but he
+couldn't work nothin' more out o' the drunks because about that time
+Sworn-off himself comes buttin' in and asks these guys what they think
+they're doin' on this side the river, and they beat it back to Peru toot
+sweet. He's got their goat, all right, and I wouldn't wonder if he's got
+Joey's, too. Anyways, Joey tells me he's off this geezer and advises me
+to lay off him, too, though he can't name a thing against him."</p>
+
+<p>"Queer," said Knowlton, looking again at the canoe out on the water.</p>
+
+<p>"Gun running?" suggested McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Nope," Tim contradicted. "I thought o' that, but Joey says they's
+nothin' to it; they watched this sourkrout close, and he don't never git
+no guns from nowheres. Besides, they's nobody up there to run guns to
+but Injuns, and them Injuns are so wild they don't want no guns; they
+stick to the bow and arrer and such stuff, which they sure know how to
+use. Whatever his game is, he plays a lone hand as far's this town
+knows. Got no pals here, and nobody wants to walk on his corns."</p>
+
+<p>"May be perfectly all right, too," mused Knowlton. "A little gold cache
+or something&mdash;though he said there was none in this region. Oh, well,
+what do we care? We have our hands full with our own business, and all
+assistance is appreciated."</p>
+
+<p>An hour drifted past. Men of the town lounged by, looking curiously at
+the strangers, some nodding and voicing a friendly, "<i>Boa dia.</i>" Women,
+too, watched them from windows and doors, and children slyly peeped
+around corners until something more important&mdash;such as a cat, a goat, or
+a gorgeous butterfly&mdash;came their way. Tim went inside and slicked up a
+bit by buttoning and lacing his clothes and combing his rebellious hair.
+At length a long boat put out from the farther shore and came surging
+across the sun-gleaming river.</p>
+
+<p>"Handle themselves well," McKay approved, noting the easy grace of the
+crew. In the bow a tall, slender fellow stood with arms folded,
+balancing himself to the sway of the rather clumsy craft and watching
+the water ahead. In the stern, on a little platform whence he could look
+over the heads of the others and catch any signal from the lookout, a
+squat, dark-faced steersman lounged against his crude rudder. Between
+these two the paddlers stood, each with one foot on the bottom of the
+long dugout and the other on the gunwale, swinging in nonchalant unison
+as their blades moved fore and aft. Under the curving roof of a
+rough-and-ready cabin, open at the sides to allow free play of air,
+Schwandorf lolled like some old-time barbarian king.</p>
+
+<p>Down to the landing place trudged the three Americans, and there the
+employers and the prospective employees looked one another over with
+interest. Eight men had come with Schwandorf, and a hard gang they were.
+The bowman, hawk nosed, slant eyed, black mustached, with hairy chest
+showing under his unbuttoned cotton shirt, had the face and bearing of a
+buccaneer chieftain; and the effect was intensified by a flaring red
+handkerchief around his head and the haft of a knife protruding from his
+waistband. The rowers behind him, though of varying degrees of
+swarthiness and height, all had the same sinewy build, the same bold
+stare, the same devil-may-care insolence of manner; and though none but
+the lookout wore the piratical red around his brow, more than one knife
+hilt showed at their waists. The steersman, whose copper-brown skin and
+flat face betokened a heavy strain of Indian blood, gazed stolidly at
+the Americans with the unwinking, expressionless eyes of a snake. Back
+into the minds of McKay and Knowlton came Schwandorf's words, "Men not
+afraid of hell or high water." They looked it.</p>
+
+<p>"Here they are," announced the German, stepping ashore deliberately.
+"Jos&eacute;, the <i>puntero</i>"&mdash;his hand indicated the lookout&mdash;"Francisco, the
+<i>popero</i>"&mdash;pointing to the steersman&mdash;"and six <i>bogas</i>. Good men."</p>
+
+<p>McKay ran a cold eye along the line of faces, his gaze plumbing each.
+Under that chill scrutiny the third man's stare wavered and dropped.
+That of the next also veered aside. The rest fronted him eye to eye.</p>
+
+<p>"Two of them will not do," he asserted, in the brusque tone of a captain
+inspecting his company. "Numbers Three and Four&mdash;fall out!"</p>
+
+<p>Literal obedience would have put Three and Four into the river,
+wherefore they stood fast. But, though they did not quite understand the
+meaning of the words, they grasped the fact that they were not wanted.
+One laughed impudently, the other slid a poisonous glance at the
+bleak-faced officer. The squat Francisco scowled. So did Schwandorf.</p>
+
+<p>"No man who cannot look me in the eye is needed on this trip," McKay
+declared. "Also, six men are enough. If necessary we will bear a hand at
+the paddles ourselves. Jos&eacute;, you have been told by Senhor Schwandorf
+what we want?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"You can start at once?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"What pay?"</p>
+
+<p>"We leave that to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Um! A dollar a day for each man?"</p>
+
+<p>"Money or goods?"</p>
+
+<p>"American gold."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si. Bueno.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"Very well. Take those two men back to Nazareth, get what belongings you
+need, return here, and report to me at the hotel. I am captain.
+Understand?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si</i>&mdash;Capitan."</p>
+
+<p>"All right. On your way!"</p>
+
+<p>As the boat drew out the two rejected men bade the Americans an ironical
+"<i>adios</i>," and one spat in the stream. In the faces of the others,
+however, showed something like respect for the crisp-spoken captain, and
+Jos&eacute; snarled something at the ill-mannered Three and Four.</p>
+
+<p>"You might need those men," mumbled Schwandorf.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess not," McKay answered, serenely, turning toward the hotel. "Come
+on, boys. Let's get our stuff ready to ride."</p>
+
+<p>Less than two hours later their rooms were vacant, their duffle was
+stowed in the long dugout, the Peruvian crew stood arrogantly eying the
+Brazilians who had gathered to witness the departure, and the Americans
+were bidding good-by to Remate de Males in general and its German
+resident in particular.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Schwandorf, we thank you for your efficient aid," said Knowlton,
+extending a hearty hand. "You have helped us to get going with all
+dispatch, and we trust that we can repay the favor soon."</p>
+
+<p>"You owe me no thanks," was the curt reply. "I would expect you to do as
+much for me if our positions were reversed. I wish you luck."</p>
+
+<p>"Get aboard, Tim!" McKay ordered, setting the example himself. Tim
+obeyed, first giving the important Joao d'Almeida Magalhaes Nabuco
+Pestana da Fonseca a real American handgrip and getting in return a
+double embrace from that worthy official. Whereafter he winked and
+grinned expansively at several women garbed in violent hues of red,
+yellow, and green, frowned slightly at Schwandorf, lit the last cigar he
+was to smoke for many a long day, and, as the dugout began to move,
+erupted into a more or less musical farewell to the females of the
+species:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"The Yanks are goin' away,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Pa-a-arley-voo!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">They're movin' on to-day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Pa-a-arley-voo!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Yanks are goin' away, they say,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Leavin' the girls in a heartless way,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Rinkydinky-parley-voo!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>With one final wave of his cigar to the gesticulating Joao and the
+grinning women he turned his back on the town and faced the little-known
+river and the inscrutable jungle. But neither his eyes nor his thoughts
+traveled beyond the bow of the boat. Through narrowed lids he studied
+the swaying paddlers and the piratical Jos&eacute;. And in his mind echoed the
+whispered warning of Joao, delivered during the effusive embrace at
+parting:</p>
+
+<p>"Comrade, watch those <i>bastardos Peruanos</i>."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<h3>IN THE NIGHT WATCH</h3>
+
+
+<p>Day by day the long canoe crawled into the vast unknown. Day by day the
+down-flowing jungle river pushed steadily, sullenly against its prow, as
+if striving to repel the invasion of its secret places by the
+fair-skinned men of another continent. Day by day it slid past in
+resentful impotence, conquered by the swinging blades of the Peruvian
+<i>bogas</i>. And day by day the close companionship of canoe and camp seemed
+to weld the voyagers into one compact unit.</p>
+
+<p>Through hours of blazing sun, when the mercury of the thermometer which
+Knowlton had hung inside the shady <i>toldo</i> cabin fluctuated well above
+100 degrees, the hardy crew forged on. Through drenching rains they
+still hung doggedly to their work, suspending it only when the water
+fell in such drowning quantities that they were forced to tie up hastily
+to shore and seek cover in order to breathe. When sunset neared they
+picked with unerring eye a spot fit for camping, attacked the bush with
+whirling machetes, cleared a space, threw up pole frameworks, swiftly
+thatched them with great palm leaves, and thus created from the jungle
+two crude but efficient huts&mdash;one for themselves and one for their
+<i>patrones</i>. When night had shut down and all hands squatted around the
+fire in a nightly smoke talk they regaled their employers with wild
+tales of adventures in bush and town, some of which were not at all
+polite, but all of which were mightily interesting. And despite all
+discomforts, fatigue, and the minor incidents and accidents which often
+lead fellow travelers in the wilderness to bickering and bitterness, no
+friction developed between the men of the north and the men of the
+south.</p>
+
+<p>Not that the Peruvians were at all obsequious or servile. They were a
+reckless, lawless, Godless gang, perpetually bearing themselves with the
+careless insolence which had characterized them at first, blasphemous of
+speech toward one another&mdash;but never toward the North Americans.
+Disputes arose among them with volcanic suddenness, and more than once
+knives were half drawn, only to be slipped back under the tongue-lashing
+of the hawk-nosed <i>puntero</i>, Jos&eacute;, who damned the disputants completely
+and promised to cut out the bowels of any man daring to lift his
+blade clear of its sheath. Five minutes afterward the fire eaters
+would be on as good terms as ever, shrugging and grinning at their
+passengers&mdash;particularly Tim, who, shaking his head disgustedly, would
+grumble:</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, pickles! Another frog fight gone bust!"</p>
+
+<p>Yet Tim, for all his disparagement of these abortive spats, knew full
+well that any one of them held the makings of a deadly duel and that
+Jos&eacute;'s lurid threats were no mere Latin hyperbole. He realized that the
+red-crowned bowman ruled his crew exactly as any of the old-time
+buccaneers whom he resembled had governed their free-booting gangs&mdash;by
+the iron hand; and that, though these men sailed no Spanish Main and
+flew no black flag, the iron-hand government was needed. He saw also
+that the rough-and-ready courtesy of this crowd toward their passengers
+was due largely to the attitude of Captain McKay, who had enforced their
+respect at the start by his soldierly bearing and retained it ever since
+by his military management.</p>
+
+<p>For the captain, experienced in directing men, conducted himself at all
+times as a commanding officer should: he saw all, said little, treated
+Jos&eacute; as a subordinate officer, and left the handling of the crew
+entirely to him. His aloofness forestalled any of that familiarity
+which, with such a gang, would have led to contempt. On the other hand,
+his avoidance of any assumption of meddlesome authority prevented the
+irritation and dislike which free men inevitably feel for the
+self-important type of leader. Thus he cannily steered himself and his
+mates between the two rocks which might have wrecked the expedition
+before it was well started. And Knowlton, ex-lieutenant, and Tim,
+ex-sergeant, seeing and understanding, followed his example.</p>
+
+<p>So the days and nights rolled by, the miles of never-ending jungle shore
+fell away behind, and, save for the occasional outbreaks between members
+of the crew, all was serene. To all appearances the Peruvians were
+whole-heartedly interested in serving their employers faithfully, and
+the North Americans were gliding onward with no thought of insecurity.
+Yet appearances frequently are deceptive.</p>
+
+<p>In the heat of the day&mdash;in fact, before the broiling sun neared the
+zenith&mdash;Tim and Knowlton habitually fell asleep inside the <i>toldo</i>, not
+to awake until two hours before sunset, when, according to the routine
+agreed upon, the night's camping place would be sought and two or three
+of the Peruvians would go into the bush with rifles, seeking fresh meat.
+McKay never slept during the day's traverse. Nothing escaped his eye
+from the time when he emerged from his mosquito net in the misty morning
+until he entered it again by firelight. The men in the boat; the
+floating alligators and wading birds of the water; the flashing parrots,
+jacamars, toucans, trogons, and hummers of the air; the yard-long
+lizards and nervous spider monkeys of the tangled tree branches
+alongshore&mdash;all these he watched quietly as the boat forged on. And the
+sinister Francisco, watching him in turn, and the paddlers throwing
+occasional glances his way, came to regard him as the only alert member
+of the trio. Wherein they erred.</p>
+
+<p>The truth was that every one of the three adventurers was on his guard.
+Tim had not forgotten the last words of his boon companion, Joao, and at
+the first opportunity he had quietly passed on that warning. Moreover,
+McKay and Knowlton, without discussing the matter, had meditated on the
+unexpected assistance of Schwandorf, the speed with which the crew had
+been obtained, the promptness of Jos&eacute; to accept the first payment
+offered, and other things. Wherefore it had come about that at no hour
+of the twenty-four was every eye and ear closed. And the real reason why
+red Tim and blond Knowlton slept by day was that they thus made up the
+slumber lost at night.</p>
+
+<p>Not that either of them patrolled the camp in sentry go. So far as the
+Peruvians knew, they slept as soundly as McKay. But, lying in their
+hammocks, they divided the night watches between them on a schedule as
+regular as that of a military camp, though the shifts necessarily were
+longer. As sunset came always at six o'clock and all hands sought their
+hanging beds two hours later, Tim's "tour of duty" lasted until one in
+the morning. When the phosphorescent hands of his watch pointed to that
+hour he stealthily reached out and jabbed Knowlton, sleeping beside him.
+When a barely audible "All right" reached his ears he was officially
+relieved.</p>
+
+<p>Night followed night, became a week, lengthened into a fortnight. Still,
+so far as the crew was concerned, nothing happened. A little rough
+banter among them as they smoked their last cigarettes, then sleep and
+snores; and that was all until morning. Men less experienced in night
+vigils than the ex-soldiers would have abandoned their watches long
+before this&mdash;if, indeed, they had ever adopted them. But these three
+were schooled in patience. Moreover, neither Tim nor Knowlton had ever
+before penetrated the jungle, and at times the light of the waxing moon
+revealed to their eyes strange things which they never would have seen
+by day. So the tedium of the long hours of wakefulness might be broken
+at any moment.</p>
+
+<p>Once they camped close to a conical hillock of compact earth, some four
+feet high and almost stone hard, from which radiated narrow covered
+galleries&mdash;the citadel and viaducts of a community of termites. Tim,
+still harboring vivid recollections of his ant battle at Remate de
+Males&mdash;though by this time he had trained himself to sleep in his
+hammock, where he was comparatively safe&mdash;looked askance at it when told
+what it was, and was only partly reassured by the information that
+termites were eaters of wood rather than of flesh. After sleep had
+embraced the rest of the camp he still was uneasy, lifting his net at
+long intervals and squinting at the moonlit mound as if expecting a
+horde of pincer-jawed insects to erupt from it and charge him. And
+during one of these inspections he saw something totally unexpected.</p>
+
+<p>From the black shadows of the forest had emerged another shadow, so
+grotesque and misshapen that it seemed a figment of indigestion and
+weird dreams&mdash;a thing from whose shaggy body protruded what appeared to
+be only a long tubular snout where a head should be, and which looked to
+be overbalanced at the other end by a great mass of hair. It stood stone
+still, and for the moment Tim could not decide which end of it was head
+and which was tail, or even whether it were not double-tailed and
+headless. Then, slowly, the apparition moved.</p>
+
+<p>Into that hard-packed earth it dug huge hooked claws, and from its
+tapering muzzle a wormlike tongue licked about, gathering the outrushing
+white ants into its gullet. For minutes Tim lay blinking at it,
+wondering if he really saw it.</p>
+
+<p>Then, picking up his rifle, he slipped outside his net and advanced on
+the creature.</p>
+
+<p>The animal turned, sat back on its great tail, lifted its terrible
+claws, and waited. Six feet away, just out of its reach, Tim stopped and
+stared anew. Then he grinned.</p>
+
+<p>"You win, feller," he informed the beast. "What ye are I dunno, but any
+critter that's got the guts to ramble right into camp and offer to gimme
+a battle is too good a sport for me to shoot. Help yourself to all the
+ants in the world, for all o' me. I'm goin' back to bed. Bon sewer,
+monseer."</p>
+
+<p>Wherewith, still grinning, but warily watching, he backed until sure the
+big invader would not spring at him. Knowing nothing of ant bears, he
+did not know it was hardly a springing animal.</p>
+
+<p>Its claws looked sufficiently formidable to disembowel a man&mdash;as,
+indeed, they were, if the man came near enough. But when Tim had
+withdrawn and the sluggish brute had decided that it would not need to
+defend itself, it sank to all-fours and passed stiffly away into the
+shades whence it had come.</p>
+
+<p>On another night, when Tim slept, Knowlton detected a creeping,
+slithering sound which made him slip off the safety catch of his
+heavy-bulleted pistol and peer at the hut where slept the crew. No man
+was moving there. Still the sound persisted. Lifting his net, he spied
+beyond the hut of the Peruvians a moving mass on the ground&mdash;a
+cylindrical bulk which looked to be two feet thick, and which glided
+past like a solid stream of dark water flowing along above the dirt. Its
+beginning and end were hidden in the bush, and not until it tapered into
+nothing and was gone did he realize fully that he had been gazing at an
+enormous anaconda. Then he kicked himself for not shooting it. But
+before long he congratulated himself for letting it go.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps an hour later the startled forest resounded with an agonized
+scream, so piercing and so appallingly human that all the camp sprang
+awake. The outcry came but once, sounding from some place not far off,
+near the water's edge, and in the direction toward which the huge
+serpent had disappeared. Before the watcher had time to tell the others
+of what he had seen, one of the boatmen discovered the rut left in the
+soft ground by the reptile. Thereafter Knowlton kept his own counsel,
+listening to the excited curses of the men and observing their pallor
+and their nervous scanning of the shadows. Jos&eacute; said the screech
+undoubtedly was the death shriek of some animal caught and crushed in
+the snake's tremendous coil. McKay concurred with a nod. And when
+Knowlton casually said it was tough that nobody had been awake to shoot
+the thing as it passed the camp, Jos&eacute; emphatically disagreed.</p>
+
+<p>A bullet fired into that fiendish giant, he averred, would have meant
+death to one or more men; for the serpent's writhing coils and lashing
+tail would have knocked down the sleeping-hut and shattered the spines
+of any men they struck. No, let Se&ntilde;or Knowlton thank the saints that the
+awful master of the swamps had gone its way unmolested. For the rest of
+that night Knowlton kept his watch openly, accompanied by Jos&eacute; and three
+of the paddlers, who refused to sleep again until they should be miles
+away from the vicinity of that dread monster.</p>
+
+<p>Two nights afterward the camp was aroused again. Tim alone saw the start
+of the disturbance, and he kept mum about it because he did not choose
+to let the Peruvians know he had been on the alert. Out from the gloom
+and straight past the huts a thick-bodied, curve-snouted animal came
+charging madly for the river, carrying on its back a ferocious cat
+creature whose fangs were buried deep in its steed's neck&mdash;a tapir
+attacked by a jaguar. With a resounding plunge the elephantine quarry
+struck the water and was gone. The tiger cat, forced to relinquish its
+hold or drown, swam hurriedly back to the bank below the encampment,
+where it roared and spat and squalled in a blood-chilling paroxysm of
+baffled fury. And though every man was awakened, not one left the flimsy
+shelter of his net. Nor did anyone so much as speak until Tim, wearying
+of the noise, announced his intention to "go bust that critter in the
+nose and give him somethin' to yowl about."</p>
+
+<p>The proposal met with instant and peremptory veto.</p>
+
+<p>"As you were!" snapped McKay. "Let him alone! You wouldn't have a
+Chinaman's chance in that black bush. A jaguar is bad all the time, and
+when he's mad he's deadly. Never fool with one of those beasts, Tim.
+I've met them before and I know what they can do."</p>
+
+<p>To which Jos&eacute; agreed with many picturesque oaths, declaring that a
+jaguar was no mere beast&mdash;it was a devil. Tim, grumbling, obeyed orders.
+The jaguar, hearing their voices, stopped its noise and probably
+reconnoitered the camp. But no man saw the brute, and its next roar
+sounded from some spot far off in the jungle.</p>
+
+<p>Other things, too, passed within Tim's range of vision from time to time
+in the moonlit hours: a queer bony creature which he took for some new
+kind of turtle, but which really was an armadillo; a monstrous hairy
+spider which slid like a streak up his net, hung there for a time,
+decided to go elsewhere, and departed with such speed that the man
+inside rubbed his eyes and wondered if he was "seein' things that
+ain't"; a couple of vampires which flitted in from nowhere like ghoulish
+ghosts, wheeled and floated silently on wide wings, seeking an exposed
+foot protruding from the hammocks, found none, rested a moment on the
+roof poles, chirping hoarsely, and veered out again into the night.</p>
+
+<p>To Knowlton's watch came a strange owl-faced little monkey with great
+staring eyes and face ringed with pale fur&mdash;one of those night apes
+seldom seen by man; a small troop of kinkajous, slender, long-tailed
+animals which looked to be monkeys, but were not, and which leaped
+deftly among the branches like frolicsome little devils let loose to
+play under the jungle moon; a big scaly iguana, its back ridged with saw
+teeth and its pendulous throat pouch dangling grotesquely under its jaw;
+and more than one deadly snake and huge alligator, the first gliding
+past with venomous head raised and cold eye glinting, the second lying
+quiescent except for occasional openings of horrific jaws.</p>
+
+<p>To the ears of both the hammock sentinels came the mournful sounds of
+living things unseen. From the depths beyond drifted the weird plaint of
+the sloth, crying in the night, "Oh me, poor sloth, oh-oh-oh-oh!" Goat
+suckers repeated by the hour their monotonous refrains, "Quao quao," or
+"Cho-co-co-cao," while a third earnestly exhorted, "Joao corta pao!"
+("John, cut wood!"). Tree frogs and crickets clacked and drummed and
+hoo-hooed, guaribas poured their awful discord into the air, and on one
+bright breathless night there sounded over and over a call freighted
+with wretchedness and despair&mdash;the wail of that lonely owl known to the
+bushmen as "the mother of the moon," whose dreadful cry portends evil to
+those who hear it.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes the air shook with the thunderous concussion of some great
+falling tree which, long since bled to death by parasitical plant
+growths, now at last toppled crashing back into the dank soil whence it
+had forced its way up into a place in the sun. Other noises, infrequent
+and unexplainable, also drifted at long intervals from the mysterious
+blackness. And in all the medley of night sounds not one was cheerful.
+The burden of the jungle's cacophonic cantanta ever was the
+same&mdash;despair, disaster, death.</p>
+
+<p>Then came the fifteenth day. It dawned red, the sun fighting an
+ensanguined battle with the heavy morning mists and throwing on the
+faces of the early-rising travelers a sinister crimson hue. Before that
+sun should rise again some of those faces were to be stained a deeper
+red.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+<h3>COLD STEEL</h3>
+
+
+<p>Some two hours after the start, while Knowlton and Tim loafed at the
+fore end of the cabin, enjoying the comparative coolness of the early
+day, another boat hove in sight up ahead&mdash;a longish craft manned by
+eight paddlers and without a cabin.</p>
+
+<p>As it came into view its bowman tossed his paddle in greeting. The
+Peruvians ignored the salutation. The bowman, after shading his eyes and
+peering at the flamboyant figure of Jos&eacute;, resumed paddling without
+further ceremony, evidently intending to pass in silence. But then McKay
+arose, waved a hand, and told Jos&eacute; to steer for the newcomers. Jos&eacute;,
+with a slightly sour look, gave the signal to Francisco, and the course
+changed.</p>
+
+<p>The other canoe slowed and waited. Its men watched the tall figure of
+McKay. Tim and Knowlton scanned the bronzed faces of those men and liked
+them at once. The paddlers evidently were Brazilians, but of a different
+type from the sluggish townsmen of Remate de Males&mdash;alert,
+active-looking fellows, steady of eye, honest of face, muscular of
+arm&mdash;in all, a more clean-cut set of men than the Peruvians. All three
+of the Americans noticed that no word was exchanged between the two
+crews.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Boa dia, amigos!</i>" spoke McKay. "Who are you and whence do you come?"</p>
+
+<p>"We are rubber workers of Coronel Nunes, senhor," the bowman answered,
+civilly. "We go to make a new camp. This land is a part of the
+<i>seringel</i> of the coronel, and we left his headquarters yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! Then the headquarters is above here?"</p>
+
+<p>"One more day's journey," the man nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you. Good fortune go with you."</p>
+
+<p>"And with you, senhor. May God protect you."</p>
+
+<p>With the words the Brazilian glanced along the line of Peruvian faces
+and his eyes narrowed. Though his words were only a respectful farewell,
+his expressive face indicated that McKay might be badly in need of
+divine protection at no distant date. As his paddle dipped and his men
+nodded their leave-taking, Francisco, the <i>popero</i>; sneered raucously:</p>
+
+<p>"Hah! Mere <i>caucheros</i>! Workers! Slaves!"</p>
+
+<p>And he spat at the Brazilian boat.</p>
+
+<p>Fire shot into the eyes of the bowman and his comrades. Their muscles
+tensed.</p>
+
+<p>"Better be slaves&mdash;better be dogs&mdash;than Peruvian cutthroats!" one
+retorted. "Go your way, and keep to your own side of the river."</p>
+
+<p>"We go where we will, and no misborn Brazilians can stop us," snarled
+Francisco. To which he added obscene epithets directed against
+Brazilians in general and the men of Coronel Nunes in particular.</p>
+
+<p>The unprovoked insults angered the Americans as well as the Brazilians.
+Knowlton leaped through the <i>toldo</i> and confronted Francisco.</p>
+
+<p>"Shut your dirty mouth!" he blazed.</p>
+
+<p>For reply, the evil-eyed steersman spat at him the vilest name known to
+man.</p>
+
+<p>An instant later, his lips split, he sprawled dazedly on his platform,
+perilously close to the edge. Knowlton, the knuckles of his left fist
+bleeding from impact with the other's teeth, stood over him in white
+fury. Francisco's right hand fumbled for his knife. Knowlton promptly
+stamped on that hand with a heavy boot heel.</p>
+
+<p>"Good eye, Looey!" rumbled Tim's voice at his back. "Boot him some more
+for luck. Hey, you! Back up or I'll drill ye for keeps!" This to a pair
+of the Peruvian paddlers who had come scrambling through the cabin.</p>
+
+<p>After one searching stare into Tim's hard blue eyes and a glance at his
+fist curled around the butt of his belt gun, the <i>bogas</i> backed up. A
+moment later they were thrown boldly into their own part of the boat by
+Jos&eacute;, who blistered them with the profanity of three languages at once.
+Then McKay came through and took charge.</p>
+
+<p>"That'll do, Tim! Same goes for you, Merry! Jos&eacute;, I'll handle this. You,
+Francisco! Get up!"</p>
+
+<p>The curt commands struck like blows. Every man obeyed. And when the
+squat steersman again stood up McKay went after him roughshod. In the
+colloquial Spanish of Mexico and the Argentine, in the man talk of
+American army camps, he flayed that offender alive. Jos&eacute; himself,
+efficient man handler though he was, stared at his captain in awe. And
+Francisco, though not given to cringing, skulked like a beaten dog when
+the verbal flagellation was finished.</p>
+
+<p>Turning then to the Brazilians, McKay formally apologized for the
+insults to them.</p>
+
+<p>"It is nothing, senhor," coolly answered the bowman&mdash;though his glance
+at the Peruvians said plainly that it would have been something but for
+the swift punishment by the Americans. "Again I say&mdash;may God protect
+you! Adeos!"</p>
+
+<p>The Brazilian boat glided away. The Peruvian craft crawled on upstream
+in silence.</p>
+
+<p>When the next camp was made all apparently had forgotten the affair. The
+men badgered one another as usual, though none mentioned Francisco's
+split mouth; and Francisco, himself, albeit sulky, betrayed no sign of
+enmity. After nightfall the regular camp-fire meeting was held and at
+the usual time all turned in. One more night of listening to the sounds
+of the tropical wilderness seemed all that lay ahead of the secret
+sentinels.</p>
+
+<p>Sleep enveloped the huts. Snores and gurgles rose and fell. Tim himself,
+for the sake of effect, snored heartily at intervals, though his eyes
+never closed. Through his mosquito bar he could see only vaguely, but he
+knew any man walking from the crew's quarters must cast a very visible
+shadow across that net, and to him the shadow would be as good a warning
+as a clear view of the substance. But the hours crept on and no shadow
+came.</p>
+
+<p>At length, however, a small sound reached his alert ear&mdash;a sound
+different from the regular noises of the bush&mdash;a stealthy, creeping
+noise like that of a big snake or a huge lizard. It came from the ground
+a few feet away, and it seemed to be gradually advancing toward his own
+hammock. Whatever the creature was that made it, its method of progress
+was not human, but reptilian. Puzzled, suspicious, yet doubtful, Tim
+lifted the rear side of his net, on which no moonlight fell. Head out,
+he watched for the crawling thing to come close.</p>
+
+<p>It came, and for an instant he was in doubt as to its character, for
+around it lay the deep shadow of some treetops which at that point
+blocked off the moon. It inched along on its stomach, its black head
+seeming round and minus a face, its body broad but flat&mdash;a thing that
+looked to be a man but not a man. Then, pausing, it raised its head and
+peered toward the hammock of Knowlton. With that movement Tim's doubts
+vanished. The lifting of the head showed the face&mdash;the face of
+Francisco, the face of murder. In its teeth was clamped a bare knife.</p>
+
+<p>Forthwith Tim applied General Order Number Thirteen.</p>
+
+<p>In one bound he was outside his net, colliding with Knowlton, who awoke
+instantly. In another he was beside the assassin, who, with a lightning
+grab at the knife in his mouth, had started to spring up. Tim wasted no
+time in grappling or clinching. He kicked.</p>
+
+<p>His heavy boot, backed by the power of a hundred and ninety pounds of
+brawn, thudded into the Indian's chest. Francisco was hurled over
+sidewise on his back. Another kick crashed against his head above the
+ear. He went limp.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye lousy snake!" grated Tim. "Crawlin' on yer belly to knife a sleepin'
+man, hey? Blast yer rotten heart&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"What's up?" barked McKay from his hammock.</p>
+
+<p>"Night attack, Cap. If ye're comin' out bring along yer gat. Hey, Looey,
+got yer gun on? Some o' these other guys might git gay. They're comin'
+now."</p>
+
+<p>True enough, the Peruvian gang was jumping from its hut. With another
+glance at the prostrate Francisco to make sure he was unconscious, Tim
+whirled to meet them, fist on gun.</p>
+
+<p>"Halt!" he roared. "First guy passin' this corner post gits shot. Back
+up!"</p>
+
+<p>The impact of his voice, the menace of his ready gun hand, the sight of
+Knowlton and McKay leaping out with pistols drawn, stopped the rush at
+the designated post. But swift hands dropped, and when they rose again
+the moonlight glinted on cold steel.</p>
+
+<p>"Capitan, what happens here?" demanded Jos&eacute;, ominously quiet.</p>
+
+<p>"Knife work," McKay replied, curtly. "Your man Francisco attempted to
+creep in and murder Se&ntilde;or Knowlton. If you and the rest have similar
+intentions, now's your time to try. If not, put away those knives."</p>
+
+<p>"Knives! <i>Por Dios</i>, what do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Look behind you."</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; looked. At once he snarled curses and commands. Slowly the knives
+slipped out of sight. The paddlers edged backward to their own shack,
+leaving their <i>puntero</i> alone.</p>
+
+<p>"The capitan has it wrong," asserted Jos&eacute;. "We awake to find our
+<i>popero</i> being kicked in the head. We want to know why. If Francisco has
+done what you say I will deal with him. That I may be sure, allow me to
+look."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well. Look."</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; advanced, stooped, studied the ground, the position of Francisco's
+body, the knife still clutched in the nerveless hand. Tim growlingly
+vouchsafed a brief explanation of the incident. When Jos&eacute; straightened
+up, his mouth was a hard line and his eyes hot coals.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si. Es verdad.</i> To-morrow we shall have a new <i>popero</i>."</p>
+
+<p>With which he stooped again, grasped the prone man by the hair, dragged
+him into the moonlit space between the huts, and flung him down. "Juan,
+bring water!" he ordered.</p>
+
+<p>One of the paddlers, looking queerly at him, did so. Jos&eacute; deluged the
+senseless man. Francisco, reviving, sat up and scowled about him. His
+eyes rested on the three Americans standing grimly ready, shoulder to
+shoulder, before their hut; veered to his mates bunched in sinister
+silence beside their own quarters; shifted again to meet the baleful
+glare of Jos&eacute;. His hand stole to his empty sheath.</p>
+
+<p>"Your knife, Francisco <i>mio</i>?" queried Jos&eacute;, a menacing purr in his
+tone. "I have it. It seems that you are in haste to use it. Too much
+haste, Francisco. But if you will stand instead of crawling as before,
+you may have your knife again&mdash;and use it, too."</p>
+
+<p>Francisco, staring sullenly up, seemed to read in the words more than
+was evident to the Americans. He lurched to his feet, staggered, caught
+his balance, braced himself, stood waiting.</p>
+
+<p>"You know who commands here," Jos&eacute; went on. "You disobey. You seek to
+stab in the night&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Now or later&mdash;what is the difference?"</p>
+
+<p>"&mdash;and now the boat is too small for both of us." Jos&eacute; ignored the
+interruption. "Here is your knife. Now use it!"</p>
+
+<p>He flipped the weapon at the other, who caught it deftly. Jos&eacute; dropped
+his right hand to his waist. An instant later naked steel licked out at
+Francisco's throat.</p>
+
+<p>The steersman's knife flashed up, caught the reaching blade, knocked it
+with a scraping clink. For a few seconds the two weapons seemed welded
+together, their owners each striving to bear down the other's wrist.
+Then they parted as the combatants sprang back.</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; side-stepped twice to his right. Francisco, turning to preserve his
+guard, now had the light full in his face. But the moon rode so high
+that the steersman's disadvantage was negligible, and the next assault
+of the <i>puntero</i> was blocked as before. And this time the wrist of the
+<i>popero</i> proved a bit the better; he threw the attacking steel aside and
+struck in a slashing sweep at his antagonist's stomach.</p>
+
+<p>A convulsive inward movement of the bowman's middle, coupled with a
+swift back-step, made the slash miss by a hair's breadth. With the
+quickness of light Jos&eacute; was in again. His knife hand, still outstretched
+sidewise, stopped with a light smack of flesh on flesh. Then it jerked
+outward. His steel now was red to the hilt.</p>
+
+<p>One more rapid step back, a keen glance at his opponent, and Jos&eacute; stood
+at ease. From Francisco burst a bubbling groan. He staggered. His knife
+dropped. His hands rose fumblingly toward his neck. Suddenly his knees
+gave way and he toppled backward to the ground. The silvery moonlight
+disclosed a dark flood welling from his severed jugular.</p>
+
+<p>With the utmost coolness Jos&eacute; ran two fingers down his wet blade,
+snapped the fingers in air, and spoke to his crew:</p>
+
+<p>"As I said, we shall have a new <i>popero</i>. To-morrow, Julio, you will
+take the platform."</p>
+
+<p>A rumble ran among the men. Their eyes lifted from Francisco to the
+Americans, and in them shone a wolfish gleam. The bowman turned sharply
+and faced them.</p>
+
+<p>"Who growls?" he rasped. "You, Julio?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si, yo soy</i>," Julio answered, harshly, fingering his knife. "I will be
+steersman, but I steer downstream, not up. Francisco spoke the truth.
+Now or later&mdash;what is the difference? Let it be now!"</p>
+
+<p>A louder growl from the others followed his words. One stepped back into
+the shadow of the hut.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Perros amarillos!</i> Yellow dogs! You go upstream, fools! The Americans
+must be taken&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>A raucous sneer from Julio interrupted him. Simultaneously the paddler's
+hand leaped upward, poising a knife.</p>
+
+<p>"The gringos stay here&mdash;and you, too, you Yanqui cur!"</p>
+
+<p>The poised knife hissed through the air at Jos&eacute;.</p>
+
+<p>Out from the crew house shot a streak of fire and a smashing rifle
+report.</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; dodged, staggered, screeched in feline fury, the knife buried in
+his left arm.</p>
+
+<p>McKay grunted suddenly, fell, lay still.</p>
+
+<p>"God!" yelled Tim. "Cap's gone! Clean 'em, Looey!"</p>
+
+<p>With the words he leaped aside and pulled his pistol, just as another
+rifle flare stabbed out from the other hut and a bullet whisked through
+the space where he had stood. An instant later he was pouring a stream
+of lead at the spot whence the burning powder had leaped.</p>
+
+<p>Knives flashing, teeth gleaming, the other paddlers charged across the
+ten-foot space between the huts.</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute;, his left arm helpless, but his deadly right hand still gripping
+his knife, hurled himself on Julio, who had seized a machete from
+somewhere.</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton slammed a bullet between the eyes of the foremost <i>boga</i>, who
+pitched headlong. He swung the muzzle to the other man's chest&mdash;yanked
+at the trigger&mdash;got no response. The gun was jammed.</p>
+
+<p>With a triumphant snarl the blood-crazed Peruvian closed in, slashing
+for the throat. Knowlton slipped aside, evaded the thrust, swung the
+pistol down hard on his assailant's head. The man reeled, thrust again
+blindly, missed. Knowlton crashed his dumb gun down again. It struck
+fair on the temple. The man collapsed.</p>
+
+<p>Tim was charging across the open at the crew house. Jos&eacute; and Julio were
+locked in a death grapple. No other living man, except Knowlton, still
+stood upright. Stooping, he peered into the red-dyed face of McKay. Then
+he laid a hand on the captain's chest. Faint but regular, he felt the
+heart beating.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God!" he breathed. With a wary eye on the battling Peruvians he
+swiftly raised the captain and put him into Tim's hammock. As he turned
+back to the fight Tim emerged from the other hut, carrying a body, which
+he dropped and swiftly inspected. At the same moment the fight of Jos&eacute;
+and Julio ended.</p>
+
+<p>With a choked scream Julio dropped, writhed, doubled up. Then he lay
+still. Jos&eacute;, his face ghastly, stared around him. His mouth stretched in
+a terrible smile.</p>
+
+<p>"So this ends it," he croaked, his gaze dropping to Julio. "<i>Adios</i>,
+Julio! The machete is not&mdash;so good as the knife&mdash;unless one has&mdash;room
+to&mdash;swing it&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He chuckled hoarsely and sank down.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant Knowlton hesitated, his glance going back and forth
+between McKay and Jos&eacute;. Swiftly then he ran his finger tips over McKay's
+head. With a murmur of satisfaction he turned from his comrade and
+hurried to the motionless bowman, over whom Tim now bent.</p>
+
+<p>"Bleedin' to death, Looey," informed Tim. "Ain't cut bad excep' that
+arm. That flyin' knife must have got an artery. Can we pull him through?
+He's a good skate."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll try. You look after Cap. He's only knocked out&mdash;bullet creased
+him&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Glory be! He's all right, huh? Sure I'll fix him up. Everybody else
+dead? I got that guy in the bunk house&mdash;drilled him three times."</p>
+
+<p>"Look out for that fellow over there. Maybe I brained him, but I'm not
+sure."</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton was already down on his knees beside Jos&eacute;, working fast to loop
+a tourniquet and stop the flow from the pierced arm. With a handkerchief
+and his pistol barrel he shut off the pulsating stream.</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah, he's done," judged Tim, rising from the man whom Knowlton had
+downed at last. "Skull's caved in. What 'd ye paste him with?"</p>
+
+<p>"Gun. Cursed thing stuck."</p>
+
+<p>"Uh-huh. Them automats are cranky. Say, lookit the mess Hozy made o'
+that guy Hooley-o."</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton glanced at Julio and whistled. Jos&eacute;'s oft-repeated threat to
+disembowel a refractory member of the crew had at last been literally
+fulfilled.</p>
+
+<p>But the lieutenant had seen worse sights in the shell-torn trenches of
+France, and now he kept his mind on his work. Wedging the gun to hold
+the tourniquet tight, he lifted his patient from the red-smeared mud and
+bore him to the nearest hammock in the crew quarters. Striding back, he
+found Tim alternately bathing McKay's head and giving him brandy. In a
+moment the captain's eyes opened.</p>
+
+<p>"Some bean ye got, Cap," congratulated Tim, vastly relieved at sight of
+McKay's gray stare. "Bullet bounced right off. Here, take another
+swaller. Attaboy! Hey, Looey, we better pack this crease o' Cap's, huh?
+She keeps leakin'."</p>
+
+<p>"Yep. Dip up the surgical kit. And give Jos&eacute; a drink. I'll have to tie
+his artery, too. How do you feel, old chap?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dizzy," McKay confessed. "What's happened?"</p>
+
+<p>"Lost our crew," was the laconic answer. "All gone west but Jos&eacute;, and
+he's bled white. We'll have to paddle our own canoe now."</p>
+
+<p>For a time after his head was bandaged McKay lay quiet, staring out at
+the tiny battlefield and at his two mates working silently on the
+wounded arm of Jos&eacute;. When they came back he spoke one word.</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah! He's the nigger in the woodpile, I bet my shirt. But why? What's
+his lay, d'ye s'pose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps Jos&eacute; knows," suggested Knowlton. "But he's in no shape to talk
+now. Let's see. Schwandorf said he was going to Iquitos?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but that doesn't mean anything."</p>
+
+<p>"Probably not. Well, maybe Jos&eacute; can explain."</p>
+
+<p>There were some things, however, which Jos&eacute; could not have told if he
+would, for he himself did not know them. One was that Schwandorf really
+had gone to Iquitos, where was a radio station. Another was that from
+that radio station to Puerto Bermudez, thence over the Andes to the
+coast, and northward to a New York address memorized from Knowlton's
+notebook, already had gone this message:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>McKay expedition killed by Indians. Rand search most dangerous, but
+if empowered I attempt locate him for fifty thousand gold payable
+on safe delivery Rand at Manaos. Reply soon a possible.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Karl Schwandorf.</span></p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE DOUBLE-CROSS</h3>
+
+
+<p>Noon, sweltering hot. A blazing sun pouring vertical rays down on a
+blinding river. A long canoe wearily creeping up the glaring waters,
+minus a lookout, heedless of the ever-present danger of sunken tree
+trunks; propelled by three sun-blistered white men, one of whom wore a
+bandage around his head; steered perfunctorily by a pallid pirate whose
+left arm hung in a sling. Atop the right bank an unbroken, endless
+tangle of jungle growth. Ahead, on the left shore, a gap gouged out of
+the forest and a number of boats at the water's edge.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess that's it," panted Knowlton, shielding his eyes and squinting at
+the clearing. "One more day's journey, the Brazilian chap said. We've
+been two and a half."</p>
+
+<p>"One day's journey for six hardened rivermen, se&ntilde;or," corrected Jos&eacute;.
+"Not for three men doing six men's work and hampered by a cripple."</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, ye're no crip, Hozy," dissented Tim. "Any guy that can steer a tub
+like this here one-handed after losin' a couple gallons o' juice is in
+good shape yet, I'll say. If ye had both legs shot off and yer arms
+broke and yer head stove in, now, ye might call yourself sort o'
+helpless. Ease her over to the left a li'l' more, so's we'll hit the
+bank right at the corner o' that gap. Me, I don't want to take one
+stroke more 'n I have to. Every muscle in me is so sore it squeaks."</p>
+
+<p>"Same here," admitted Knowlton. "I'm one solid ache."</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; nodded. The clumsy craft veered a bit. The three put a little more
+punch into their lagging strokes, noting, as they neared the steep bank,
+that a couple of men had appeared at its top and were staring at them.
+Gradually the long dugout worked in to the muddy shore, where the
+paddlers stabbed their blades into the clay and held it firm.</p>
+
+<p>"Ahoy, up there! This the Nunes <i>seringal</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>From the edge, some thirty feet above, the taller of the two watchers
+answered:</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si</i>, senhor. The headquarters of the coronel. Do you come to visit
+him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Right."</p>
+
+<p>"Then permit me to help you. The path is a little ahead. Pull up and tie
+to this stake."</p>
+
+<p>The tall fellow came dropping swiftly downward. At the same time the
+other Brazilian stepped back and was gone.</p>
+
+<p>With a dexterous twist the man of Nunes moored the boat to the
+designated stake. Then he reached a hand toward Tim to help him out.</p>
+
+<p>"I ain't no old woman, feller," Tim refused, and hopped aground
+unassisted. McKay and Knowlton followed. But Jos&eacute;, after moving
+languidly forward and contemplating the sharp slope, hesitated and then
+shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"I am tired, se&ntilde;ores," he said. "And perhaps it would be well for one to
+stay here and watch."</p>
+
+<p>The tall Brazilian's eyes narrowed.</p>
+
+<p>"There is no danger of loss," he asserted, with dignity. "We men of the
+coronel are not thieves."</p>
+
+<p>The slight emphasis of his last sentence might have been taken as an
+intimation that some one else not far away would bear watching. Jos&eacute;'s
+mouth tightened. For a moment Brazilian and Peruvian eyed each other in
+obvious dislike. Then, with a glance at his crippled arm, Jos&eacute; shrugged
+again.</p>
+
+<p>"Better come along, Jos&eacute;," McKay said. "Stuff's safe enough."</p>
+
+<p>"As you will, Capitan."</p>
+
+<p>He lounged to the edge, hesitated, wavered slightly. At once the
+Brazilian darted out a hand and gave him support. And while the four
+clambered up the slope he retained a grip on the Peruvian's arm, aiding
+him to the top. When they emerged on the level, however, he dropped his
+hand immediately. Jos&eacute; gave him a half-mocking bow of thanks, to which
+he replied with a short nod. Then he stepped back and let the Peruvian
+precede him toward a number of substantial pole-supported houses a
+hundred yards away.</p>
+
+<p>"No love lost between them two," thought Tim, who had watched it all.
+"Good skate, though, this new feller. Ready to help a guy that needs it,
+whether he likes him or not; ready to knock his block off, too, if he
+needs that. Bet he'd be a hellion in a scrap. Dang good-lookin' lad,
+too."</p>
+
+<p>Wherewith he introduced himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't git sore because I growled at ye down below," he said, with a
+friendly grin. "Sounded rough, mebbe, but that's my style. I'm Tim Ryan,
+from the States. I bark more 'n I bite."</p>
+
+<p>The overture met with instant response&mdash;a quick smile and a twinkle in
+the warm eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"It is not words that give offense, senhor, but the way they are
+spoken&mdash;and the man who speaks them. One man may growl, but you like
+him. Another may speak smoothly, but you itch to strike him. Is it not
+so? I am Pedro Andrada, a <i>seringueiro</i> who should be tapping trees
+instead of loafing here. But my partner and I have just come in from a
+long trip into the <i>sertao</i>&mdash;wilderness&mdash;and are resting."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah? Was that yer buddy I seen with ye?"</p>
+
+<p>"My&mdash;ah&mdash;buddee? Partner? Yes, that was he&mdash;Louren&ccedil;o Moraes, the best
+comrade one ever had. He has gone to tell the coronel of your arrival.
+Have you met with an accident downriver?"</p>
+
+<p>He moved a thumb meaningly toward the only remaining member of the crew.</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah," grimly. "Bad accident."</p>
+
+<p>Tim tapped his pistol significently, raised five fingers, winked, and
+twitched his head toward the Peruvian. Pedro lifted his brows, nodded
+quick understanding, pointed to the bad arm of Jos&eacute;, and made motions as
+if pulling a trigger. Tim shook his head and enacted the pantomime of
+drawing and throwing a knife. Whereat the Brazilian, aware that Jos&eacute; was
+not a prisoner and probably knowing that North Americans were not knife
+throwers, looked much puzzled. But their sign manual went no farther,
+for they now approached the house which evidently formed the dwelling
+and office of Coronel Nunes.</p>
+
+<p>At the foot of the ladder stood a broad-shouldered, square-jawed,
+thick-muscled, deeply tanned man, who, without speaking, pointed a thumb
+upward. Above, in the doorway, waited an elderly Brazilian of medium
+height and spare figure, standing with soldierly erectness and garbed in
+white duck of semimilitary cut. He beamed down at McKay and Knowlton,
+but as his black eyes encountered those of Jos&eacute; they seemed suddenly to
+become very sharp. Then his gaze rested on Tim's broad face and he
+smiled again.</p>
+
+<p>"Enter, gentlemen," he invited. "<i>Esta casa e a suas ordenes</i>&mdash;this
+house is at your disposal."</p>
+
+<p>McKay, with a bow, climbed the ladder, followed by Knowlton. Jos&eacute;, with
+a swaggering stare at the wide-shouldered man, who stared straight back
+without facial change, also went up. Tim came fourth and last, for Pedro
+stopped beside his countryman, who evidently was Louren&ccedil;o.</p>
+
+<p>The travelers found themselves in a room which, in view of its distance
+from civilization, seemed palatial. Its floor was tight, its furniture
+modern, its walls decorated with a few excellent pictures, of which the
+largest was a superb view of the rugged harbor of Rio de Janeiro.
+Comfortable chairs were ranged along the walls, and the middle of the
+room was occupied by a massive square-cornered table on which lay a
+jumble of hand-written business papers, a number of books, a high-grade
+violin and bow. Beyond the table stood a swivel chair, evidently the
+usual seat of the coronel. Table and chair were so arranged that the
+master of this house sat always with his back to a wall and his face
+toward the door. And on a couple of hooks on that wall, ready for
+instant service, hung a high-power rifle.</p>
+
+<p>On their way up the river the Americans had passed, at long intervals, a
+few small rubber estates, whose headquarters consisted mainly of a crude
+shack or two, hardly better than the dingy houses of Remate de Males.
+This place was more imposing. They had observed, while crossing the
+cleared space, that it was at least half a mile square; that its
+warehouse for supplies was big and solid; that a goodly number of
+<i>barracaos</i>, or rubber workers' huts, surrounded the house of the master
+at a respectful distance; and that the owner's home was no one-room
+cabin, but big enough to contain six or eight rooms. This well-appointed
+reception room and the formal yet sincere courtesy of its owner showed
+that Coronel Nunes was no mere native of the frontier. Later they were
+to learn that he was a gentleman of Rio who, exiling himself from the
+capital after the death of his wife, had carved from this forbidding
+jungle a fortune in the rubber trade.</p>
+
+<p>With the correct touch of Latin punctilio McKay spoke the introductions
+and stated that they were on their way upriver to explore the
+hinterland. With equal politeness the coronel bowed and begged his
+illustrious guests to be seated. Then he touched a small bell. A door at
+one side opened and a white-suited negro appeared.</p>
+
+<p>"Caf&eacute;," the coronel ordered. As speedily as if these visitors had been
+long expected, the servant brought in a tray bearing cups of syrupy
+coffee. Each of the guests accepted one. Whereafter the decorum of the
+occasion was shattered by Tim, who, at the imminent risk of scalding
+himself, gulped his refreshment and vociferated his satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>"O-o-oh boy! That hits right where I live! Gimme another one, feller,
+and make it man's size!"</p>
+
+<p>The black fellow struggled with his quick mirth and then laughed
+outright&mdash;the throaty, infectious laugh of his race. The coronel's eyes
+twinkled. And when Tim fished a damp cigarette from his shirt,
+nonchalantly scraped a match on his host's table, blew a cloud of smoke,
+and sprawled back with one leg dangling over a chair arm, formality went
+a-glimmering.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>A quem madruga Deus ajuda</i>," laughed the coronel. "Or, as you North
+Americans put it, 'God helps those who help themselves.' Let us not be
+ceremonious, gentlemen. 'Tonio, bring more coffee. And cigars. And&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Down behind his table, where only the servant saw the motion, he
+twitched a finger as if pulling a cork. 'Tonio, his ebony countenance
+split by a grin, ducked his head and vanished into the other room.</p>
+
+<p>"How is the rubber market, sir?" asked Knowlton, seeking to divert
+attention from Tim.</p>
+
+<p>"Not so good," the old gentleman replied, with a deprecatory gesture.
+"In truth, it is very poor since the war&mdash;so poor that soon I shall
+abandon this <i>seringal</i> and go out to spend the rest of my life on the
+coast. With rubber selling at a mere five hundred dollars a ton in New
+York and the artificial plantations of the Far East growing greater
+yearly, there is no longer much profit in bleeding the wild trees of our
+jungle. I really do not know why I stay here now, unless it is because I
+have become so much accustomed to this life."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I understood that there was much money in rubber!"</p>
+
+<p>"You speak truth&mdash;there was. Now there is not. The world moves and times
+change. Years ago foreigners came into Brazil, helped themselves to the
+seed of our wild trees, and planted it in Ceylon and the Malay region.
+That seed now bears such fruit that the world is flooded with rubber.
+Ten years ago, senhores, a ton sold for six thousand five hundred
+dollars. Now, in this year nineteen-twenty, the price is only
+one-thirteenth of what it was in those days. It scarcely pays for the
+gathering. I hope you have not come expecting to make fortunes in
+rubber."</p>
+
+<p>"No. We are here to find a race of men known as Red Bones."</p>
+
+<p>The coronel's brows lifted. They kept on lifting, and he opened his lips
+twice without speaking. After a long stare at Knowlton he looked at
+McKay, at Tim, and finally at Jos&eacute;. A frown grew on his face. And the
+Americans, following his look at the Peruvian, were surprised to see
+that Jos&eacute; himself was staring blankly at the speaker.</p>
+
+<p>"Jos&eacute; Martinez!" snapped the coronel, leveling a finger pistollike at
+the <i>puntero</i>. "What devil's game are you working now?"</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; recovered himself and lifted his coffee cup.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not understand you, Nunes," he replied, languidly. "I am but the
+humble <i>puntero</i> of the crew engaged by these se&ntilde;ores. My only work has
+been to earn my pay. And you may ask <i>el capitan</i> whether I have earned
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, he has," corroborated McKay. "Killed two of his own crew in our
+defense."</p>
+
+<p>The coronel's jaw dropped. He blinked as if disbelieving his ears.</p>
+
+<p>"He&mdash;Jos&eacute;? Not possible!" he stuttered. "Jos&eacute;&mdash;this man&mdash;defended you
+against his companions?"</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly."</p>
+
+<p>The Brazilian slowly shook his head. Then suddenly he nodded as if an
+illuminating thought had crossed his mind.</p>
+
+<p>"I see. Jos&eacute; is very well paid."</p>
+
+<p>"One dollar a day," was McKay's dry retort.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment 'Tonio re-entered with a larger tray than before, bearing
+more coffee, long cigars, and squat glasses in which glowed a golden
+liquid. Tim sat up with a grunt and helped himself with both hands. When
+the coronel's turn came he disregarded the drinks, but lit the cigar as
+if he needed it.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>De noite todos os gatos sao pardos</i>," he said. "At night all cats are
+gray. I am much in the dark, gentlemen. If you would be so good as to
+enlighten me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He paused, looking sidewise again at Jos&eacute; as if the <i>puntero</i> had
+suddenly grown wings or horns.</p>
+
+<p>"All right," nodded Knowlton, biting and lighting his cigar. "We are
+somewhat in the dark ourselves as to why Jos&eacute; has been so zealous, for
+he has been very taciturn since the recent fight at our camp. Perhaps
+Jos&eacute; also is a bit hazy about our expedition&mdash;he looked rather surprised
+just now. So here is the situation."</p>
+
+<p>Briefly then he outlined the object of the search, stating that the
+identity of the mysterious Raposa was a matter of some concern to
+certain persons in the United States and that the expedition had been
+formed with the view of settling the question. From the time of the
+landing at Remate de Males, however, he narrated events more fully,
+giving complete details of Schwandorf's activities, Francisco's offense,
+and the final attack by the crew. While he talked the coronel's frown
+deepened. Also, Jos&eacute; gradually assumed the expression of a thundercloud.
+And when the tale was done the <i>puntero</i> exploded.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Sangre de Cristo!</i>" he yelled. "<i>El Aleman</i>&mdash;the German&mdash;he told you
+we would go among the cannibals? We? Peruvians? <i>Madre de Dios!</i> If ever
+I get within knife length of him! Nunes, you see, do you not?"</p>
+
+<p>The coronel nodded grimly.</p>
+
+<p>"I see that he planned to have all of you destroyed. Senhor Knowlton,
+that black-bearded and black-hearted man suggested that you take
+Mayoruna women? He told you they were shapely of body and tried to put
+into your minds the thought of making them your paramours? The snake!</p>
+
+<p>"He did not tell you, then, that the Mayoruna men allow no trifling with
+their women; that any alien man attempting to embrace one of them would
+be killed. But it is true. If you should succeed in establishing
+friendly relations with the men&mdash;which is not at all likely&mdash;you would
+forfeit all friendship, and your lives as well, by the slightest
+dalliance with any of the women.</p>
+
+<p>"He told you that more than one man has risked his life to win a
+Mayoruna woman? That is true. But he gave you a false impression as to
+the way in which the risk was incurred. He did not tell you that
+Peruvian <i>caucheros</i> have sometimes raided small isolated <i>melocas</i> of
+the Mayorunas, shooting down the men and carrying off the girls to be
+victims of their bestial lust. He did not tell you that for this reason
+any Peruvian is considered their enemy and is killed without mercy
+wherever found. Yet he tried to send you with Peruvian guides into their
+country. He knew the Peruvians would be killed on sight&mdash;and you with
+them."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+<h3>FIDDLERS THREE</h3>
+
+
+<p>Black looks passed among the men as the duplicity of Schwandorf lay
+plain before their eyes. Tim growled. Jos&eacute; hissed curses. The coronel
+whirled to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Jos&eacute;! What was his object in trying to destroy you and your crew? You
+have been his man. You know much about him. He wanted to stop your
+mouth, yes? Dead men tell no tales."</p>
+
+<p>The <i>puntero's</i> eyes glittered. For a moment the others thought he was
+about to reveal important secrets. Then his face changed.</p>
+
+<p>"I know no reason why we should be killed," he declared.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not believe you," the coronel declared, bluntly.</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; shrugged, calmly drank the coronel's wine, lighted the coronel's
+cigar, leaned back in the coronel's chair, and eyed the coronel with
+imperturbable insolence.</p>
+
+<p>"See here, Jos&eacute;," demanded McKay, "you've had something up your sleeve
+all along. Now come clean! What is it?"</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; puffed airily at the cigar, saying nothing.</p>
+
+<p>"What orders did Schwandorf give you?"</p>
+
+<p>This time the reply came readily enough.</p>
+
+<p>"To take you twenty-four days up the river and put you ashore. To
+prevent any trouble before that time."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! And after that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing. At least, nothing to me. What may have been said to the other
+men I do not know. Schwandorf came to me last, after he had picked all
+the others."</p>
+
+<p>"And what do you know about Schwandorf?"</p>
+
+<p>"What is between me and Schwandorf will be settled between me and
+Schwandorf. My duty to you se&ntilde;ores lies only in handling the crew. Now
+that there is no crew my duty ends. Also, Capitan, I would like my pay
+now."</p>
+
+<p>"You quit?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why not? I have done my best. I can do no more. I am crippled. I am of
+no further use to you. Give me my pay, a little food, a small canoe, and
+I go."</p>
+
+<p>"It is possible, Senhor Jos&eacute;," spoke the coronel, with ironic
+politeness, "that you may not go so soon. You have killed two men
+recently. You refuse to reveal some things which should be known about
+the German. Perhaps the law&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; burst into a jeering laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Law? You speak of law? There is no law up the river but the law of the
+gun and the knife. And if there were, se&ntilde;or, what then? I killed in a
+fair fight. I killed men who would do murder. I killed on the west bank
+of the river&mdash;Peru. Neither you nor any other Brazilian can lay hand on
+me. And though I now have only one good arm, it will not be well for
+anyone to try to hold me. My knife and my right hand still are ready."</p>
+
+<p>"By cripes! the lad's right!" Tim blurted, impulsively. "And I'll tell
+the world I'm for him. He's got a right to keep his mouth shut if he
+wants to. He don't owe us nothin'. Mebbe he's got somethin' up his
+sleeve, at that; but he stuck with us in the pinch, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And we'll give him a square deal, of course," Knowlton cut in. "Jos&eacute;,
+your own wages to this point, at a dollar a day, are eighteen dollars.
+The wages of the five other men to the place where they&mdash;quit&mdash;would
+aggregate seventy-five dollars. Grand total, ninety-three. The others
+chose to take their pay in lead instead of gold, so their account is
+closed. Therefore I suggest that their pay go to you as <i>puntero</i>,
+<i>popero</i>, and good sport. What say, Rod?"</p>
+
+<p>"Make it a hundred flat," McKay agreed.</p>
+
+<p>"Right. A hundred in gold. Satisfy you, Jos&eacute;?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed yes, se&ntilde;or. I did not expect such generosity."</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right, then. We'll fix you up before we move on, and&mdash;Say!
+Are you in Schwandorf's pay, too?"</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; hesitated. Then he replied:</p>
+
+<p>"Since you mention it, I will admit that <i>el Aleman</i> offered me certain
+inducements to make this journey. I now see that he had no intention of
+meeting his promises. But you can leave it to me to collect from him
+whatever may be due."</p>
+
+<p>Even the coronel nodded at this. The gleam in the Peruvian's eyes
+presaged unpleasantness for Schwandorf.</p>
+
+<p>"You gentlemen, of course, will not attempt to continue your journey for
+the present," the coronel suggested. "You are fatigued and I shall
+greatly appreciate the pleasure of your companionship. New arrangements
+also will be necessary in the matter of a boat and men."</p>
+
+<p>"We've been wondering about getting another boat and a new crew,"
+Knowlton said, frankly. "The canoe we have is too big for three men to
+handle, and I'll admit we're tired. Jos&eacute;, too, is in no shape to travel
+yet&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Jos&eacute;, of course, is my guest also," the old gentleman interrupted. "The
+question of new men can be solved. But there is time for everything, and
+now is the time for all of you to rest. As our proverb has it, '<i>Devagar
+se vae ao longe</i>'&mdash;he goes far who goes slowly."</p>
+
+<p>McKay arose, glass in hand.</p>
+
+<p>"To our host," he bowed. The toast was drunk standing. Whereafter the
+host tapped the bell twice and 'Tonio reappeared with a tray of fresh
+glasses. A toast to the United States by the coronel followed, and as
+soon as the black man arrived with a third round the Republic of Brazil
+was pledged. Then the coronel directed the servant:</p>
+
+<p>"'Tonio, if Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o are outside, ask them to move the
+belongings of the gentlemen from the canoe. And make ready rooms for the
+guests."</p>
+
+<p>'Tonio disappeared down the ladder. The coronel raised the violin,
+tendered it to the others, accepted their pleas to play it himself, and
+for the next half hour acquitted himself with no mean ability. Snatches
+of long-forgotten operas and improvisations of his own flowed from the
+strings in smooth harmony, hinting at bygone years amid far different
+surroundings for which his soul now hungered and to which he would
+return. Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o, transporting the equipment, passed in and
+out soft-footed and almost unnoticed. At length the player, with a
+deprecatory smile and a half apology for "boring his guests," extended
+the instrument again toward the visitors. And McKay, silent McKay, took
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Sweet and low, out welled the haunting melody of "Annie Laurie." Tim,
+who had listened with casual interest to the coronel's music, now
+grinned happily. And when the plaintive Scotch song became "Kathleen
+Mavourneen" he closed his eyes and lay back in pure enjoyment. "The
+River Shannon" flowed into "The Suwanee River," and this in turn blended
+into other heart-tugging airs of Dixieland. When the last strain died
+and the captain reached for his half-smoked cigar the room was silent
+for minutes.</p>
+
+<p>Then, to the astonishment of all, Jos&eacute; spoke:</p>
+
+<p>"Se&ntilde;ores, there was a time when I, too, could draw music from the
+violin. If I may&mdash;" His eyes rested longingly on the instrument.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Certamente</i>, if you can use the arm," the coronel acquiesced. With a
+little difficulty Jos&eacute; drew his arm from the sling, balanced his left
+elbow on the chair arm, and poised the violin. A half smile showed in
+the eyes of the coronel as he glanced at his guests. He, and they as
+well, expected a discordant, uncouth attempt to scrape out some obscene
+ditty of the frontier.</p>
+
+<p>But as Jos&eacute;, after jockeying a bit, began drifting the bow across the
+strings, the suppressed smiles faded and eyes opened. Here was a man
+who, as he said, once could play. And he wasted no time on airs composed
+by others and known to half the world. Under his touch the mellow wood
+began to talk, and in the minds of the listeners grew pictures.</p>
+
+<p>City streets, blank-walled houses, patios, the rattle of the hoofs of
+burros over cobbles, the shuffle of human feet, the toll of bells from a
+convent tower. Gay little bits of music, laughter, flashing eyes, a
+voluptuous love song repeated over and over. A sudden wild outbreak,
+fighting men, shots, the clash of steel&mdash;again a tolling bell and a
+requiem for the dead. A horse galloping in the night. Mountain winds
+crooning mournfully, rising to the scream of tempest and the crash of
+thunder. Dreary uplands, the hiss of rain, the sough of drifting snow,
+the patient plod of a mule along a perilous trail. And then the jungle:
+its discordant uproar, its hammering of frogs, its hoots and howls, the
+dismal swash of flood waters. A monotonous ebb and flow of life,
+punctuated by sudden flares of fight. Then a long, mournful wail&mdash;and
+silence.</p>
+
+<p>His bow still on the strings, Jos&eacute; sat for a minute like a stone image,
+his eyes straight ahead, his pale face drawn, his red kerchief glowing
+dully in the semishadow like a cap of blood. For once his face was empty
+of all insolence, changed by a pathetic wistfulness that made it tragic.
+Then, wordless, he lowered the violin, held it out to the coronel,
+fumbled absently at his sling, and slowly incased his wounded arm. When
+he looked up his old mocking expression had come back and he once more
+looked the reckless buccaneer.</p>
+
+<p>For a time no one spoke. Each felt that he had glimpsed something of
+this man's past; felt, too, that he who now was a bloody-handed borderer
+had once been a <i>caballero</i>, moving in a much higher circle. Certainly
+he could not play like this unless he had been of the upper class in his
+youth. The coronel's face was thoughtful as he took back the violin.
+When at length he began to talk, however, it was on a topic as remote as
+possible from music and present personalities&mdash;the reconstruction of
+Europe as the result of the World War.</p>
+
+<p>With this and kindred subjects, aided by the attentive ministrations of
+'Tonio, the afternoon passed swiftly. Dinner proved a feast, the <i>pi&egrave;ce
+de r&eacute;sistance</i> being tender, well-cooked meat which the Americans took
+for roast beef, but which really was roast tapir. More cigars, coupled
+with the fatigue of the past two days of paddling, eventually caused the
+visitors to seek their rooms, where McKay and Knowlton paired off and
+Tim took Jos&eacute; as his "bunkie."</p>
+
+<p>When Tim awoke the next morning he found himself deserted.</p>
+
+<p>To Knowlton, who drew from the small gold-chest the hundred dollars
+allotted to Jos&eacute; and handed it to him before redressing his wound, the
+<i>puntero</i> quietly revealed his intention to go before sunrise.</p>
+
+<p>"Say nothing, se&ntilde;or," he requested. "You need know nothing of it, if you
+like. I am here to-night&mdash;I am gone to-morrow&mdash;that is all. I am of no
+further use to you, I am unwelcome in this house of Nunes, and I go. Oh,
+have no fear for me! I have my gun, my knife, and my good right arm, and
+I can take care of myself very well. No doubt the coronel will be
+astonished to find that on leaving to-night I have neither cut anyone's
+throat nor stolen anything&mdash;ha! I have a black name on this river, and
+it is well earned, perhaps. Yet few men are as bad as those who dislike
+them think they are. I may borrow a small canoe, but any Indian would do
+the same. An unoccupied canoe is any man's property.</p>
+
+<p>"Before our ways part, se&ntilde;or, let me say that as Jos&eacute; Martinez never
+forgets his enemies, so he never forgets friends. Where some men would
+have turned me loose like a sick dog with my eighteen dollars, you and
+Se&ntilde;or McKay give me a hundred. And far more than that, you saved my life
+at a time when many men would have said, 'Bah! let the bloody one die!
+He is nothing but scum of the border and leader of that murdering crew.'
+You had only to let me lie a few minutes longer and you would be rid of
+me. No, Jos&eacute; does not forget.</p>
+
+<p>"That is all, except&mdash;if you will, in parting, take the hand of a man
+known as a killer and other things&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton gripped that hand with swift heartiness. He would have
+protested against such a departure, but the other's steady gaze
+betokened inflexible purpose. So he merely said:</p>
+
+<p>"Then good luck, old chap! And if you meet Schwandorf give him our
+affectionate regards."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si</i>, se&ntilde;or," was the sardonic answer. "I will do that thing. And here
+is something that may be of interest to you. I happen to know that
+before we left Remate de Males a swift one-man canoe left Nazareth, and
+that the man in it was an Indian who is in the German's control. It went
+upstream while we were loading your supplies, and it has not returned.
+By this time it must be many hours above this place. I do not know what
+message that Indian carries, nor where he goes. But he is a short man,
+and his left leg is crooked. If you meet such a one make him talk.
+Good-by, se&ntilde;or."</p>
+
+<p>Just how and when the <i>puntero</i> cat-footed his way out that night none
+ever knew but himself. But before the next dawn he had vanished from the
+Brazilian shore.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+
+<h3>BY THE LIGHT OF STORM</h3>
+
+
+<p>"One thing I can't understand," Knowlton said, toying with his coffee
+cup the next morning, "is why Schwandorf should double-cross us. We
+never did anything to him. Another thing I don't quite get is how he
+expected to have the Peruvians wiped out when he knew blamed well they
+were aware of the enmity of the cannibals. They'd hardly be likely to go
+into the bush with us under those circumstances."</p>
+
+<p>"My guess is this," McKay replied. "He set a trap. He is on a friendly
+footing with some of the savages above here, no doubt. He dispatched
+that Indian messenger to stir them up with some false tale and bring
+them to some place where they'd be pretty sure to get us. He primed the
+crew to jump us at the same place, perhaps. Then the crew would kill us
+or we'd kill them, and whichever side won would be smeared by the
+Indians. Sort of a trap within a trap. Why he did it doesn't matter
+much. He double-crossed us, he double-crossed the crew, he
+double-crossed Jos&eacute;. First thing he knows he'll find he's double-crossed
+himself."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah," Tim grunted. "He better beat it before we git back!"</p>
+
+<p>"He wanted no killing before we reached the cannibal country," McKay
+went on, "because then it would all be blamed on the savages and he
+could show clean hands. Francisco's vengefulness tipped over his cart."</p>
+
+<p>"Still, he might have known we'd stop here for a call on the coronel,
+and that there was a big chance for us to be warned here about the feud
+between Mayorunas and Peruvians."</p>
+
+<p>"That probably was provided for. Crew doubtless had orders to prevent
+any such visit, by lying to us or in other ways. We probably would have
+gone surging past here at top speed."</p>
+
+<p>"Wal, it don't git us nothin' to talk about things that 'ain't
+happened," interposed the practical Tim. "Question is, where do we go
+from here? And how?"</p>
+
+<p>All eyes went to the coronel, who sat languidly smoking his morning
+cigar.</p>
+
+<p>"Coronel, we are in your hands," McKay said, bluntly. "Your men, I
+presume, are all out at work in various parts of the bush. We want a
+crew and, if possible, guides. Can you help us?"</p>
+
+<p>The coronel flicked off an ash and spoke slowly:</p>
+
+<p>"I have two men, senhores, who have no peers as bushmen. They are the
+two whom you saw yesterday. Frankly, they are most valuable to me, and I
+hesitate about sending them on so dangerous a mission as yours. Yet they
+might succeed where most men would fail, for they have repeatedly gone
+into the bush on risky journeys and returned unharmed. Their adventures
+would fill books.</p>
+
+<p>"The older of these two, Louren&ccedil;o Moraes, has been more than once among
+the cannibals of this region, and so he knows something of them.
+Naturally he did not live long among them; he left them as soon as he
+could. But he has the faculty of extricating himself from hopeless
+positions&mdash;or perhaps it would be better to say that his cool head and
+good fortune together have preserved him thus far. '<i>Tanta vez vae o
+cantaro a fonte ate gue um dia la fica</i>'&mdash;the pitcher may go often to
+the spring, but some day it remains there.</p>
+
+<p>"Pedro Andrada, the younger, is not so steady and cool-headed as
+Louren&ccedil;o. Yet he is a most capable man, and the two together&mdash;they are
+always together&mdash;make a very efficient team."</p>
+
+<p>"I bet they do," Tim concurred, heartily. "I like that Pedro lad fine."</p>
+
+<p>"So do I," the coronel smiled. "Now, gentlemen, I will not order these
+men to go with you. If they go it must be of their own choice. They have
+only recently returned from a hazardous mission and they are entitled to
+rest. Yet I have little doubt that they will jump at the chance to risk
+their lives in a new venture. If they choose to go, I suggest that you
+place yourselves entirely in their hands and give them free rein. You
+would look far for better men."</p>
+
+<p>"And we're lucky to get them," Knowlton acquiesced. "To them and to you
+we shall be greatly indebted."</p>
+
+<p>"Not to me, senhor," the coronel demurred "I do nothing but bring you
+men together. Theirs is the risk. 'Tonio! Find Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o. Shall
+we go into the office, gentlemen?"</p>
+
+<p>Chairs scraped back and an exodus from the dining room ensued. Outside,
+the lusty voice of the negro bawled. Soon he was back, and at his heels
+strode the lithe Pedro and the quiet Louren&ccedil;o. They ran their eyes over
+the group, then stood looking inquiringly at their employer.</p>
+
+<p>"Be seated, men. Roll cigarettes if you like," said the coronel. Coolly
+they did both. Pedro, catching Tim's friendly grin, flashed a quick
+smile in return. Louren&ccedil;o, unsmiling, looked squarely into each man's
+face in turn and seemed satisfied with what he saw. Both then glanced
+around as if missing some one.</p>
+
+<p>"Your friend Jos&eacute; has left us," the coronel informed them, dryly,
+interpreting the look. "He disappeared in the night."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! That is why one of our canoes is gone," said Pedro. "We are ready
+to start."</p>
+
+<p>"You mistake," the old gentleman laughed. "We do not want him back.
+Nothing else is missing."</p>
+
+<p>Whereat Pedro looked slightly surprised. Louren&ccedil;o's lips curved in a
+faint grin. Neither made any further comment.</p>
+
+<p>The coronel plunged at once into the business for which they had been
+summoned. Succinctly he stated the purpose of the North Americans in
+coming here, pointed out their need of guides&mdash;and stopped there. He
+said nothing of the dangers ahead, mentioned no reward, did not even ask
+the men whether they would go. He merely lit a fresh cigar and leaned
+back in his chair.</p>
+
+<p>A silence followed. Again Louren&ccedil;o looked searchingly into the face of
+each American. Pedro contemplated the opposite wall, taking occasional
+puffs from his cigarette. At length Knowlton suggested, tentatively:</p>
+
+<p>"We will pay well&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Both the bushmen frowned. The coronel spoke in a tone of mild reproof:</p>
+
+<p>"Senhor, it is not a matter of pay. These men can make plenty of money
+as <i>seringueiros</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon," said Knowlton, and thereafter held his tongue.</p>
+
+<p>Deliberately Louren&ccedil;o finished his smoke, pinched the coal between a
+hard thumb and forefinger, and spoke for the first time.</p>
+
+<p>"May I ask, senhor, if you are the commander?" His gaze rested on McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"I am."</p>
+
+<p>"And do I understand that we shall at all times be subject to your
+orders?"</p>
+
+<p>"In case any orders are necessary&mdash;yes. But I assume that you will not
+need commands."</p>
+
+<p>A quiet smile showed in the bushman's eyes. He glanced at Pedro. The
+latter met the look from the corner of his eye, without wink, nod, or
+other sign. But when Louren&ccedil;o turned again to McKay he spoke as if all
+were arranged.</p>
+
+<p>"When do we start, Capitao?"</p>
+
+<p>Tim slapped his leg and cackled.</p>
+
+<p>"By cripes! there ain't no lost motion with these guys. Hey, Cap?"</p>
+
+<p>McKay smiled approvingly.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall get on together" he said. "Louren&ccedil;o and Pedro, this is not a
+one-man party. We are three comrades, who now become five. If at any
+time one man needs to command, I, as senior officer, will take that
+command. Otherwise we are all on an equal footing."</p>
+
+<p>"Just so," Louren&ccedil;o agreed. "If it were otherwise you would still be
+three men&mdash;not five. Since that is plain, let me say frankly that your
+big canoe had best stay here, also everything you do not need in the
+bush. Two light canoes are faster, easier to handle and to hide. Pedro
+and I have our own canoe and will provide our own supplies. We will pick
+out a three-man boat for you and load it with what you select from your
+equipment. After that every man swings his own paddle."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Cada qual por si e Deus por todos.</i> Each for himself and God for us
+all," Pedro summarized.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the dope," applauded Tim. "Now say, Renzo, old feller, what d'ye
+know about these here, now, Red Bones up above here? And have ye got
+anything on that Raposy guy?"</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"I know little of the Red Bone people, for I have never met them. That
+is one reason why I now should like to meet them. I have heard of them,
+yes; and the things I have heard are not pleasant. Yet it may be that
+the tales are worse than the people. I have also heard terrible stories
+of the light-skinned cannibals, the Mayorunas; yet I have been among the
+cannibals and found them not so bad&mdash;though it is true that they eat the
+flesh of their enemies; I have seen it done. But it makes a very great
+difference how they are approached and who the men are who approach
+them. It is possible that we may go unharmed among even <i>los Ossos
+Vermelhos</i>&mdash;the Red Bones. We shall see.</p>
+
+<p>"Of the Raposa I think I do know something. I have seen him."</p>
+
+<p>Everyone except Pedro sat up with a start.</p>
+
+<p>"You have seen him?" exclaimed the coronel. "When? Where? How? Why have
+you not spoken of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because, Coronel, I forgot it until now. It meant nothing to us&mdash;yes,
+Pedro was with me&mdash;except that it was one more queer thing in the bush.
+In time I might have remembered it and told you. But you know we have
+been busy."</p>
+
+<p>"True. But go on."</p>
+
+<p>"It was only a little time ago. We were returning from the scouting trip
+on which you sent us to locate new rubber trees. We were
+seven&mdash;eight&mdash;seven&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Eight days' journey from here," prompted Pedro.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i> We were in our canoe when a sudden storm broke and we got
+ashore to wait until it was over. The place was on an <i>ygarap&eacute;</i>&mdash;a
+creek&mdash;about two days away from the river. The trees were large and the
+ground free from bush. In a flash of lightning we saw a man peering out
+at us from a hollow tree.</p>
+
+<p>"He was naked and streaked with paint&mdash;that was all we saw in the
+flashes that came and went. The rain was heavy, and we stayed where we
+were until it ended. Then we ordered that man to come out.</p>
+
+<p>"He came, and he held bow and arrow ready to shoot. We, too, were ready
+to shoot, but we held back our bullets and he held back his arrow. We
+saw that his paint was red and that it traced his bones; that his skin
+was that of a tanned white man and his hair was dark with a white streak
+over one ear. No, we did not notice the color of his eyes&mdash;the light was
+not good and he stood well away from us.</p>
+
+<p>"We looked around for other men, but saw none. We asked him who he was
+and what he wanted, but he gave no answer. He looked at us for a long
+time, and we at him. Then he began walking away sidewise, watching us
+steadily, holding his arrow always ready. Finally he disappeared among
+the trees and we saw him no more. But we heard him, senhores; twice
+before we lost sight of him he spoke out in a queer voice like that of a
+parrot. And the thing he said was, 'Poor Davey!'"</p>
+
+<p>McKay thumped a fist on his chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Davey! David Rand!"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps so, Capitao. I do not know. But he spoke English."</p>
+
+<p>"By thunder! David Rand! Merry, where's that picture?"</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton was already unbuttoning his pocket flap. Quickly he produced
+the photograph.</p>
+
+<p>"That the fellow?"</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o studied the face. The eagerly anticipated affirmative did not
+come.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot say surely. This is a full-faced, clean-shaven man with hair
+close trimmed. That one's face was gaunt, covered partly with beard and
+partly by long hair, and we were not close to him, as I have said. I
+would not say the two were the same until I could have a better look at
+the wild man."</p>
+
+<p>"You didn't follow him?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. Why should we? He had done nothing to us and we let him go his way.
+We did look at his hollow tree, though. But it was only an empty tree,
+not his home; a place where he had stepped in out of the storm. We had
+other things to do, so we got into our canoe again and paddled off."</p>
+
+<p>"You can find the place again?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. But I much doubt if we shall find him there."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind. We've something to start with now, and that's worth a lot.
+Get busy with your boats and supplies, boys, right away. Tim and Merry,
+let's dig out our essentials and start. We're on a hot trail at last.
+Let's go!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+
+<h3>OUT OF THE AIR</h3>
+
+
+<p>Again the sun fought the mists of a new day, casting a pallid, watery
+light on the livid green roof of the limitless jungle. High up under
+that roof, more than a hundred feet above the ground, the morning alarm
+clock went off with a scream, the sudden chorus of monkeys and macaws
+awaking after a few hours of silence. Down on the eastern shore of the
+river, in a little natural port where the shadows still lay thick, men
+stirred under their black mosquito nets, yawned, and waited for more
+light before starting another day's journey.</p>
+
+<p>To three of the five men housed under those flimsy coverings the somber
+hue of their nets was new. On leaving Remate de Males the insect bars
+had been clean white; and though they had grown somewhat soiled from
+daily handling, they never had approached the drab dinginess of the
+barriers draping the hammocks of the Peruvian rivermen. In fact, their
+owners had been at some pains to keep them as clean as possible, folding
+them each morning with military precision and stowing them carefully.
+Wherefore they were somewhat taken aback when informed that nice white
+nets were decidedly not the thing in this part of the world.</p>
+
+<p>"Up to this place, senhores, they have done no harm," Pedro said, before
+leaving the coronel's grounds. "But from here on they will not do at
+all. The weakest moonlight&mdash;yes, even starlight&mdash;would make them stand
+out in the darkness like tombstones. A few days more and we shall be in
+the cannibal country. And it is an old trick of those eaters of men to
+skulk along the shore by night, watching a camp until all are asleep,
+and then sneak up with spears ready. A rush and a swift stab of the
+spears into those white nets, and you are dead or dying from the
+poisoned points. I would no more sleep under a white net than I would
+lie in my hammock and blow a horn to show where I was. Your light nets
+must stay here. We will find dark ones for you."</p>
+
+<p>Thus the voyagers learned another of those little things on which
+sometimes hinges life or death. Even McKay, with his experience of other
+jungles, had never thought it necessary to drape himself in invisibility
+at night. But when his attention was called to it he recognized its
+value at once, and the white nets were forthwith abandoned.</p>
+
+<p>Now, on the first morning out from the Nunes place, the three Americans
+stretched themselves in lazy enjoyment after a night passed without a
+sentinel. The stretching evoked sundry grunts due to the discovery that
+their muscles still were lame. The long steamer journey from their own
+land, followed by the daily confinement of the Peruvian canoe, had
+afforded scant opportunity for keeping themselves fit, and the sudden
+necessity for doing their own paddling had found every man soft. But
+they now were hardening fast, and the steady swing of the paddles was
+proving a physical joy. These were men ill accustomed to sitting in
+enforced idleness for weeks on end.</p>
+
+<p>Matches flared under the nets and cigarette smoke drifted into the air,
+rousing to fresh activity the mosquitoes humming hungrily outside.
+Gradually the shadows paled and the weak light reflecting from the
+fog-shrouded water beyond grew into day. The nets lifted and the
+bloodthirsty insects swooped in vicious triumph on the emerging men. But
+again matches blazed, flame licked up among kindlings, a fire grew, and
+in its smoke screen the voyagers found some surcease from the bug
+hordes. Soon the fragrance of coffee floated into the air.</p>
+
+<p>Tim yawned, coughed explosively, and swore.</p>
+
+<p>"Fellers can't even take a gape for himself without gittin' these cussed
+bugs down his throat," he complained, and coughed again. "Gimme some
+coffee! I got one skeeter the size of a devil's darnin' needle stuck in
+me windpipe."</p>
+
+<p>"A devil's darning needle? What is that, Senhor Tim?" inquired Pedro,
+passing him a cup of hot coffee. When the liquid&mdash;and the "skeeter"&mdash;had
+passed into Tim's stomach he enlightened the inquirer.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye dunno what's a devil's darnin' needle? Gosh! I'm s'prised at ye. I
+seen lots of 'em right on this here river. He's a bug about so long"&mdash;he
+stuck out a finger&mdash;"and he's got jaws like a crab and a long limber
+tail a with reg'lar needle in the end, and inside him is a roll o' tough
+silk&mdash;tough as spider web. And he's death on liars. Any time a feller
+tells a lie he's got to look out, or all to oncet one o' them bugs'll
+come scootin' at him and grab him by the nose with them jaws. Then he'll
+curl up his tail&mdash;the bug, I mean&mdash;and run his needle and thread right
+through the feller's lips and sew his mouth up tight. Then he flies off
+lookin' for another liar."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Por Deus!</i> And the liar starves to death?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wal, no. O' course he can git somebody to cut the stitches. But the
+needle is a good thick one and it leaves a row o' holes all along the
+feller's lips. Any time ye see a guy with li'l' round scars around his
+mouth, Pedro, ye'll know he's such an awful liar the devil bug got him."</p>
+
+<p>McKay coughed. Knowlton blew his nose into a big handkerchief. Louren&ccedil;o
+squinted sidewise at Tim, who was solemn as an owl. Pedro, his eyes
+twinkling, bent forward and scrutinized Tim's mouth.</p>
+
+<p>"You have been fortunate, senhor," he said, simply&mdash;and stepped around
+to the other side of the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"Huh? Say, lookit here, ye long-legged gorilla&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton exploded. McKay and Louren&ccedil;o snickered.</p>
+
+<p>"It's on you, Tim!" vociferated Knowlton. "You dug the hole yourself.
+Now crawl in and pull it in after you."</p>
+
+<p>Tim snorted wrathfully, but his eyes laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, what's the use o' trying to educate you guys?"</p>
+
+<p>"You swallowed a mosquito just now, but I cannot swallow that devil
+bug," Pedro grinned.</p>
+
+<p>Tim rumbled something, solaced himself with a cigarette, then squatted
+and joined the others in their frugal breakfast of coffee and
+<i>chibeh</i>&mdash;a handful of farinha mixed with water in a gourd. When it was
+finished McKay, who never smoked in the morning until he had eaten,
+filled a pipe and suggested:</p>
+
+<p>"Guess we'd better plan our campaign. We didn't take time yesterday. In
+case we find no trace of the Raposa at the place where you fellows saw
+him, what's your idea?"</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o, puffing thoughtfully, stared into the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"There will be time enough to decide that, Capitao, after we have
+visited that place," he said, slowly. "Still, perhaps it is best to make
+some plan; it can be changed at any time."</p>
+
+<p>For a moment longer he looked at the dying flame. Then, dropping his
+cigarette stub into it, he continued:</p>
+
+<p>"If I were going alone to find a man among the Red Bones, I should go
+first to the Mayorunas and work through them to make sure of a friendly
+reception by the other people. I would&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, that's the very thing Schwandorf suggested!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes? I have not heard what he said. Tell me."</p>
+
+<p>McKay did so. Louren&ccedil;o smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Sometimes, Capitao, the devil puts into the hands of men a weapon which
+is turned against himself. So it is now. That <i>Allemao</i>, Schwandorf,
+never expected you to reach the people you seek, but the plan is good.
+It would not be good if you followed it exactly as he laid it out, but
+things have changed; and what you could not do with Peruvian companions,
+or alone, you perhaps can do with us. I will show you.</p>
+
+<p>"It happens that I have been twice among the cannibals living in a
+certain <i>maloca</i> which I can find again. Perhaps you know that those
+people live in scattered <i>malocas</i>, each ruled by its own chief&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, we know about that."</p>
+
+<p>"Good. Now if we went to any <i>maloca</i> where we were not known we might
+be killed at once. But at that <i>maloca</i> of which I speak I am known to
+the chief and all his fighting men, for I once led them on a raid into
+Peru. So they will remember me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"What's that?" Knowlton interrupted, in amazement. "You led a cannibal
+tribe on the warpath?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just so, senhor. It is a long story, but these are the facts:</p>
+
+<p>"There was in Peru a gang of killers, robbers&mdash;and worse&mdash;who called
+themselves the Peccaries. They raided one of the coronel's camps where I
+was in charge, killed all my gang except myself and one other, and used
+us two as slaves and beasts of burden.</p>
+
+<p>"The other man died from poison. I lived only to revenge myself on those
+foul outlaws. There was much rubber of the coronel's, worth much money
+at that time, in the camp they had raided. So, after driving me like a
+beast to their stronghold in the hills of Peru, they came back with
+boats and Indian porters to get out that rubber.</p>
+
+<p>"On that return journey I tried to kill the leader, who was called El
+Amarillo&mdash;yellow-skinned. I failed, and he had me nailed with long
+thorns to a tree where I might hang in torment for days, dying slowly.
+See. Here are the marks."</p>
+
+<p>All three of the Americans had noticed on the previous day that each of
+Louren&ccedil;o's hands was disfigured by a scar which looked as if a spike had
+been driven through. Now he held those hands forward for their
+inspection. Then he pulled off his loose shirt and rolled up his
+trousers. They saw other scars in the big muscles before the armpits, in
+the soft flesh under the ribs, in the thighs and calves.</p>
+
+<p>"The dirty Hun!" Tim grated.</p>
+
+<p>"That was not all, Senhor Tim. They also put fire ants on me, which bit
+so cruelly that I nearly lost my mind from pain. Then they went on,
+intending to have more sport with me when they came back with the
+rubber. But after they left me two hunters of the cannibal tribe who had
+been following a tapir's track found me and took me down from the tree.</p>
+
+<p>"Now the Peccaries before this had stolen some women from a Mayoruna
+<i>maloca</i> and were treating them like dogs&mdash;I saw one of those women
+brutally murdered while I was captive in the outlaw camp. I managed to
+tell the two hunters I could lead them to the Peccary stronghold and
+give them revenge. They carried me to their <i>maloca</i>&mdash;I could not
+walk&mdash;and told their chief what I had said. The chief caused my hurts to
+be cured, and then I kept my promise.</p>
+
+<p>"I guided the savages to the outlaw camp; they surrounded it, and in the
+fight that followed every Peccary was killed except their leader. Now
+that cannibal chief has not forgotten me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Wait a minute," protested Knowlton. "Did that Peccary leader escape?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. He was kept alive until a big herd of peccaries was met. Then,
+because he called himself 'King of the Peccaries,' he was nailed to a
+tree, as I had been, and told to make the peccaries take out the thorns.
+The wild pigs tore him into ribbons with their tusks."</p>
+
+<p>Calmly he donned his shirt again. Tim, staring at him, twitched his
+shoulders as if a chill had gone down his back.</p>
+
+<p>"Ugh!" muttered Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"So now," Louren&ccedil;o resumed, "if I can find that chief again&mdash;he may have
+been killed in some tribal fight before now&mdash;he may be friendly to all
+of us. Or he may not. Savages cannot be relied on with much certainty.
+But if any of the Mayorunas will help us, he will. It is worth trying."</p>
+
+<p>"And if he is not friendly&mdash;" Knowlton paused.</p>
+
+<p>"We do not come back," Pedro finished. "Have you a better plan?"</p>
+
+<p>All shook their heads.</p>
+
+<p>"Laurenco's idea is excellent," said McKay. "I was thinking along the
+same line, though I did not know he had any such friendly relations with
+a chief. That makes it all the more advisable to try it, unless we find
+the Raposa first. We, of course, will not land at the place where
+Schwandorf told us to go ashore, seven days from here."</p>
+
+<p>"By no means," Louren&ccedil;o concurred. "In five days we leave the river and
+travel along the <i>ygarap&eacute;</i>. If we go to the <i>maloca</i> it will be from
+another direction than the river."</p>
+
+<p>He began preparing to travel. The others also went about the work of
+breaking camp. By the time the canoes were loaded the mists had lifted
+and the river lay open and empty before them. In the bush around and
+beyond, gloom still lay thick and the forest life yelped, howled,
+clattered, and wailed. But out on the water it was broad day, and far
+overhead sounded the harsh cries of unseen parrots flying two by two in
+the sunlight above the matted branches. The world of the pathless tropic
+wilderness, ever dying, ever living, was about its daily business. The
+five invaders were about theirs.</p>
+
+<p>As the paddlers dipped, however, Knowlton held back.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, Rod, we didn't tell these fellows about Schwandorf's Indian. Hold
+up a second, men."</p>
+
+<p>While all rested on their paddles he spoke of the mysterious messenger
+dispatched from Nazareth. Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o contemplated the river,
+then frowned.</p>
+
+<p>"That may be of importance, senhores," said Louren&ccedil;o. "It may change
+everything for us. We saw a lone Indian go past the coronel's place,
+traveling fast, three days before you came. I would give much to know
+where he is now and what word he carries. A short man with a bad left
+leg, you say. We shall keep watch for such a man. Perhaps we may meet
+him."</p>
+
+<p>Wherein he predicted more accurately than he knew.</p>
+
+<p>The canoes swung out and the paddlers settled into the steady stroke to
+which they were growing accustomed. Hour after hour they forged on, the
+Brazilians adjusting their speed to that of the Americans, who had not
+yet attained the muscular ease of habitual canoemen. The miles flowed
+slowly but surely behind them, the sun rolled higher and hotter, the
+silence of approaching noon crept over the jungle on either side. Then,
+as the time drew near when they would land for a more hearty meal than
+that of the morning, Pedro pointed ahead.</p>
+
+<p>Up out of the bush on the Peruvian shore rose a vulture. It flapped
+sullenly away as if disappointed. The bushmen, quick to note anything
+that might be a sign, paid no attention to the bird's flight, but marked
+with unerring eye the spot whence it had taken wing.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us cross, comrades, and see what we may see," Pedro called. "If
+nothing is there, we can eat."</p>
+
+<p>But something was there. All saw it before they landed&mdash;the stern of a
+small, speedy canoe almost concealed in a narrow rift at the bottom of
+the bank. In the soil of the rising slope were the prints of bare feet.
+And Pedro, scanning the tracks narrowly after he and the others reached
+shore, asserted, "These were not made to-day."</p>
+
+<p>Up the bank they climbed, silent and watchful. At the top Louren&ccedil;o took
+the lead. In under big trees the five passed in file. A short distance
+from the edge Louren&ccedil;o stopped, looking at the ground. The others spread
+out and stared at the thing he had found.</p>
+
+<p>Between the buttress roots of a tall tree was a crude shelter of palm
+leaves. Before this lay the scattered bones of a man. The skull had been
+crushed by a mighty blow.</p>
+
+<p>The bones were picked clean&mdash;had been stripped and torn asunder days
+before, and the vulture which had just left had gotten nothing for its
+belated visit. Among them were remnants of cloth, a belt and a machete,
+and strands of coarse black hair. A few feet away lay a cheap "trade"
+gun. Louren&ccedil;o inspected the weapon and laid it back.</p>
+
+<p>"Did he shoot before he was downed?" asked Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"No. The gun is loaded. His death came from above." The bushman ran his
+eye up the towering tree, then pointed to a large dark object on the
+ground near by.</p>
+
+<p>"Castanha&mdash;Brazil-nut tree," he explained. "That heavy nut fell and
+smashed the Indian's skull like an egg. Indian, yes. His gun, his
+shelter, and his hair show that. And"&mdash;stooping and pointing at one of
+the bones&mdash;"that bone shows who he was. See, Capitao."</p>
+
+<p>McKay looked down on a leg bone. At some time the leg had been broken
+and badly set, if set at all. The bone was crooked.</p>
+
+<p>"A short Indian with a crooked leg. Schwandorf's messenger!"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i> No man will ever receive the message he bore. He camped here days
+ago. Now he camps here forever."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE ARROW</h3>
+
+
+<p>Slowly, silently, two canoes glided along the still, dark water of a
+gloomy creek over-arched by the interlaced limbs of lofty trees.</p>
+
+<p>The first, propelled by the slow-dipping blades of two Brazilian
+bushmen, seemed to be seeking something; for it nosed along with
+frequent pauses of the paddles, during which it drifted almost to a stop
+while its crew searched the solemn jungle depths reaching away from the
+right-hand shore. The second, carrying three bronzed and bearded men of
+another continent, was only trailing the leader. It moved and paused
+like the first, but the recurrent scrutiny of the farther gloom by its
+paddlers was that of men who saw only a meaningless, monotonous bulk of
+buttresses and trunks and tangle of looping lianas. In this dimness and
+bewildering chaos the trio might as well have been blind. The eyes of
+the tiny fleet were in the first boat.</p>
+
+<p>The progress of the dugouts was almost stealthy. Not a paddle thumped or
+splashed, not a voice spoke. They moved with the alert caution born not
+of fear, but of wary readiness for any sudden event&mdash;like prowling
+jungle creatures which, themselves seeking quarry, must be ever on guard
+lest they become the hunted instead of the hunters.</p>
+
+<p>For the past two days they had moved thus. The last fresh meat had been
+shot miles down the river, where a well-placed bullet from the rifle of
+McKay had downed a fat swamp deer. Since that day not a gun had been
+fired. The rations now were tough jerked beef and monkey meat, slabs of
+salt pirarucu fish, and farinha, varied by tinned delicacies from the
+stores of the Americans. Henceforth gunfire was taboo unless it should
+become necessary in self-defense.</p>
+
+<p>At length the fore canoe halted with an abruptness that told of back
+strokes of the blades hidden under water. McKay, bowman of the trailing
+craft, also backed water, while his mates held their paddles rigid. The
+two boats drifted together.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the place," Louren&ccedil;o said, speaking low.</p>
+
+<p>The Americans, scanning the shore, saw nothing to differentiate the spot
+from the rest of the wilderness growth. Yet Louren&ccedil;o's tone was sure.
+Pedro's face also showed recognition of his surroundings. With no
+apparent motion of the paddles&mdash;though the wrists of the paddlers moved
+almost imperceptibly&mdash;the canoe of the bushmen floated to the bank. They
+picked up their rifles, twitched their bow up on land, and turned their
+faces to the forest.</p>
+
+<p>"Stay here," was Pedro's subdued command, "until you hear the bird-call
+which we taught you down the river."</p>
+
+<p>He and Louren&ccedil;o faded into the dimness and were gone.</p>
+
+<p>"Beats me how them guys find their way 'round," muttered Tim. "I could
+land here twenty times hand-runnin', but if I went away and then come
+back I'd never know the place."</p>
+
+<p>"It's all in the feel of it," was McKay's low-toned explanation. "They
+find places and travel the bush as an Indian does&mdash;by a sixth sense.
+Take them to New York City, guide them around, then turn them loose&mdash;and
+they'd be hopelessly lost in ten minutes."</p>
+
+<p>The others nodded agreement and sat watching. In the shadows no creature
+moved. Afar off some bird cried mournfully like a lost soul condemned to
+wander forever alone in the grim green solitudes. No other sound came to
+the listeners save the ever-present hum of the big forest mosquitoes, to
+which they now had become indifferent. For all they could see or hear of
+their two guides, they might as well have been alone. Yet they knew the
+Brazilians were not far away, threading the maze with sure step and
+scouting hawk-eyed for any sign of danger.</p>
+
+<p>At length a long soft whistle sounded in the bush ahead. Any Indian
+hunter hearing that sound would straightway have begun scanning the high
+branches, for the liquid call was that of the mutum, or curassow turkey.
+But the waiting trio knew it for Pedro's signal that all was clear. At
+once they slid their canoe to shore, lifted its bow to a firm grip on
+the clay, and, after plumbing the shadows, quietly advanced in squad
+column.</p>
+
+<p>A few steps, and they halted suddenly and whirled. A voice had spoken
+just behind them. There, squatting leisurely between the root buttresses
+of a huge tree, Louren&ccedil;o looked up at them in amusement. They had passed
+within rifle length of him without seeing him.</p>
+
+<p>"Of what use are your eyes, comrades?" he chaffed. "In the bush one
+should see in all directions at once. You were looking at that patch of
+sunlight just ahead, yes? But danger lurks in the shadows, not in the
+glaring light."</p>
+
+<p>Without awaiting an answer, he arose and took the lead. At the edge of
+the small sunlit space beyond he halted.</p>
+
+<p>"You were heading for the right place," he added then. "Look around. Do
+you see anything?"</p>
+
+<p>Swiftly they scrutinized the gap left by the fall of a great tree whose
+gigantic trunk had bludgeoned weaker trees away in its crushing descent.
+Seeing nothing unusual, they then peered around them. Tim suddenly
+snapped up his rifle.</p>
+
+<p>"Holler tree there&mdash;and a man in it! Hey! come out o' there!"</p>
+
+<p>"Your eyes improve," Louren&ccedil;o complimented. "But the man is Pedro."</p>
+
+<p>Tim lowered the gun as Pedro, grinning, came out of his concealment.</p>
+
+<p>"That is the tree of the Raposa," Louren&ccedil;o went on. "The lightning
+flashing in from above showed us the man. But now, senhores, I think we
+must tramp the bush for some time before we find that Raposa again.
+There is no trace of him here."</p>
+
+<p>"Hm!" said Knowlton. Striding to the hollow tree, he peered about inside
+it. The cavity was almost big enough to sling a hammock in, but it was
+empty of any indication of habitation, human or otherwise. A temporary
+refuge&mdash;that was all.</p>
+
+<p>"No sign anywhere around here, eh?" queried McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"We have found none. We shall look farther, but I have small hope. If
+you senhores will make the camp this time we shall start at once and
+stay out until dark. Build no fire until we return. And if you hear the
+call of the mutum, pay no attention to it; we may use it to locate each
+other if we separate, and also perhaps as a decoy. Any wild man, red or
+white, hearing that call would seek the bird making it, for a fine fat
+mutum is well worth killing. Keep quiet and be on guard."</p>
+
+<p>"Right. Go ahead."</p>
+
+<p>The bushmen turned at once and stole away. The others returned to the
+canoes, transported the necessary duffle to the base of the hollow tree,
+made camp with a few poles, and squatted against the trunk to smoke,
+watch, and wait. Several times they heard mutum calls receding in the
+distance. Then came silence.</p>
+
+<p>The sun-thrown shadows in the gap crawled steadily eastward. Knowlton
+tested the feed of his automatic, which, since its balkiness in the
+fight with the Peruvians, he had kept carefully oiled and free from the
+slightest speck of rust. Tim arose at intervals and paced up and down in
+sentry go, eyes and ears alert&mdash;a useless activity, but one which
+provided an outlet for his restless energy. McKay let his gaze rove over
+the small area visible from their post, studying the contours of the
+towering trunks, the prone giant whose fall had opened the hole in the
+leafy roof, the parasitical vines twined about other trees, the thin,
+outflung buttresses supporting the mighty columns&mdash;all familiar sights
+to him, but the only things to occupy his vision. So limned on his brain
+did the scene become that after a time he could close his eyes and see
+it in every important detail.</p>
+
+<p>It might have been two hours after Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o had departed&mdash;the
+shadows had grown much longer&mdash;when over McKay stole the feeling that he
+was being watched. He glanced at his companions and found that neither
+of them was looking at him. Knowlton, sitting with hands clasped around
+updrawn knees, was dozing. Tim, though wide awake, was staring absently
+at a fungus. The captain's eyes searched the short vistas all about,
+spying nothing new. Still the feeling persisted. Then all at once his
+roaming gaze stopped, became fixed on a point some forty feet away.</p>
+
+<p>There rose a rough-barked red-brown tree, and from it, near the ground,
+projected a blackish bole. McKay was very sure the protuberance had not
+been there before. He had stared steadily at that tree more than once,
+and its shape was quite clear in his mind. Was that bump an insensate
+wood growth now revealed for the first time by the changing sun slant,
+or&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>For minutes he watched it. It did not move. Then Tim, restless again,
+rose directly in McKay's line of sight, yawned silently, swung his gun
+to his shoulder, and began another slow parade of his self-appointed
+post. When he had stepped aside McKay looked again for the puzzling
+bole.</p>
+
+<p>It was gone.</p>
+
+<p>With a bound the captain was up and dashing toward the tree, drawing his
+pistol as he ran. But within three strides he went down. A tough vine,
+unnoticed on the ground, looped snakily around one ankle and threw him
+hard. His gun flew from his hand. As he fell a tiny whispering sound
+flitted past, followed by a small blow somewhere behind him. Ensued a
+gruff grunt from Tim and the swift clatter of a breech bolt.</p>
+
+<p>Raging, McKay kicked his foot loose and heaved himself up. Empty handed,
+he continued his rush for the tree. But when he reached it he found
+nothing behind it. If anything had been there it now was gone, and the
+vacant shadows beyond were as inscrutable as ever.</p>
+
+<p>Feet padded behind him and Tim and Knowlton halted on either side. A
+moment of silent searching, and Tim broke into reproach.</p>
+
+<p>"Cap, don't never do that again! If ye take a tumble in my line o' fire,
+for the love o' Mike stay down till I shoot! I come so near drillin' ye
+when ye hopped up that I'm sweatin' blood right now."</p>
+
+<p>In truth, the veteran was pale around the mouth and his broad face was
+beaded with cold drops.</p>
+
+<p>"I seen more 'n one time in France when I felt like shootin' my s'perior
+officer, but I never come so near doin' it as jest now. I had finger to
+trigger and had took up the slack, and a hair's weight more pull would
+have spattered yer head all around. And besides givin' me heart failure
+ye let that guy git away. We'll never find him&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You saw him?" McKay cut in.</p>
+
+<p>"I seen somethin' beyond ye&mdash;couldn't make out what 'twas, but from the
+way ye was goin' over the top I knowed it must be a man. And then when
+the arrer come&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Arrow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure. Missed ye when ye took that flop, and stuck in the tree over
+yonder. What'd ye rush the guy for, anyways? Whyn't ye drill him from
+where ye was?"</p>
+
+<p>In the reaction from his sudden fright Tim was as wrathfully ready to
+"bawl out" his captain as if he were some raw rookie. McKay, with a cool
+smile, explained his abrupt action, meanwhile reconnoitering the dimness
+for any further sign of the vanished assailant. None showed.</p>
+
+<p>While Tim stood vigilant guard the other two stooped and moved around
+the base of the tree, narrowly examining the ground. Beyond it they
+paused at one spot, fingered the soil lightly, and lit a match or two.</p>
+
+<p>"No ghost," said Knowlton. "Barefoot man. Didn't leave much trace, but
+enough to show he was here. Let's look at that arrow."</p>
+
+<p>Back to the hollow tree they went, retrieving McKay's pistol on the way.
+About a yard above the earth a long shaft projected from the bark.
+Knowlton reached for it, but McKay held him back and drew it out.</p>
+
+<p>"M-hm! Thought so!" he muttered. "Poisoned."</p>
+
+<p>"Oof! Nice, gentle sort of a cuss," rumbled Tim. "That smear on the
+point&mdash;is that poison?"</p>
+
+<p>"Poison. Quickest and deadliest kind of poison. Mixes instantly with
+blood. Paralysis&mdash;convulsions&mdash;death. The least scratch and you're gone.
+Wicked head on this thing, too: looks like a piece of serrated bone. See
+all those little barbs along the edges? War arrow, all right."</p>
+
+<p>"Meanin' that we'll be jumped pretty soon by more Injuns. If that guy's
+on the warpath he ain't alone."</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't be a bad idea to take cover," nodded McKay. Turning the
+five-foot shaft downward, he plunged its head into the soft ground and
+left it sticking there, harmless.</p>
+
+<p>"Tim, go down and guard the canoes. Merry, lie in between these roots
+and keep watch off that way. I'll go over to that tree where the spy
+hid."</p>
+
+<p>For another hour the camp was silent. Each in his covert, finger on
+trigger, the trio watched with ceaseless vigilance, expecting each
+instant to detect dusky forms crawling up from tree to tree. Yet nothing
+of the sort came. Nor did any hostile sound reach them. Somewhere
+parrots squawked, somewhere else the puppylike yapping of toucans
+disturbed the solitude; nothing else.</p>
+
+<p>The wan light faded. The sun crawled up the trees, leaving all the
+ground in shadow. Then, not far off, sounded the soft whistle of the
+mutum. Suspicious, the watchers held their places until, with another
+whistle, Pedro came into view, followed by Louren&ccedil;o.</p>
+
+<p>McKay arose, met them, and briefly explained the situation. They nodded,
+but seemed undisturbed.</p>
+
+<p>"We can start a fire now, Capitao," Louren&ccedil;o said. "Night comes and we
+are hungry. There will be no danger before another dawn."</p>
+
+<p>With which he leaned his rifle against a tree and started immediate
+preparations for a meal. Pedro continued on to the canoes, made sure
+they were drawn up high enough to remain in place in case of any sudden
+rain, and returned with Tim. Around them now resounded the swiftly
+rising roar of the nightly outbreak of animal life. The sun vanished. At
+once blackness whelmed all except the little fire.</p>
+
+<p>"See anything while you were out?" asked McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"We found no trace of the Raposa," Louren&ccedil;o evaded.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you plan to do now?"</p>
+
+<p>"Eat&mdash;smoke&mdash;talk&mdash;sleep."</p>
+
+<p>McKay eyed the bushman keenly, feeling that he was holding something
+back. But, feeling also that this pair knew what they were about, he
+bided his time. When all had eaten and tobacco smoke was blending with
+that of the burning wood, Louren&ccedil;o drew the arrow from the ground and
+studied it. Then he passed it to Pedro, who, after a critical
+examination, held it in the blaze until the deadly head was burned away.</p>
+
+<p>"A big-game arrow of the cannibal Mayorunas," said Louren&ccedil;o. "The point,
+with its sawtooth barbs, is made from the tail bone of the araya, the
+flat devilfish of the swamp lakes. That fish, as you perhaps know, has a
+whiplike tail armed with that bone; and if he strikes the bone into your
+flesh it breaks off and stays in the wound, and you are likely to die."</p>
+
+<p>"But in that case death comes from gangrene," McKay remarked. "This
+point has been dipped in wurali poison."</p>
+
+<p>"You have seen such arrows before, Capitao?"</p>
+
+<p>"Seen the poison before, yes. Over in British Guiana. The Macusi Indians
+make it from the wurali vine, some bitter root or other, a couple of
+bulbous plants, two kinds of ants&mdash;one big and black with a venomous
+bite, the other small and red&mdash;a lot of pepper, and the pounded fangs of
+labarri and couanacouchi snakes. They boil all this stuff down to a
+thick syrup, and that's the poison. The man who makes it is sick for
+days afterward."</p>
+
+<p>"Our cannibals make that poison in much the same way. Yet Guiana is many
+hundreds of miles from here, and our Indians know nothing of those
+Macusi people. Queer, is it not, that the same plan should be used by
+savages thousands of miles apart?"</p>
+
+<p>"Rather odd. Must have started from some common source hundreds of years
+ago and spread around. Queerest thing is, though, that a poison so
+deadly doesn't spoil meat for eating."</p>
+
+<p>"Huh?" exclaimed Tim. "Mean to say them cannibals can kill us by
+scratchin' us with a poison arrer and then stummick us afterwards?"</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly. You'd taste just as sweet as ever, Tim&mdash;maybe more so. Cheer
+up! They say it doesn't hurt much to die that way; you're paralyzed so
+quick you just sort of fade out."</p>
+
+<p>Tim shook his head, his abhorrence of poison strong as ever. Knowlton
+spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"I've heard that this wurali poison is much overrated, that it will kill
+only birds and monkeys, not men."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Por Deus!</i> Whoever said that was a fool trying to appear wise!" Pedro
+snorted. "We have seen the poison death, and we know."</p>
+
+<p>McKay also shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Experiments have been made with the wurali of the Macusis," he stated.
+"It was tried on a hog, a sloth&mdash;and a sloth is mighty hard to
+kill&mdash;also on mules, and on a full-grown ox weighing almost half a ton.
+It killed every one of them."</p>
+
+<p>A momentary silence followed. Tim gazed sourly at the arrow, now
+harmless but still sinister.</p>
+
+<p>"Urrrgh!" he growled. "Cap, ye had a narrer squeak&mdash;come near gittin' it
+from in front, and behind, too. Wisht I could have drilled that guy."</p>
+
+<p>The bushmen grinned. And Louren&ccedil;o's next speech was amazing.</p>
+
+<p>"Be thankful you did not. That bullet might have killed us all."</p>
+
+<p>After enjoying their puzzled expressions a moment he continued.</p>
+
+<p>"We are nearer to a Mayoruna <i>maloca</i> than I thought. Not the one I
+intended to seek, but a smaller one. It is about three days' journey
+from here, and to reach it we must go through the bush. The man who left
+this arrow here to-day is from that <i>maloca</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"A week ago his brother went hunting, and he has not returned. So this
+young savage and three of his comrades now are searching the bush for
+some sign of him. To-day they separated, each going in a different
+direction, agreeing to meet again to-night at a place less than half a
+day's journey from here. This man circled around and worked along this
+creek, knowing his brother would hardly go beyond the water. He spied
+our canoes, then sought the men who had come in them and found you.</p>
+
+<p>"He watched you for some time, and if you had not rushed at him he would
+have slipped away without attacking you, for he was alone and he saw
+your guns. But when you, Capitao, suddenly leaped at him he darted away,
+then stopped long enough to send an arrow at you. After that he dodged
+out of sight and ran to the camp of his three friends. He is there now,
+telling about you."</p>
+
+<p>"Great guns! You chaps are wizards!" cried Knowlton. "How do you know
+all this?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because we met him while on our way back here. He was running hard, and
+we heard him, so we blocked him. After we convinced him that we were
+friendly we talked for some time&mdash;I can speak their tongue&mdash;and he told
+us about you. He was sure you were enemies to him and his people, and
+believed also you had killed his missing brother, and he was going first
+to rejoin his companions and then hasten to the <i>maloca</i> to bring all
+their fighters against you. It was well that we met him in time. It was
+well, too, that you did not shoot him&mdash;or even shoot at him. His
+companions would have learned of it, and then&mdash;death for us all."</p>
+
+<p>"And now what?"</p>
+
+<p>"Now, comrades, we all go to the <i>maloca</i> of that man. We meet him and
+the other three to-morrow at the place where we talked to him to-day. I
+told him we were going to visit that other chief whom I knew, and,
+though he was at first suspicious of a trap, he finally agreed to lead
+us to his own chief. So in the morning we march. Now let us sleep."</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton and McKay glanced at each other and nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Luck's with us so far," said the captain.</p>
+
+<p>"Right. We just march right into Jungle Town with bodyguard and
+everything. Pretty soft! Wonder if they'll turn out the tomtom band to
+drum us in."</p>
+
+<p>Tim said nothing. He squinted again at the headless arrow, then
+inspected the breech bolt of his rifle.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE WAY OF THE JUNGLE</h3>
+
+
+<p>Dawn came, dismal, damp, and chill. Moisture dripped drearily from the
+upper reaches, and under the dense canopy of leaves and limbs the gloom
+and the fog together made a murk wherein the early-rising bushmen were
+scarcely visible to the North Americans ten feet away. Yet day had come,
+or was coming; the noise of the animal world left little doubt of that.</p>
+
+<p>By the light of a sullen smoky fire and oil-smeared torches Pedro and
+Louren&ccedil;o made up their packs, cording them roughly with bark-cloth
+strips brought from headquarters. The Americans, after eating a more
+solid meal than the Brazilians seemed to require, also rolled their
+blankets, hammocks, nets, and other paraphernalia; strapped the outfits
+into the army pack harnesses which they had transported for thousands of
+miles and never yet used; crammed their web belts with cartridges; slung
+their sheathed machetes down their left thighs; looked to their guns;
+and announced themselves ready to go.</p>
+
+<p>While the northerners made these final preparations their guides slipped
+away for a time. Pedro, on his return, announced that the canoes had
+been concealed. Louren&ccedil;o, bringing back the freshly filled canteens of
+the ex-army men, delivered with them the marching orders of the day.</p>
+
+<p>"If you thirst, comrades, drink only from your canteens. If the canteens
+fail, never fill them from flowing water unless the Indians also drink
+from the stream. There are always small pools to be found, and, though
+their water may be warm and stale, it is not likely to be poisoned, as
+the streams may be.</p>
+
+<p>"To-day, and every day after we meet the cannibals, make no suspicious
+moves. Do not speak harshly. Do not laugh or sneer at them. They are
+unreasoning and easily insulted, and lifelong foes when angered. Let me
+do the talking.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not hold a gun in a threatening manner or draw pistols unless you
+must fight. Then kill.</p>
+
+<p>"Above all, pay no attention to their women.</p>
+
+<p>"Now we go. I lead."</p>
+
+<p>He turned and strode away into the fog as easily and surely as if
+cat-eyed and cat-footed. Pedro swung nonchalantly after him. The others
+followed in order, hitching at their backstraps.</p>
+
+<p>The ghostly haze about them now was paler, but through the interstices
+overhead came no glint of sunshine, nor even the glow of a clear dawn.
+The whole sky evidently was overcast, and around the marching men the
+gloom still lay thick. Yet Louren&ccedil;o's eyes seemed to bore through the
+shades and the dark shroud blurring the trunks, for his steady gait did
+not falter. The little file hung close together, for all knew that any
+man straggling would be instantly lost.</p>
+
+<p>Worming around gigantic columns, crawling over rotting trunks long laid
+low, changing direction abruptly when blocked by some great butt too
+high to be scaled, sinking ankle-deep in clinging mud, the venturesome
+band wound along through the wilderness. Repeated glances at his compass
+showed McKay that the general trend of the march was southeast; but the
+impassable obstacles encountered at frequent intervals necessitated not
+only detours, but sometimes actual back-tracking.</p>
+
+<p>"Walk four miles to advance one," was his thought. And for some time it
+seemed that such was the case. But then the ground changed, the light
+improved, the trees thinned, and the undergrowth became more dense&mdash;and,
+paradoxically, the rate of progress improved.</p>
+
+<p>This was because the smaller growth gave the two leaders a chance to cut
+their way straight onward instead of dodging about; and cut they did.
+Their machetes swung with untiring energy, opening a path through what
+seemed an impenetrable tangle. Now every yard of movement was a yard
+gained. But the ground was rising and the struggle up some of the sharp
+slopes winded more than one man.</p>
+
+<p>Then the slope dipped the other way, and they slipped down into a ravine
+where water gleamed darkly. Here a halt was called while the leaders
+sought for a fallen tree. Tim squatted and mopped his face for the
+hundredth time.</p>
+
+<p>"Gosh! This is what I call travelin'!" he panted. "Flounderin' round in
+mud soup, bit to death by skeeters and them what-ye-call-'em
+flies&mdash;piums&mdash;sweatin' yerself bone dry and totin' forty thousand
+pounds, on yer back, not to mention hardware slung all over ye&mdash;this
+ain't no place for a minister's son or a fat guy, I'll tell the world.
+And this is only the start!"</p>
+
+<p>A call from Pedro forestalled any answer. The trio struggled along to
+the spot where the guides waited at the butt of a slanting tree trunk
+spanning the gulf. As they reached it Pedro walked carefully up the
+trunk, carrying a long slender sapling, which he lowered and fixed in
+the bottom of the stream. Then, steadying himself with the upper end of
+this pole, he continued his journey to the other side, where he flipped
+the sapling back to Louren&ccedil;o. One by one the others crossed, slipping,
+almost losing balance, but managing to evade a fall. Tim, walking the
+precarious bridge and looking down, saw that the surface of the water
+was dotted with the heads of venomous snakes.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you following your trail of yesterday?" demanded McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"No, Capitao. Yesterday we circled. To-day we go as nearly straight as
+possible."</p>
+
+<p>"And you can find the appointed place by this new route?" The captain's
+tone was dubious.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly. Else I should go the other way. Come."</p>
+
+<p>Up another bank they toiled, and on through rugged country which seemed
+momentarily to become higher and harder to traverse. In the minds of the
+Americans grew suspicion that, for the first time, the Brazilians were
+bluffing; it seemed impossible for any man to keep his sense of
+direction in such a maze. But they said no word and followed on.</p>
+
+<p>At length the leader paused and sent the long call of the mutum floating
+through the trees. No answer came. After a moment the line moved on,
+each man peering ahead with sharper gaze, each holding a little tighter.
+To the Americans, at least, the thought of possible ambush loomed large.</p>
+
+<p>Four man-eating savages, hidden in this labyrinthine tangle and armed
+with arrows whose slightest scratch meant death, could strike down every
+man of this expedition without even a wound in return; for of what avail
+were high-power guns, automatic pistols, and machetes against invisible
+enemies? Yet there was assurance in Louren&ccedil;o's confident air, and
+reassurance in the thought that these tribemen would be unlikely to
+assail a band avowedly on its way to visit their chief.
+Besides&mdash;Knowlton smiled grimly&mdash;even if the Mayorunas hungered for
+human flesh it would be more economical of labor to let the meat travel
+to the slaughterhouse on its own legs than to kill it here and carry it
+home.</p>
+
+<p>Again the mutum whistle drifted away. Again no answer came. For a short
+distance farther the file continued its march. Then, in a small opening
+where the uptorn roots of a tree rose like a wall at one side, it
+halted.</p>
+
+<p>"The place of meeting," Pedro said. All peered around. None saw anything
+but the upstanding roots, the forest jumble, the misty serpentine
+lianas. None heard any sound but their own hoarse breathing, the solemn
+drip of water, the insect hum, and the occasional melancholy notes of
+birds. The place seemed bare of life. Yet upon McKay came again that
+feeling of being watched.</p>
+
+<p>Slowly, deeply, Louren&ccedil;o spoke. The words meant nothing to his mates.
+They were like no words they knew. His eyes roved about as he talked,
+and it was evident that he saw no more than did the silent men behind
+him. But they guessed that he said he and they were there as agreed,
+with peace in their hearts, and that he was telling the men of the
+wilderness to come forward without fear. And they guessed rightly.</p>
+
+<p>As quietly as a phantom of the mist a man took shape at the edge of the
+tree roots. Tall, straight, slender, symmetrically proportioned, with
+unblemished skin of light-bronze hue, straight black hair, and deep dark
+eyes, he was a splendid type of savage. Face and body were adorned with
+glossy paint&mdash;scarlet and black rings around the eyes, two red stripes
+from temple to chin, wavy lines on arms and chest. He held a bow longer
+than himself, with a five-foot arrow fitted loosely to the string and
+pointed downward, but ready for instant use. Diagonally across his body
+ran a cord supporting a quiver, from which the feathered shafts of
+several arrows projected above his left shoulder. Around his waist
+looped another cord from which dangled a small loin mat. Otherwise he
+was totally nude&mdash;a bronze statue of freedom.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o spoke again in the same quiet tone. The savage stepped warily
+forward. At the same moment three other naked men appeared with equal
+stealth from tree trunks which had seemed barren of all life. Like the
+first, each of these held an arrow ready, but pointing downward; and
+each moved with the slow, velvety step of a hunting jaguar. Their eyes
+searched those of these strange men of another world who, wearing
+useless clothing, carrying heavy weapons of steel, burdening themselves
+with queer weights on their backs, now invaded the wilderness which they
+and their fathers had roamed untrammeled for centuries. The invaders in
+turn studied the faces of the Mayorunas, of whom so many gruesome tales
+were told. For long silent minutes primitive and civilized man probed
+each other for signs of treachery&mdash;and found none.</p>
+
+<p>Tim, forgetting the orders of the day, spoke out abruptly. At the gruff
+jar of his voice the wild men started and raised their weapons.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, are those guys cannibals? I was lookin' to see some ugly mutts
+with underslung jaws and mops o' frizzy hair, like them Feejee Islanders
+ye see pitchers of. Barrin' the paint, I've seen worse-lookin' fellers
+than these back home."</p>
+
+<p>With which he gave the savages a wide, unmistakably approving grin.</p>
+
+<p>"Shut up!" muttered McKay.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o, unruffled, made instant capital of Tim's remarks.</p>
+
+<p>"My comrade of the red hair," he said in the Indian tongue, "has never
+before seen the mighty warriors of the Mayorunas, and is astonished to
+find them such handsome men. He says his own countrymen are not so good
+to look upon."</p>
+
+<p>Slowly the menacing arrows sank. As the savages studied Tim's wholesome
+grin and absorbed the broad flattery of Louren&ccedil;o a slight smile passed
+over their faces. They stood more at ease. The whites sensed at once
+that, for a moment, at least, a friendly footing had been established,
+and relaxed from their own tension.</p>
+
+<p>Once more Louren&ccedil;o spoke, motioning toward the farther distances. The
+Indian who had first appeared now replied briefly. Two of the others
+stepped back to their trees and lifted long, hollow tubes.</p>
+
+<p>"What's them?" demanded Tim.</p>
+
+<p>"Blowguns," Pedro answered. "They use them for small or thin-skinned
+game. See, the two blowgun men carry also short darts in their quivers,
+and small pouches of poison."</p>
+
+<p>"Uh-huh. They like their poison a dang sight better 'n I do. Say, are
+them guys goin' to march behind us? I don't want no poison needles
+slipped into my back, accidental or other ways."</p>
+
+<p>Two of the savages were walking toward the rear of the line. Knowlton,
+exasperated, snapped out:</p>
+
+<p>"They'll walk where they like, and you'll do well to give us more
+marching and less mouth. You nearly spilled the beans just now, and if
+Louren&ccedil;o hadn't said something that pleased these fellows we all might
+be in the soup this minute. Pipe down!"</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, Looey, I only said these guys were good-lookin'. Ain't no fight in
+words like that."</p>
+
+<p>"You heard the orders this morning. Let Louren&ccedil;o do the talking. That
+goes! We're skating on thin ice&mdash;so thin that if it breaks we drop plump
+into hell. Less noise!"</p>
+
+<p>"Right, sir," was the sulky answer. "I'm deaf and dumb."</p>
+
+<p>"March," added McKay. The head of the column already was on the move,
+led by the tallest Indian and a blowgun man, behind whom walked the two
+Brazilians. The whole line took up the step in turn and passed on into
+the unknown.</p>
+
+<p>Again McKay consulted his compass at intervals, finding that now the
+route led more to the south, though there still was an easterly trend.
+After a time, however, the telltale needle informed him that they were
+proceeding almost due east, and glances at the surroundings showed that
+on their right was a densely matted mass of undergrowth. Not long
+afterward another interwoven brush wall blocked the way, and this time
+the leader veered to the west. Not until an opening appeared did he
+resume his southward course. It dawned on McKay that the savages, having
+no bush knives, were accustomed to follow the line of least resistance.
+This obviously increased the distance traveled.</p>
+
+<p>The men of Coronel Nunes, too, perceived this. A halt was called, during
+which Louren&ccedil;o talked with the guide, tapped his machete, and evidently
+protested against needless detours. The leader, with a few words,
+pointed south. Louren&ccedil;o nodded and replied. The march was resumed, and
+when the next impenetrable tangle was encountered the Indians in the van
+stepped aside, the machetes of the Brazilians flashed out, and a way was
+cut straight through. From that time on the long knives came into
+frequent play and a direct course was maintained.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, with a grunt of warning, the tall tribesman stopped. The plan
+of chopping through instead of going around had brought the Indians into
+a part of the forest which they had not heretofore traversed in their
+search for the missing hunter. Now they stood in a small trough between
+the knolls, under good-sized trees around which grew little brush. The
+ground was soft, almost watery. In the damp air, faint but unmistakable,
+hung the odor of death.</p>
+
+<p>The savages at the rear came forward at once. All four of them spread
+out and, sniffing the air, advanced up the trough. A cry broke from one
+of them. The others, and the white men, too, hastened to the spot whence
+the call had come.</p>
+
+<p>Scattered about in the soft muck were bones, two skulls, bits of tawny
+fur, a long bow, several big-game arrows. Around them the ground was
+marked with many tracks. Most of the imprints were of the vultures which
+had stripped the bones, but there were others&mdash;those of a barefoot man,
+of a great cat, and of a couple of wild hogs. The peccary tracks went
+straight on, but those of the man and the cat showed that a fierce
+struggle had occurred. And one of the two grinning skulls was that of a
+jaguar.</p>
+
+<p>The story was plain. The hunter, following fast on the trail of the
+hogs, had suddenly met the jaguar. He had shot it; one arrow, blood
+stained for more than a foot above the barb, proved that. But in the few
+seconds of life left to it the animal had sprung and fatally torn the
+man. Then, as usual, had dropped the black scavengers of the sky to rend
+them both.</p>
+
+<p>Silently the men of the bush and the men of the north looked down at the
+brief history written in the mud&mdash;a story only a week old, yet ancient
+as human life itself&mdash;primitive man and ferocious brute destroying each
+other as in the prehistoric days when saber-toothed tiger and troglodyte
+hunted and slew for the right to live. And as it had been then, so it
+was now. The living read the tale of tragedy and passed on, leaving the
+bones behind them. Only, before they went, the Mayorunas threw the
+remnants of the jaguar aside and piled the bones of their dead comrade
+together in one place. Then, bearing with them his bow and arrows, they
+resumed their way without a word.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+
+<h3>A DUEL WITH DEATH</h3>
+
+
+<p>Rain came and went.</p>
+
+<p>The first night's camp of the strangely assorted company was a wet one,
+for well on in the day the skies poured down the watery weight which had
+been troubling them once morning. Yet even in such miserable weather the
+four tribesmen of the Mayorunas declined to sleep in the same camp with
+the whites. They accepted the food tendered them, but when it was eaten
+they withdrew to some covert of their own to spend the night. Whereby
+the whites knew that, though their guides now could no longer suspect
+them of killing the lone hunter, they still were not accepted as
+friends.</p>
+
+<p>"Did ye say them guys had a trick of jabbin' men in their hammicks at
+night, Renzo?" was Tim's significant question after the Indians had
+departed.</p>
+
+<p>"Have no fear," Louren&ccedil;o assured him. "They have promised to take us
+safely to their chief."</p>
+
+<p>"How much is the word of a cannibal worth?" asked Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"Worth everything, so long as you do nothing to make them forget it,
+senhor. Being uncivilized, they are not liars."</p>
+
+<p>The lieutenant eyed him sharply, half minded to regard the answer as
+insolent. But there was no insolence in the Brazilian's straightforward
+gaze, and McKay laughed approvingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Well spoken!" was the captain's comment.</p>
+
+<p>"Among those people there are but two great crimes," Louren&ccedil;o added.
+"They are, to speak falsely or to be a coward."</p>
+
+<p>"Wherein a goodly portion of the so-called civilized world would fail to
+measure up to the standards of these cannibals," McKay said. "By the
+way, have you asked them about the Raposa?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Capitao. It is as well not to put into their heads the idea that we
+are hunting anyone here. I shall say nothing of that matter until we
+reach the chief who knows me."</p>
+
+<p>"Good idea."</p>
+
+<p>With that the talk ended and all sought their hammocks, dog tired from
+the day's travel. No watch was kept, for, as Pedro quaintly phrased it,
+"We now are in the hands of God and the cannibals." Nor was any watch
+needed.</p>
+
+<p>Daybreak brought sunlight. While the breakfast coffee was being boiled
+the four wild men appeared silently and simultaneously, one bringing a
+red howling monkey and another a large green parrot as their
+contributions to the morning meal. Neither bird nor animal showed any
+wound except a slightly discolored spot surrounding a skin puncture no
+larger than if made by a woman's hatpin&mdash;the marks left by poisoned
+darts from the ten-foot blowguns. When the meat was cooked they offered
+portions to the whites, of whom Tim alone refused.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd as quick eat a rat killed with Paris green," he growled. "No
+poisoned meat gits into my stummick if I know it."</p>
+
+<p>"Bosh!" scoffed McKay. "It's perfectly wholesome&mdash;though it's tough as a
+rubber boot."</p>
+
+<p>"And I might tell you, senhores, that among these people it is an insult
+to refuse any food offered you," added Louren&ccedil;o. "I advise you to forget
+about the poison hereafter and eat what is put before you, even if it
+stinks."</p>
+
+<p>His advice was emphasized by the evident displeasure of the tribesmen,
+who, though saying nothing, looked rather grimly at the man who had
+despised their provisions. But Louren&ccedil;o then smoothed over the matter by
+telling them that the red-haired man was sick at the stomach that
+morning&mdash;which, at that particular moment, was not far from the truth.</p>
+
+<p>Soon the triglot column was once more on its way across the hill
+country, which hourly grew higher and rougher&mdash;a constant succession of
+ridges and ravines. Louren&ccedil;o, pointing out the absence of water marks on
+the trees of the uplands, said that now the land of the great annual
+floods had been left behind; for even the sixty-foot rise of waters in
+the rainy season could not reach to these hilltops. With the entry into
+this terra firma the travelers had also found the sun again, the dank
+mist of yesterday having vanished. Nevertheless, the going was fully as
+hard as on the previous day, because of the density of the bush and of
+the labor of crossing the narrow but deep streams flowing at the bottom
+of nearly every clove. Few words were exchanged, every man needing his
+breath for the work of walking.</p>
+
+<p>As before, the keen machetes of the Brazilians opened a direct route
+through all opposing undergrowth. When a brief halt was called at noon
+the Mayorunas, who seemed to know exactly where they were despite the
+fact that they had never before followed this straight course, informed
+Louren&ccedil;o that much circuitous traveling had already been saved, and that
+by tramping hard until sundown they might succeed in reaching the tribal
+<i>maloca</i> that night. But McKay vetoed the idea of a forced march.</p>
+
+<p>"This gait is fast enough and hard enough," he declared. "No sense in
+exhausting ourselves to save a few hours' time. Also, we don't want to
+go staggering into the Mayoruna village with our tongues hanging out and
+our knees wabbling. First impressions are lasting with such people, and
+they might get an idea we were weaklings."</p>
+
+<p>To which all except the savages, who did not understand the language of
+the white man, assented approvingly.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it was the Mayorunas themselves who delayed arrival at their
+<i>maloca</i>&mdash;the Mayorunas and a monkey. When the sinking sun was still two
+hours high, and while the leader was forcing the pace as if determined
+to reach home that night whether the rest liked it or not, the monkey
+upset any such plan.</p>
+
+<p>He was a big gray monkey, and he was high up in the branches of a tall
+matamata tree, where he deemed himself safe from the many creatures
+laboring along the ground below. Wherefore he chattered impudently down
+at them and, as the tall Indian guide halted, showed his teeth
+derisively. The savage grunted. The man behind him also grunted and
+lifted his blowgun. But the leader growled at him and the blowgun sank.</p>
+
+<p>With a swift sweep of the hand the guide drew from his quiver one of
+those long, poisoned arrows and fitted it to the bow cord, which he had
+laid on the ground. With two toes of each foot he held the cord firmly
+on the soil. His right hand lightly grasped the arrow and aimed it up at
+the insolent primate. His left drew the bow up, up, into an arc.</p>
+
+<p><i>Twang!</i> the cord thrummed as his lifted toes released it. The arrow
+whirred aloft. Then a snarl of chagrin from the marksman blended with
+the grunts of his mates. The arrow had failed to reach the quarry.</p>
+
+<p>It had missed, however, by a mere hand's breadth&mdash;missed only because it
+struck the limb directly under the monkey, where it hung by the tip from
+the bark. Muttering something which may have been a Mayoruna
+malediction, the savage moved aside a step or two, drew another arrow,
+and set it to the cord with more care than before. But while he did this
+the monkey was not idle.</p>
+
+<p>Chattering in rage, the animal leaned down, worked the arrow loose from
+the bark, and threw it aside. The deadly shaft turned in air, then
+plunged aimlessly earthward. At that instant all below were watching the
+guide, who in turn was looking at his toes and placing the new arrow in
+position. Unseen, the other missile hurtled down&mdash;and ripped across the
+back of the marksman's left hand.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant the tall cannibal stood as if petrified, staring at his
+cut hand and the shaft now sticking upright in the ground beside him.
+Then, in simple symbolism, he reversed the new arrow and stabbed it also
+into the dirt. Dropping his bow, he lay down on his back.</p>
+
+<p>"Yuara will draw bow no more. Yuara goes to join the spirits of the
+dead," he said, calmly.</p>
+
+<p>Mechanically Louren&ccedil;o translated the words. McKay sprang forward.</p>
+
+<p>"No!" he disputed. "Not without a try for life, anyhow! Merry, sling a
+tourniquet! Quick!"</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton jumped to the side of Yuara, tied a handkerchief above the
+elbow, twisted it tight. McKay whipped from a pocket a keen-bladed
+knife. In one swift ruthless slash he laid open the arm from elbow to
+knuckles.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep that tourniquet tight!" he snapped. "If the blood once gets past
+it he's gone. Tim, get out the salt bag! Louren&ccedil;o, tell this fellow to
+breathe deep and keep it up!"</p>
+
+<p>While Tim burrowed into his pack for the salt, Louren&ccedil;o spoke, as much
+for the benefit of the other tribesmen as for that of Yuara; for the
+three Mayorunas stood in ominous silence, watching the outrush of blood
+caused by the knife of the white man.</p>
+
+<p>"The white man of the black beard, who is very wise, will save Yuara to
+draw many a good bow if Yuara will do as he says. Let Yuara breathe
+deeply, that the spirit of life remain in him to fight against the demon
+of death. Even now the poison rushes out of the arm of Yuara."</p>
+
+<p>"Yuara cannot live," was Yuara's cool reply. "Where once the poison has
+entered, there follows death."</p>
+
+<p>"Is Yuara then a coward, that he will die without a fight? Then he is no
+Mayoruna, for no Mayoruna is a coward. Let Yuara die if he will. His
+comrades shall carry to their <i>maloca</i> the tale that, although the white
+man would have saved him, he died like an old woman, because he had not
+the will to live!"</p>
+
+<p>Fire shot into the eyes of the prostrate man. He ground his teeth and
+struggled to rise and throttle the insulting Brazilian.</p>
+
+<p>"No, not that way," Louren&ccedil;o went on at once. "Yuara can fight the death
+demon only by drawing into himself the air in which is the spirit of
+life. The wise white man has stopped the poison at the place where the
+cloth is tied, and he knows the air spirits will help Yuara if Yuara
+will breathe deep and long. If he will not, then the white man's
+medicine cannot save him. Yuara's life or death is in his own hands."</p>
+
+<p>In his heart Louren&ccedil;o had faint hope that the injured man would live.
+But he knew the rest of the cannibal tribe must soon hear the tale of
+this incident from the three now present, and he was preparing an
+excellent excuse for the failure of McKay to save him. Whether Yuara
+lived or not, the Mayorunas now would know that the whites had done
+their utmost for him, and that very fact might make a vast difference.</p>
+
+<p>Yuara, though his eyes still flamed, sank back under McKay's restraining
+weight and obeyed orders. After the first couple of breaths he settled
+into his task and his chest rose and fell rhythmically.</p>
+
+<p>"Here's yer salt, Cap. What'll I do with it?"</p>
+
+<p>"You come here and hold this tourniquet. Don't let it slip! Merry, fill
+this chap's mouth with salt. Louren&ccedil;o, tell him to hold it as long as
+possible, then swallow it. Now, Merry, fix up a good strong salt
+poultice. The rest of you make camp. We've got a stiff fight on our
+hands, and we can't go farther until we've either won or lost."</p>
+
+<p>The Brazilians glanced at the sun shadows and remained where they were.
+According to their experience, Yuara should be dead within ten minutes
+at most. Time enough to make camp when they knew how this venture would
+result. The Mayorunas also stood fast and watched for the shadow of
+death to blanch the face of their stricken mate.</p>
+
+<p>But the minutes dragged past and Yuara's eyes did not grow dim. His
+first resignation over and his fighting blood aroused, he was battling
+grimly against fate. At times his deep respirations were broken by
+sudden gasps, and spasmodic quivers shook his whole body. But he
+breathed on, paying no heed to the burning pain of his ripped and salted
+arm.</p>
+
+<p>"By cripes! he's puttin' up a man's scrap!" blurted Tim. "Stay with it,
+old feller. Ye'll win out yet!"</p>
+
+<p>And as more minutes passed and the wounded man still breathed, a murmur
+of wonderment passed among the cannibals and the men of Nunes. Yuara
+should be dead, yet he was not even paralyzed. Such a thing had never
+before been known in this bush.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o touched Pedro's arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Find a spot where we can make camp," he said. "I must stay here to
+speak to the wild men if words are needed."</p>
+
+<p>Reluctantly Pedro went away. Soon he was back with news of a suitable
+place. He found all bending closer over Yuara, whose breathing had
+become stertorous and whose eyes seemed fixed.</p>
+
+<p>"Going!" was the bushman's thought. But the others would not have it so.</p>
+
+<p>"How 'bout a shot o' booze to jolt his heart, Cap?" suggested Tim, whose
+whole soul was in the fight.</p>
+
+<p>McKay nodded. Knowlton quickly produced brandy and poured a stiff dose
+down Yuara's throat. It took hold at once, and light came back into the
+Indian's eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Got a good chance yet," McKay asserted. "Don't loosen that tourniquet.
+Let the arm mortify, if necessary, but hold that blood away from the
+heart at all costs. I'll chop his arm off at the shoulder before I'll
+give in."</p>
+
+<p>His hard-set face showed he meant it.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o spoke to the Mayorunas, urging that camp be made at once. He
+and Pedro strode away, and all three of the Indians followed.</p>
+
+<p>"Really think he'll pull through, Rod?" Knowlton asked, then. "If he
+does you're a miracle worker."</p>
+
+<p>"It's an experiment," McKay confessed, watching Yuara with unswerving
+intentness. "Never saw this done, but it's worth a try&mdash;and I honestly
+believe it will work. I saved an Indian over in Guiana once by cutting
+off his arm as soon as he was hit, but I want to keep this fellow's arm
+for him if possible. Feed him some more salt."</p>
+
+<p>Time passed unheeded. Sounds of labor not far off told that camp was
+being built. Presently the absent five returned, two of the Mayorunas
+carrying a crude but strong litter constructed from saplings and
+giant-fern leaves. McKay rose stiffly on cramped legs.</p>
+
+<p>"All right. You can move him," he consented.</p>
+
+<p>Carefully Yuara was lifted to the litter and transported to the new
+camp. There the Americans found not only the open shed, or <i>tambo</i>,
+usually constructed by the Brazilians, but also a somewhat similar
+shelter erected by the Indians. In the latter stood two stout crotched
+stakes, firmly braced&mdash;the handiwork of Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o. And to
+these, with tough bush rope, the Indians fastened the litter of Yuara,
+thus forming a rude but effective hammock.</p>
+
+<p>While McKay and Knowlton continued their ministrations to the stricken
+man the rest of the camp work was completed, the Mayorunas making
+hanging beds for themselves from withes, leaves, and bush cord, and the
+Brazilians slinging the hammocks of their own party and opening packs.</p>
+
+<p>Night fell and the wounded man lived on. Supper was eaten, pipes smoked,
+the regular activities of the early hours of darkness gone through&mdash;and
+Yuara lived on. His deep breathing had become automatic, and his eyes
+stared straight up in concentration on his battle with the death demon.</p>
+
+<p>At length he was seized with violent nausea which convulsed him for a
+time. But when the spasms passed he lay back more easily, and a faint
+smile flitted over his face as he looked at the white men.</p>
+
+<p>"Been expecting that," said McKay. "Might loosen that ligature now&mdash;just
+a few seconds.... Tighten it! All right." Alter watching the sick man a
+little longer he added: "Now I'm going to eat and smoke. Feel like
+taking a drink, too, but guess I won't. The Indian will pull through
+now, I think."</p>
+
+<p>When he had returned to the Indian hut with pipe aglow, Knowlton asked
+him, "Now tell us how you doped out this cure."</p>
+
+<p>"Combination of various things. Salt is a partial antidote to venom in
+the blood, and I got it into him in three ways&mdash;by mouth absorption, by
+the stomach, and by the salt poultice, which drew out some of the poison
+from the forearm and helped neutralize what remained. Ripping his arm of
+course let out a lot of bad blood. Ligature above the elbow stopped most
+of the rest&mdash;though some sneaked past that point, I'm pretty sure.</p>
+
+<p>"Big thing, though, was the deep breathing. Remember I told you about
+the experiments that killed mules and an ox? Another experiment was
+this&mdash;opening the windpipe of a poisoned mule after the heart stopped,
+inserting a pair of bellows, and starting artificial respiration. After
+four hours of this the mule came to life and stayed alive&mdash;though he was
+a wreck for a year afterward.</p>
+
+<p>"I just put all these together, made the Indian do his own
+breathing&mdash;and here he is. I'm going to sit up awhile longer and watch
+him, but the critical period is over. You chaps can turn in."</p>
+
+<p>But none turned in until midnight, when no doubt remained that
+Louren&ccedil;o's prophecy would come true&mdash;that Yuara would live to draw bow
+again. Then, when the slashed arm had been thoroughly cleansed and
+bound, Louren&ccedil;o spoke once more to the savages.</p>
+
+<p>"The medicine of the wise white man and the air spirits have saved Yuara
+from the death demon. Yuara has fought as a man of his tribe should
+fight, and so has lived when he would have died. To-morrow Yuara shall
+once more see his people, the first man of the Mayorunas to come back
+from the death of poison. And he and his comrades shall tell of the
+white man's wisdom, without which he now would lie cold on the ground."</p>
+
+<p>"So shall it be," Yuara himself faintly answered. "Yuara, son of Rana,
+second chief of the men of Suba, will not forget."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Por Deus!</i>" exclaimed Louren&ccedil;o. "Comrades, this man is no common
+hunter, but son of a subchief. Capitao, you have done good work to-day."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE CANNIBALS</h3>
+
+
+<p>Through the long, dim shadows of early morning the little column passed
+on the last leg of its journey to the <i>maloca</i> of Suba, chief of this
+outlying tribe of the Mayorunas. At its head marched Yuara, his left arm
+incased in bandages, his face drawn and pallid, his stride stiff and
+springless, but still carrying his weapons and stoically setting the
+pace as befitted the son of a subchief. He had had no sleep; he had lain
+in the gates of death; his arm ached cruelly; yet a warm glow shone in
+his hollow eyes as he reflected on the fact that in all the unwritten
+history of his people he was the first man to survive the inexorable
+power of the wurali. As long as he lived this fact would lift him above
+the level of all his fellows. Even the chief could not boast of such a
+superhuman feat.</p>
+
+<p>The undergrowth this morning was not so thick as it had been, and the
+machetes of Louren&ccedil;o and Pedro stayed in their sheaths. The ground, too,
+was more level and the footing more firm. After some three hours of
+walking the Americans found that they had come into a faint path.</p>
+
+<p>Somewhat to the bewilderment of the white men, who expected the Indians
+to increase their speed now that the way home lay under their feet, the
+leading pair slowed their gait. Moreover, they scanned the trail with
+intent care and watched the trees along the way. At length, with a
+warning grunt, Yuara stepped out of the path and began a detour. His
+comrade and the Brazilians followed. The Americans stopped.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the idea?" demanded McKay, looking along the innocent-appearing
+path.</p>
+
+<p>"Probably a man trap, Capitao," answered Pedro. "Follow us."</p>
+
+<p>"Let's see the trap first."</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o called to Yuara, who stopped and grunted two words.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si</i>, it is a trap. A pit, Yuara says."</p>
+
+<p>Yuara spoke again, and Louren&ccedil;o added: "He says we must not touch it. It
+is there just before you, covered so cunningly that it looks exactly
+like the rest of the ground. The cover is a framework of sticks balanced
+on a pole, and the instant a man steps on it it gives way. He falls into
+a nine-foot hole whose sides are dug inward, so that they overhang above
+him. There the cannibals find him and kill him. I fell into one of those
+holes when I first came into this Mayoruna country, so I know just how
+they are made."</p>
+
+<p>"So? How did you get out?"</p>
+
+<p>"There were two of us, and I stood on the other man's shoulders while he
+lifted me high enough to jump out. Then I tied bush rope to a tree and
+he climbed up the rope. Come. Yuara waits."</p>
+
+<p>After a short circuit around the danger point the party returned to the
+path, and as they went on Louren&ccedil;o explained further concerning the pit:</p>
+
+<p>"Every approach to the <i>malocas</i> has this kind of trap hidden in it, and
+others also. The Indians recognize the places by some secret signal
+known only to themselves&mdash;a certain kind of stick or vine or something
+of the kind, placed where it can be seen by those who understand. The
+traps are made to stop any enemies who try to sneak up on the <i>malocas</i>
+and catch these people unawares. Another kind of trap is a spring bow or
+a blowgun shot by a vine stretched across the path. Still another is a
+piece of ground studded with poisoned araya bones which pierce the bare
+feet of anyone walking on them. It is well for us that we now have
+friendly guides."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite so," McKay agreed, dryly.</p>
+
+<p>Some distance farther on the leader again left the path, and this time
+all filed after him without comment. Pedro pointed significantly at a
+thin, tight-drawn bush cord stretched across the path at the height of a
+man's ankle&mdash;the trigger which would discharge hidden death at anything
+touching it. At another point, perhaps a hundred feet farther along, a
+third and last detour was made, and this time the nature of the trap was
+not revealed by anything on the ground. No questions were asked.</p>
+
+<p>With the passing of these three menaces Yuara resumed his former pace
+and abandoned his circumspection. Before long came sounds of communal
+life&mdash;the barking of a dog and shouts of children. Then suddenly the
+forest thinned, and after a few more strides the marchers found
+themselves in a clearing.</p>
+
+<p>Before them rose a big round house, about forty feet high and a hundred
+feet in diameter, its sides composed of palm logs, and its roof a thick
+thatch of palm leaves, whence smoke oozed lazily through an opening at
+the peak. A single low door, not more than four feet high, opened toward
+a creek a few rods away at the right. Near this doorway a couple of
+naked children, boy and girl, were playing with the dog, while beyond
+them a number of women, also nude, were busy at some kind of work.</p>
+
+<p>As Yuara and his fellow-tribesmen entered the open space the boy shouted
+a greeting and started running toward them. Then, seeing the white men
+filing from the bush behind the warriors, the youngster stood as if
+shocked motionless. After one long stare he screamed and bolted for the
+shelter of the <i>maloca</i>. Other screams echoed his as the women also saw
+the bearded outlanders. They, too, dived through the doorway.</p>
+
+<p>Out from behind the house leaped three warriors, two of whom already had
+fitted arrows to their bows, while the third&mdash;a powerful
+fellow&mdash;clutched a four-foot war club. Weapons raised, faces contracted
+into fighting masks, they stared speechless at the spectacle of the
+subchief's son calmly leading gun-bearing whites among them.</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton, though his attention was riveted on the astonished warriors,
+caught the quiet snick of Tim's safe-lock being turned off.</p>
+
+<p>"None of that, Tim!" he warned. "Put that safety on again. And don't
+hold your gun as if you intended to use it."</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, I was jest tryin' her to make sure she was all right."</p>
+
+<p>"Put it on!" snapped the lieutenant. Another tiny click told him the
+order was obeyed.</p>
+
+<p>Out from the doorway darted another warrior, stooping low to avoid
+hitting his head. Others followed instantly, all armed and ready for
+action. The opening was still vomiting tribesmen when Yuara and the rest
+reached it. But none made a hostile move when it was seen that the son
+of the subchief was in command and that the strangers seemed friendly.
+Yuara spoke, briefly but authoritatively, and the weapons sank. Then,
+with a word to his three companions, he ducked through the doorway. The
+other three remained where they were.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall have to wait now, comrades, until Yuara tells his father and
+the chief about us," Louren&ccedil;o said. "So let us take off our packs and
+rest."</p>
+
+<p>He set the example by laying his rifle on the ground, unslinging his
+pack, squatting beside it, and coolly rolling a cigarette. Apparently he
+was paying no attention whatever to the savages, who watched his every
+move. But McKay, glancing at him as he followed suit, saw that, for all
+his seeming unconcern, the Brazilian bush rover was keenly watchful and
+that his gun lay within reach of his hand.</p>
+
+<p>From within the tribal house sounded the monotonous voice of Yuara.
+After listening a moment Louren&ccedil;o quietly addressed the nearest warrior.
+A slightly surprised looked passed over the cannibal's face. He replied,
+and a slow conversation ensued.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the others looked over the array of savage fighting men.
+Except for difference of stature, build, and expression, they were as
+like as brothers. All were light skinned&mdash;hardly darker than the
+river-tanned whites themselves; all had straight-set eyes, with no hint
+of the slant often found among the Indians of the Amazon headwaters; and
+the cheek bones of all were fairly low. Their average stature was a
+little under six feet, and most of them had an athletic symmetry of
+physique. Their feet, McKay noticed, were small and shapely.</p>
+
+<p>All wore tall feather headdresses of parrot and mutum plumes. All had
+the scarlet and black rings around the eyes, the streaks from temple to
+chin, the wavy design on their bodies. And each wore in the cartilage of
+his nose a pair of small feathers slanting outward. At another time and
+under other circumstances the white men might have smiled at those nose
+feathers, which resembled odd mustaches; but as they studied the austere
+faces around them they found no occasion for merriment. Nor was the
+tension lessened by the sight of the weapons grasped in the strong hands
+of the warriors.</p>
+
+<p>Great bows and arrows, such as the hunters had borne, were supplemented
+here by the long clubs of heavy wood and by ugly spears. The clubs
+terminated in balls studded with jaguar teeth. The spears were triple
+pronged, each prong ending in a saw-toothed araya bone and each bone
+darkened by the fatal wurali. Frightful weapons they were&mdash;the one
+designed to smash skulls and tear out brains, the other to stab and
+poison at the same thrust.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o stopped talking, and the others observed that now the wild men
+stood more easily, their holds on their weapons loosened.</p>
+
+<p>"I have shown them, Capitao, that I can speak their tongue, and told
+them we go to visit the chief Monitaya as friend," he explained. "They
+tell me Monitaya has grown great since last I saw him. Another tribe
+which lost its chief and subchiefs by a swift sickness has joined his
+own, and he now rules two big <i>malocas</i> together. He is a powerful
+fighter, and if he is friendly to us we have a good chance of success.
+Ah! here is Yuara."</p>
+
+<p>The son of the subchief came through the doorway as he spoke, followed
+by an older man whose facial resemblance and ornaments indicated that he
+was the subchief himself. His headgear was more elaborate than that of
+his men, and around his shoulders and down his chest hung a brilliant
+feather dress, while a wide belt of green, blue, and black plumes
+encircled his hips. Yuara himself had inserted feathers in his nose and
+donned a headband of tall parrot plumes a trifle more ornate than those
+worn by the ordinary fighters, and somehow the simple addition seemed to
+transform him into a bigger, fiercer man. Also, his eyes now held a
+smoldering light which had not been there before.</p>
+
+<p>The older man, Rana, the subchief, glanced swiftly along the line of new
+faces. Then his gaze returned to McKay. His mouth set and his
+countenance turned hard. He spoke curtly to Yuara, who replied with one
+word. After another long, unpleasant look at McKay, who stared coldly
+back at him, Rana grunted a few words and re-entered the house.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o, nonplussed by the frigidity of the subchief where he had
+expected gratitude or at least hospitality, glanced questioningly at
+Yuara. But the young man stood mute, looking straight ahead.</p>
+
+<p>"The subchief says we shall enter and see the chief. We must leave our
+guns outside."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't like that," muttered McKay. "That subchief looks ugly."</p>
+
+<p>"But we must obey or provoke a fight, Capitao. Besides, our rifles would
+be useless inside, as they would be instantly seized if we lifted them.
+So let us make the best of it. But I think you can carry your pistols
+with you; they are covered by the holsters, and I do not believe these
+people know what they are. And since Rana spoke only of guns, we will
+keep our machetes. Come."</p>
+
+<p>"Wait a second."</p>
+
+<p>McKay dived a hand into his haversack and brought forth a heavy hunting
+knife with a gaudy red-and-white bone handle, sheathed and attached to a
+leather belt.</p>
+
+<p>"Brought this along as a present for some Indian who might do us a good
+turn," he explained. "Been thinking of giving it to Yuara, but now I'll
+pass it to the chief. Might make a difference. All right, let's go."</p>
+
+<p>With confident tread, but with some misgiving, the five advanced,
+leaving guns and packs on the ground. One by one they bent low and got
+through the doorway. Yuara, with a word to a clubman and a motion to the
+equipment, followed the whites, trailed in turn by his three companions
+of the forest. The clubman, after a curious inspection of the packs,
+stood on guard among them, his bludgeon grasped loosely but
+suggestively, ready to prevent any undue inquisitiveness by the rest.
+But soon he found himself alone, for the other tribesmen transferred
+their attention and themselves to the interior of the <i>maloca</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Within the house the soldiers of fortune halted a moment, adjusting
+their vision to the sudden diminution of light. Except for the sunshine
+pouring in at the smoke hole above and at the tiny door behind, the only
+light in the big room came from small cooking fires scattered about the
+place, and for the moment details were withheld from the newcomers'
+sight. Then they found themselves in what seemed a labyrinth of poles
+and hammocks.</p>
+
+<p>Through this confusion Yuara passed with familiar step, and in his wake
+the travelers went to a central fire around which was a comparatively
+clear space. Beyond, in a big hammock dyed with the symbolic scarlet and
+black and tasseled with many squirrel tails, sat a fat, small-eyed,
+heavy-jawed man whose elaborate feather dress and authoritative air
+proclaimed him chief. Beside him stood Rana and another subchief, lean
+and somber-faced. Behind this bulwark of tribal might huddled the women
+and children, staring wide-eyed. As the visitors stopped and returned
+the chief's unwinking regard the warriors packed themselves at their
+backs, blocking all chance of exit.</p>
+
+<p>When the shuffle of feet had died and no sound was audible, Yuara began
+to talk. In his deliberate way he told the complete narrative of his
+journey, which previously he had sketched only in outline. His three
+companions corroborated his tale from time to time by nods, and when the
+discovery of the slain hunter's bones was described one of those three
+stepped forward and laid the dead man's weapons on the ground before the
+chief. As Yuara went on he touched his bandaged arm and pointed to McKay
+and Knowlton. And as he concluded he motioned toward Louren&ccedil;o.</p>
+
+<p>Ignorant of the Indian language, but guessing the nature of his talk
+from his motions, the Americans stood patiently awaiting the next move.
+For a time all three of the chiefs remained silent; but all of them
+studied McKay, standing bolt upright with arms folded and the
+belt-wrapped knife partly concealed in the hollow of one elbow. Though
+it was evident that Yuara had given the captain full credit for saving
+his life, the faces of the head men showed no sign of friendliness. In
+fact, their expressions were distinctly ominous.</p>
+
+<p>At length the chief turned his eyes to Louren&ccedil;o. The veteran bushman
+promptly stepped forward and said his say. At the end he turned, took
+from McKay the knife, unrolled the belt, and dangled the weapon before
+the eyes of the rulers. They stared at it in obvious ignorance of its
+character. Not until the Brazilian drew the blade from its sheath and
+the glint of steel struck their vision did they show recognition. Then
+Chief Suba grunted, his little eyes lit up, and he reached for it.</p>
+
+<p>For a few minutes he sat gloating over the gift, admiring the bone
+handle, hefting the weight of the long blade, while the subchiefs gazed
+in envy. When he looked up his face was beaming. But then the sour-faced
+subchief at his left hand muttered something, and Suba's visage
+darkened. His eyes rested again on McKay, went to the bandaged arm of
+Yuara, dropped to his knife&mdash;the first steel knife ever owned by him or
+any man of the Suba tribe&mdash;and rose again to the black-bearded captain.
+Abruptly then he spoke out.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o stared in blank astonishment. After a puzzled moment he shook
+his head as if unable to believe he had heard aright. Suba, scowling,
+repeated what he had said. Louren&ccedil;o shook his head again, this time in
+vehement denial, and began to talk. But Suba, rising with surprising
+agility for a man of his weight, stopped him imperiously and spoke with
+finality. Slowly the Brazilian nodded and turned to his captain.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not understand this, Capitao. But these are the words of the
+chief:</p>
+
+<p>"'The white man with the black beard tries a trick, but it does not
+deceive the free men of the forest. The thing which he thinks to be
+hidden in his own heart is known to Suba and his chiefs. It is known
+also to the chief Monitaya, and to his chiefs, and to his men also. The
+white man is bold. And now his own boldness shall be his death.</p>
+
+<p>"'Since the white man has said he goes to visit the chief Monitaya, and
+since by some demon's power the white man has saved the life of Yuara,
+who is a man of Suba, the men of Suba will allow him to go in peace from
+this place. But Suba will see that he and his companions go to Monitaya,
+who will know how to deal with his visitors. The men of Suba will take
+the strangers at once to the canoes and carry them to Monitaya.</p>
+
+<p>"'If the white man of the black beard and the black mind thought the men
+of the jungle blind to the foulness he would do here, he is a fool. It
+is useless for him or his men to lie and say they know not what Suba
+means. Let him look into his own heart and he will know well.</p>
+
+<p>"'Suba has spoken.'</p>
+
+<p>"Something is wrong, Capitao, but I do not know what it is. It will do
+no good to argue. Let us go at once."</p>
+
+<p>Suba snarled commands to the warriors. They trooped toward the door.
+Without another word or glance at the three chiefs Louren&ccedil;o stalked
+after the Indians, and his comrades followed with stiff dignity.</p>
+
+<p>Outside, the savages picked up the rifles and packs and carried them to
+the creek, where small canoes lay. The five strangers were allowed to
+crowd themselves together in a four-man canoe, but their guns and packs
+were distributed among four other dugouts, into which armed paddlers
+entered. Other Indians brought provisions to the outgoing craft. In a
+very short time the leading canoe started off downstream, followed by
+the boat of the white men, behind which the other craft pressed close
+and vigilant.</p>
+
+<p>They swung in among the trees, and the <i>maloca</i> of Suba was blotted out.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
+
+<h3>BLACKBEARD</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Well," said Knowlton, after a period of silent paddling, "we have met
+the enemy and we are his'n. No harm done so far, though, and if old man
+Calisaya, or whatever his name is, wants to act nasty we can send him
+and a few others along the road to glory with our gats. We'll travel the
+same road, of course, but we'll take company with us."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si</i>, senhor," Pedro agreed. "And besides your pistols we still have
+our machetes. Yet I believe Louren&ccedil;o's words to the chief Monitaya will
+make all well. But I cannot help wondering&mdash;" He glanced at McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm wondering, too, Pedro," said the captain. "It's hardly possible
+that these people know why we're here, and hardly likely that they have
+any interest in the Raposa. Lord knows I've nothing else up my sleeve.
+It's a riddle to me."</p>
+
+<p>It remained a riddle to the rest, for no explanation could be gleaned
+from the Mayorunas. At the first halt, which did not come until nearly
+sundown, the Americans discovered that one of the men in the fore canoe
+was Yuara, who had been lying in the bottom of the craft and sleeping
+all the afternoon. From him Louren&ccedil;o attempted to get information as to
+the reason for Suba's enmity&mdash;but in vain. The tall fellow spoke not a
+word in reply, and his face remained unreadable.</p>
+
+<p>Camp was made, and by Yuara's direction the packs of the adventurers
+were restored to them. The rifles, however, remained under guard of
+savages appointed by the subchief's son. When the night meal was out of
+the way nothing remained but to seek hammocks and sleep, for further
+attempts at conversation by Louren&ccedil;o met with the same silent rebuff
+from every cannibal addressed. None showed active hostility by either
+look or manner, but it was plain that between wild and civilized men
+stood a wall&mdash;a wall not too high for the jungle dwellers to leap over
+in deadly action if occasion should be given. Wherefore the whites held
+themselves aloof, said little, and slept early.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad Yuara is with us," Louren&ccedil;o said. "As he promised, he does
+not forget what was done for him. He will keep this band in control, and
+unless I am much mistaken he will tell Monitaya all he knows of us,
+which surely will not do us any harm. At any rate, we can sleep in
+safety to-night. And since it does no good to puzzle about what is gone
+by or to worry about what has not yet to come to pass, let us sleep
+now."</p>
+
+<p>"Ho-hum!" yawned Tim. "Renzo, ye spill more solid sense to the square
+inch than any feller I seen in a long time. We're here because we're
+here; to-day's dead and to-morrer ain't born yet, and li'l' Timmy Ryan
+hits the hay right now. Night, gents."</p>
+
+<p>So, surrounded by man eaters, the trailers of the Raposa slept far more
+securely than on any night down the river when their companions had been
+supposedly civilized Peruvians. Whether a watch was kept by their guards
+during the night they neither knew nor cared, since they had no
+intention of attempting escape.</p>
+
+<p>They awoke to find the men of Suba diminished in number by half. Yuara,
+deigning to speak for the first time since leaving the <i>maloca</i>,
+explained that the absent men had gone hunting for their breakfasts.
+Before long the hunters came straggling back, bearing monkeys and birds,
+which were divided among their companions. None of this meat was offered
+to the prisoners, who ate unconcernedly from their pack rations. Tim,
+after watching the Indians sink their sharp-filed teeth into broiled
+monkey haunches and tear the meat from the bones, snorted and turned his
+back to them.</p>
+
+<p>"Look like a gang o' bloody-faced devils gobblin' babies," he muttered.
+"I'll believe now they're cannibals, all right."</p>
+
+<p>So uncomfortably apt was his simile that the others grimaced and turned
+their eyes elsewhere until the savage meal was finished. Then their
+attention became riveted on a queer proceeding at the canoe wherein
+Yuara had journeyed yesterday.</p>
+
+<p>To the gunwales amidships two of the men fastened a couple of small
+crotched posts. In the forks was laid a pole, crosswise of the boat, and
+from this, by slender fiber cords, four slabs of wood were hung.
+Strolling down to the canoe, the travelers found that athwart its bottom
+had been laid a crosspiece supporting two shorter crotched posts,
+between which stretched another transverse pole; and from this pole in
+turn the lower ends of the four slabs had been suspended. Now the
+savages joined the tips of each pair of slabs by carved end sections,
+and the contrivance seemed to be complete&mdash;a sort of grate, its bars
+sloping at an angle of forty-five degrees.</p>
+
+<p>As the Americans eyed the arrangement in perplexity, one of the crew
+picked up from the bow of the canoe a pair of mallets the heads of which
+were wrapped in hide. With these he struck the slabs in rapid
+succession. Out rolled four notes of astonishing volume&mdash;the first four
+notes of the musical scale. Again and again he ran them over, then
+stopped. The deep tones thrummed away along the creek and died.</p>
+
+<p>"By George! a big xylophone!" Knowlton exclaimed, admiringly.</p>
+
+<p>"It sure talks right out loud," said Tim. "Lot o' class to these guys,
+at that. Bet this is their brass band, and we'll go rip-snortin' into
+the next town like we was on parade. Oughter have some flags to hang up
+in the boats, and mebbe a drum corps to help out. Wisht I had a tin
+whistle or somethin' and I'd join the orchester. I can toot a whistle
+fine."</p>
+
+<p>"My favorite instrument is the old-fashioned dinner horn," laughed
+Knowlton. "But I think you're wrong&mdash;this is some kind of signaling
+apparatus."</p>
+
+<p>"You have it right, senhor," Louren&ccedil;o affirmed. "I have heard this sort
+of thing used, though I never before saw the instrument itself. Those
+notes will carry at least five miles, and the cannibals send messages by
+striking the bars in different order. This run which we have just heard
+is always used first, and no message is sent until a reply is received."</p>
+
+<p>"Bush telegraph," nodded McKay. "First call your operator and then shoot
+the message in code. Pretty ingenious for a bunch of absolute savages."</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o turned to Yuara and asked a question. Yuara curtly replied.</p>
+
+<p>"He says, Capitao, that this is to tell Monitaya we come. But we now are
+too far off for Monitaya's men to hear. The bars are made ready before
+starting so that they can be used as soon as we are within hearing. He
+says also that we start now."</p>
+
+<p>The Mayorunas already were entering their canoes. With cool deliberation
+the whites gathered up their equipment and settled themselves for the
+journey at whose end lay either life or death. The boat of Yuara
+started, and once more the flotilla was on its way.</p>
+
+<p>For an hour or more it swung on among the forested hills before the
+telegraph instrument was put to use. Then it paused, and the sonorous
+voice of the xylophone spoke to the jungle. A period of waiting brought
+no reply.</p>
+
+<p>The canoe moved on for a mile. Again the mallets beat the wood in the
+ascending scale of the call. And then, faint, mellow, far off, sounded
+the answer.</p>
+
+<p>While every man sat silent the bars boomed out their fateful news. Slow,
+brief, deep as a bell tolling a dirge, a reply rolled back. And with the
+solemnity of a funeral cort&eacute;ge the canoes once more moved on, unhurried,
+inexorable, the measured swing of the paddles beating like a pulse of
+doom.</p>
+
+<p>At length the crew of Yuara held their paddles. Yuara himself turned
+toward the second canoe and talked a minute. A signal to his men, and
+his boat proceeded. All the others remained where they were.</p>
+
+<p>"He goes to Monitaya to speak of us," said Louren&ccedil;o. "He will return. We
+have only to wait."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah," grunted Tim, disgustedly. "We'll wait till night if he takes as
+long to go through his rigmarole as he done yesterday. If I got to fight
+I want to hop to it, not set round in the shade o' the shelterin' palm
+while them guys are heatin' up the stewpot. This waitin' stuff gits my
+goat."</p>
+
+<p>"You might sing us a song, senhor, to pass the time," Pedro suggested,
+with a tight-lipped smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, I'll do that, jest to show these guys I don't give a rip. And
+while their ears are dazzled by me melody I'm goin' to git me holster
+unbottoned and me masheet kinder limbered up. Git set. Here it comes:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Ol' Hindyburg thought he was swell,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Pa-a-arley-voo!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He made the kids in Belgium yell,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Pa-a-arley-voo!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But the Yanks come over with shot and shell<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And Hindyburg he run like hell,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Rinkydinky-parley-voo!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Under cover of his outbreak, which made the savages clutch their weapons
+and glare at him in mingled suspicion and amazement, there proceeded a
+furtive loosening of pistols and machetes.</p>
+
+<p>"A noble sentiment, and more or less appropriate," grinned Knowlton.
+"But don't give them another spasm for a few minutes, or they may rise
+up and kill us all in self-defense. They're on the ragged edge now."</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, them guys dunno how to appreciate good singin'. But I should worry;
+I got me gat fixed now like I want it."</p>
+
+<p>Time dragged past. The Americans and Brazilians smoked and exchanged
+casual comments on subjects far removed from their present environment.
+The Mayorunas watched them with unceasing vigilance, as if expecting a
+sudden break for life and liberty. Their chief had intimated that
+Monitaya would kill these men; and now was their last chance to try to
+dodge death. But neither the black-bearded McKay nor any of his mates
+manifested the slightest concern. And at last the canoe of Yuara came
+back.</p>
+
+<p>It came, however, without Yuara himself. The son of Rana had remained at
+the <i>malocas</i> ahead, whence he sent the command to advance. Closely
+hemmed in by the men of Suba, the white men's boat surged onward at a
+brisk pace. Around a bend in the creek it went, and at once the domain
+of Monitaya leaped into view.</p>
+
+<p>Two big tribal houses, each considerably larger than the one of Suba,
+rose pompously in a wide cleared space beside the stream. Before them,
+ranged in a semicircle, stood hundreds of Mayorunas&mdash;men, women,
+children&mdash;all silently watching the canoes of the newcomers. In the
+center of the arc, like the hub of a human half wheel, a small knot of
+men waited in aloof dignity, four of them adorned with the ornate
+feather dresses of subchiefs, backed by a dozen tall, muscular savages,
+each armed with a huge war club. Before all stood a powerful,
+magnificently proportioned savage belted with a wide girdle of squirrel
+tails, decked with necklaces of jaguar teeth and ebony nuts, crowned by
+plumes which in loftiness and splendor surpassed all other headgear
+present&mdash;the great chief Monitaya.</p>
+
+<p>At the shore, beside a row of empty canoes, Yuara was waiting. He
+mentioned for his men to bring their dugouts to the regular landing
+place, and when they obeyed he gave commands. Then he turned and walked
+toward Monitaya.</p>
+
+<p>"I go," stated Louren&ccedil;o, rising. "You stay here until called. Yuara has
+told his men to leave all weapons in the canoes."</p>
+
+<p>He walked away after the son of Rana, and if any misgiving was in his
+heart it did not show in his confident step. Halting before the big
+chief, he began talking as coolly as if there were not the least doubt
+of welcome for himself and those with him. Monitaya gave no sign of
+recognition, of friendliness, or of enmity. Proud, statuesque, he stood
+motionless, his deep eyes resting on those of the Brazilian.</p>
+
+<p>"Sultry weather," remarked McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Just so, Capitao," agreed Pedro, narrow eyed. "We shall soon know
+whether we shall have storm."</p>
+
+<p>"Indications are for violent thunder and lightning soon," Knowlton
+contributed. "See those husky clubmen awaiting? Looks as if a public
+execution were about to be pulled off."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah. But say, ain't that chief a reg'lar he-man, though! No
+pot-bellied fathead like that there, now, Suby guy. Hope I don't have to
+drill him. I bet I won't, neither. He looks like he had brains."</p>
+
+<p>Hoping Tim was right, but dubious, all watched the progress of the
+parley. Louren&ccedil;o evidently was stating his case in logical sequence,
+recalling to the chief's mind the time when he had led him to revenge
+against the Peccaries of Peru, then going on to tell of the arrival of
+the strangers and the object of their search. Yuara's sudden, quick
+glance at him showed that the Raposa had been mentioned for the first
+time. A little later his face became slightly sullen, and the watchers
+guessed that Louren&ccedil;o was now referring in somewhat uncomplimentary
+terms to the treatment received in the <i>maloca</i> of Suba. Soon after that
+the Brazilian ended his speech.</p>
+
+<p>In a deep, quiet tone Monitaya spoke first to Louren&ccedil;o, then to one of
+his subchiefs. The bushman beckoned to his waiting companions. At the
+same time the subchief stepped out and called two names. As McKay,
+Knowlton, Tim, and Pedro arose and stepped ashore with the weaponless
+men of Suba, out from the great human arc came two men. All advanced
+toward the chief. And though the Americans were studying the central
+figures as they walked, they also noticed that the pair of Mayorunas who
+had been summoned were lame. One walked with a stiff knee, the other as
+if a whole leg was paralyzed.</p>
+
+<p>"Squad&mdash;halt!" muttered McKay. A step and a half and the four stood
+aligned and alert, two strides from Monitaya.</p>
+
+<p>The eyes of the chief dwelt long on McKay, and they were hard eyes.
+Without shifting his gaze he grunted a few words. The two crippled
+Indians stumped forward and stared into McKay's face. Through a long
+minute the Americans felt a sinister tension grow in the air about them.
+Then, slowly, the cripples turned about and faced their ruler. In the
+tones of men sure of themselves, they spoke one word.</p>
+
+<p>With the utterance of that word the tension broke. Through the long line
+of watching tribesmen ran a murmur. The clubmen relaxed from their ready
+poise. The subchiefs glanced at one another as if disappointed. And the
+stern face of Monitaya himself was transformed by a wide, friendly
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>A sweeping gesture and the cordial timbre of the chief's voice told the
+Americans plainly what Louren&ccedil;o translated a moment later.</p>
+
+<p>"We are welcome, comrades. We shall sleep in the <i>maloca</i> of Monitaya
+himself and a feast shall be made for us. Our lives have just hung on
+one word, but now that the word is spoken we are safe. I cannot tell you
+more now, for I do not wholly understand this matter myself as yet&mdash;but
+I shall learn. Now is the time, Capitao to give presents, if you have
+any for the chief."</p>
+
+<p>"I have. But our packs are in the canoe, and I'll be hanged if I'll make
+a beast of burden of myself at this stage of the game."</p>
+
+<p>"I will have all the packs brought up, Capitao. The men of Suba took
+them from us at their <i>maloca</i>; now they shall restore them before all
+these people."</p>
+
+<p>He addressed Monitaya affably, then spoke more brusquely to Yuara. That
+young man, whose previous austerity now had dissolved into open
+friendliness, uttered four words. Immediately his men returned to the
+canoes and brought up not only the packs, but the rifles.</p>
+
+<p>From his blanket roll McKay brought forth a cloth-wrapped package out of
+which he drew a half-ax, its blade gleaming dully under a protective
+coating of grease, which he swiftly swabbed off. From his haversack he
+produced a heavy chain of ruby-red beads. Under the bright sun the beads
+glowed like living things, and the glittering steel flashed back a
+dazzling beam. The two gifts together had cost considerably less than
+ten dollars in New York, but to the chieftain they were priceless
+treasures; and as McKay, with a formal bow, extended them to him, his
+face shone with delight. Yet he made no such greedy grab for them as had
+been displayed by Suba when tendered the knife. His acceptance was
+achieved with a calm dignity which brought a twinkle of approval to the
+eyes of the white men.</p>
+
+<p>In the same dignified manner he led the way to the <i>maloca</i> which
+evidently was the older of the two and which had always been his home.
+The semicircle of his subjects broke up into a disorderly crowd which
+streamed after him and his guests or surrounded the men of Suba with
+holiday greetings. Within the tribal house the adventurers proceeded to
+the central space where burned the chief's fire. There Monitaya ordered
+certain hammocks removed to make room for those of the visitors. Soon
+the travelers were seated at ease in their hanging beds, their packs and
+rifles lying on the ground beneath them, while near at hand clustered
+groups of Mayorunas, staring at them in na&iuml;ve curiosity.</p>
+
+<p>Pedro drew a long breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Senhores, that was a very close call," he declared. "As Louren&ccedil;o says,
+our lives have hung on one word. What was that word, comrade?"</p>
+
+<p>"The word was, 'No,'" answered Louren&ccedil;o. "Monitaya asked those two
+crippled men, 'Is this the man?' As you saw, they looked at the capitao,
+giving no attention to the rest of us. Then they said, 'No.' You will
+remember that the capitao was the one whom Suba also picked upon. As
+soon as Monitaya finishes talking with those men I shall ask him what
+all this means."</p>
+
+<p>The big chief was giving directions to a score of young fellows, who
+presently scattered to various parts of the house and accoutered
+themselves for hunting. Thereupon Louren&ccedil;o approached Monitaya with the
+familiarity of former acquaintance, being received with a good-humored
+smile. For a time the two conversed. As they talked the smile of the
+ruler faded and his face grew dark, while into the Brazilian's voice
+came a wrathful growl. Finally both nodded. Louren&ccedil;o returned to his
+hammock, frowning.</p>
+
+<p>"Capitao, it is all because of your black hair and beard. Through all
+the <i>malocas</i> of the Mayorunas, far and near, has gone the word to watch
+for a big, black-bearded man who is neither a Brazilian nor a Peruvian,
+but of some country unknown to these people; and when such a man is
+caught, to kill him and his companions without mercy. And the reason for
+such a command is this:</p>
+
+<p>"For many moons the Mayorunas, especially those of the smaller and
+weaker <i>malocas</i>, have been losing women. From time to time sudden raids
+have been made by gangs of gun-carrying Peruvian Indians and
+<i>mesti&ccedil;os</i>&mdash;half-breeds&mdash;who shot down the defenders of the houses
+before they could reach their weapons, and carried off girls. This, of
+course, is nothing new here, for such things have happened occasionally
+for many years. But within the past five years there has been a
+difference in these attacks which has made them much more deadly.</p>
+
+<p>"These raids used to be made always at night, and they were few and far
+between. But of late they have come about also in the day, at times when
+almost all the men of the small <i>malocas</i> were far out in the forest
+hunting meat and the women had little protection. Several chiefs have
+been killed by the raiders, who seemed to be acting according to an
+agreed plan, to be organized for this work, and to know when to strike
+and how to get away quickly. And what is more, the men who did this were
+not chance parties who came only to get women for themselves and then
+stayed away. The same men came back time after time.</p>
+
+<p>"A few of these were killed, but only a few; and all the dead were
+Peruvians. Being dead, they could tell nothing. But the Mayorunas felt
+that all these raids were directed by one mind. And they became sure of
+this when one captured girl escaped by killing a Peruvian with his own
+knife and returned to her own <i>maloca</i>. She said the raiders took her
+and the other girls to the big man with the black beard, who waited at a
+safe place a day's march from the tribal house.</p>
+
+<p>"A few weeks later another small <i>maloca</i> several miles from here was
+attacked at night while two men of Monitaya were there, having stayed
+out too late on a hunting trip and taken refuge with their neighbors
+until day. Both these men were hit and crippled by bullets in the wild
+shooting that opened the attack. One was struck in the knee, the other
+in the lower part of the back. But both caught a glimpse of the leader's
+face and saw that he was the black-bearded man himself.</p>
+
+<p>"So you see, Capitao, why we have been near death. Suba and Monitaya
+both thought you were the man. We were lucky to escape alive from Suba,
+and still more lucky that hero were two men who knew the face of the
+blackbeard."</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf!" barked McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Capitao, it must be the German&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I know it's Schwandorf! And I know his game! He's a slaver!"</p>
+
+<p>"A slaver?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's it. Knew I'd seen that sneak before. He worked the same game in
+British Guiana eight years ago on a small scale. Had a gang of tough
+bush niggers from over in Dutch Guiana to do his dirty work. Stole
+Macusi girls&mdash;they're the best-looking Indians in B. G.&mdash;and sold them
+like cattle to gold miners. Cleaned up quite a pot before the English
+got on to him, but had to get out of the country on the hot foot&mdash;didn't
+have time to take his gold with him. His name wasn't Schwandorf over
+there, and he had no beard; he was thinner, too, and posed as a Russian;
+but he's the man. Must have made his get-away by the back door&mdash;down the
+Branco to the Amazon. Now he's running Mayoruna girls into Peru. He
+could sell them to rubber men or miners and make good money, eh,
+Louren&ccedil;o?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure. And that's why he wanted to kill off his Peruvians&mdash;they knew too
+much; probably were trying to bleed him for hush money. He must have a
+regular slave route and a gang of border cutthroats to do his
+raiding&mdash;men who don't go downriver. Murderer, slaver&mdash;wonder how many
+other crimes are on his soul."</p>
+
+<p>"Them two are enough," growled Tim. "And he 'ain't got no soul."</p>
+
+<p>"No soul," echoed Pedro. "You have said it, Senhor Tim. And if ever
+these people capture him he soon will have no body."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
+
+<h3>FEVER</h3>
+
+
+<p>In the <i>maloca</i> of Monitaya a feast was in the making.</p>
+
+<p>Fires glowed all about the great room. Hunters came in, bearing birds or
+beasts which were placed before the tribal ruler for inspection and
+approval. Fishermen armed with tridents or crude harpoons arrived with
+sizable trophies of their skill. And at length two young bowmen advanced
+proudly with a freshly killed wild hog. After glancing at this the chief
+added to his usual nod a few words of praise which made the huntsmen
+grin with all their pointed teeth.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o, squatting comfortably on a jaguar skin beside the lavishly
+decorated hammock of Monitaya, carried on a lazy-toned monologue which
+probably dealt with his various experiences since his last meeting with
+these people and which appeared to interest and amuse the chief. The
+others, lolling back in mingled fatigue and relief from tension, studied
+the interior of the place and watched the activities around them.</p>
+
+<p>As in the <i>maloca</i> of Suba, the small forest of poles and hammocks
+seemed a higgledy-piggledy maze wherein was neither beginning nor end.
+Yet, as the newcomers took time to observe it, they presently found that
+the confusion was only apparent and that there existed an efficient and
+orderly arrangement. The hammocks, seemingly slung from any available
+pair of poles in utter disregard of one another, really were arranged in
+triangles. On the ground under the hanging beds lay woven grass mats and
+hides of the sloth and the jaguar; and in the space inclosed by each
+trio of hammocks burned a small fire. The hammocks were the beds of men,
+the mats and furs the couches of women and children, and each fire was
+the focal point of the family residing in that triangle.</p>
+
+<p>Above the hammocks, from transverse poles, were suspended the weapons of
+the men: the great bows, the long blowguns, the fighting spears whose
+deadly points now were sheathed in thick scabbards of grass, the
+unpoisoned fish spears and harpoons. From these poles also hung the
+quivers of arrows and darts and the small rubber-covered pouches wherein
+a little fresh poison was carried by warrior or hunter. Thus both the
+ground and the air were utilized, and by the compactness of the
+arrangement an entire family with its worldly goods, was enabled to live
+in a comparatively small space. Looking around the wide room and
+remembering the big half circle of Indians who had stood outside, the
+two ex-officers estimated that in this tribal house and its twin dwelt
+seven hundred people.</p>
+
+<p>Tim and Pedro, less interested in the Mayoruna domestic economy than in
+the Mayorunas themselves, were scanning the figures moving about in the
+reddish haze of smoke. Most of them were women, all nude and na&iuml;vely
+unconscious of any need of clothing. Like the men of the tribe, they
+bore the red and black rings and streaks on face and body; but, unlike
+the males, each wore a facial ornament in the shape of an oval piece of
+wood thrust through the lower lip. From time to time those near by
+glanced up from their work and gave the new men unmistakably friendly
+looks&mdash;particularly several young but well-grown girls who obviously
+were still unmated. In fact, these last smiled openly at the lithe,
+handsome Pedro, and red Tim was by no means overlooked.</p>
+
+<p>"I got me orders," said Tim, <i>sotto voce</i>, "and I'm danged if I crack a
+smile back at them girls. But I sure feel like grinnin'. Watch yourself,
+old-timer; they're tryin' to flirt with ye."</p>
+
+<p>Pedro, mindful of watchful eyes, turned his gaze to Tim's face before
+allowing himself to smile. Then he laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not fear," he said. "My heart is still my own."</p>
+
+<p>"Same here. Specially when I remember these females would grin jest the
+same if them club swingers had spattered our brains all over the front
+yard awhile back. But I wisht sombody'd give the girls a nightie or
+somethin' to wear. I been around some and I seen quite a lot, but I
+ain't used to bein' vamped by a bunch of undressed kids with goo-goo
+eyes the size of a plate o' fish balls. I'm only a bashful country kid
+from N'Yawk."</p>
+
+<p>"Live and learn," chuckled Pedro. "And clothes really have nothing to do
+with modesty."</p>
+
+<p>"True for ye. Clothes is mostly a disguise, anyhow, specially with
+women, and an awful expense, besides. These guys are lucky, I'll say;
+they 'ain't got to buy their wives no fur coats or silk stockin's or
+nothin'. All the same, I got all I can do to hold me face straight when
+I see these li'l owl-eyes givin' us the glad look. I'd oughter stayed
+back in Remate de Males, where a feller can wink at a woman without
+gittin' all his pardners massacreed."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps it would not be fatal, now that we are guests of the chief. But
+it is best to take no chances."</p>
+
+<p>"Safety first. That's us. Grin at one of 'em and another might git sore
+because she missed out, and first thing ye know ye've started somethin'
+without meanin' to. Let's look at somethin' harmless&mdash;one o' them
+poisoned spears, f'r instance."</p>
+
+<p>At that moment Monitaya and Louren&ccedil;o both arose, the chief to inspect in
+person the progress of the arrangements for the feast, the bushman to
+return to his companions with additional news.</p>
+
+<p>"Monitaya tells me," he said, "that his people have lost girls in other
+ways than by the murderous attacks of the gunmen. A number of young
+women who have gone into the bush near their <i>malocas</i> to get urucu and
+genipapa, which they use to make the red and black body dyes, have
+disappeared. So have several who went to the creeks for their daily
+baths. Warriors who tried to trail them have found the footprints of a
+few men, but always lost them at water. The girls had been taken away in
+canoes. Even this tribe of Monitaya, which never has been attacked by
+night raiders because it is too strong, has not been safe from these
+stealthy woman stealings by daylight. Three girls have been taken from
+here within the past two moons, and others have disappeared from other
+<i>malocas</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Hm! And Schwandorf hasn't been here recently," said Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"No. It must be that he has agents who work when he is not here, or else
+this is done without his knowledge. I have told Monitaya what I know of
+Schwandorf, and he agrees that the women are taken as slaves. I have
+also told him that when we return down the river we shall see that
+Schwandorf troubles the Mayorunas no more."</p>
+
+<p>"Excellent," McKay approved. "Have you asked him about the Raposa?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet. It does not pay to hurry business with these people. After the
+feast is out of the way I will talk further with him."</p>
+
+<p>No more was said for a time. The five lounged at ease, sniffing the
+savory odors arising from the reddish clay pots and pans in which fruit,
+fish, or fowl was frying in tapir lard, or meat was stewing. At length a
+number of tall, shapely women, apparently the handsomest of their sex in
+the tribe, laid a number of small mats in a semicircle on the ground
+before the chief, and placed thereon a steaming array of edibles. Furs
+were placed outside the line of mats. From somewhere appeared all four
+of the subchiefs, accompanied by Yuara. Thereupon Monitaya, with a
+smiling nod to his guests, squatted within the arc. Forthwith the
+visitors advanced in a body, disposed themselves comfortably on the
+furs, and assailed the viands with a vigor that brought a delighted grin
+to the face of their barbaric host.</p>
+
+<p>Fried bananas, tender fish, broiled parrot which was not so tender, a
+thick stew of somewhat odorous meat seasoned with tart-tasting herbs,
+roast wild hog, and other things at whose identity the whites could not
+even guess, all were chewed and washed down with generous draughts of a
+rather sour liquid resembling beer. Remembering Louren&ccedil;o's previous
+warning, each man took care not to slight any portion of the meal or to
+show distaste with anything, whether it pleased the palate or not.
+Throughout the feast the tall women hovered near, bringing fresh
+supplies whenever a dearth of any edible appeared to threaten. And when
+at last the feasters were full to repletion Monitaya himself designated
+what he considered titbits to tempt them further.</p>
+
+<p>"Gosh! if I eat any more I'll bust, and I'm danged if I'll bust jest to
+satisfy this guy," asserted Tim. Wherewith he put one hand under his jaw
+and patted his stomach with the other, signifying that he was filled to
+the throat. Pedro lifted his elbows, dropped his jaw, and made motions
+as if gasping for air. The chieftain grinned widely. The grin became a
+chuckling when Tim, after a vain attempt to rise, lay back at full
+length on his rug and begged some one to make a cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess I'll have to follow Tim's example," confessed Knowlton. And he
+too stretched out. Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o also sprawled back. McKay, after
+glancing around, compromised with his dignity by leaning on one elbow.
+The subchiefs and Yuara, with slight smiles, relaxed in various
+postures. Monitaya alone arose&mdash;not without some difficulty&mdash;and got
+into his hammock, where he beamed down at them.</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose this is a compliment to the chief," smiled McKay. "He thinks he
+has eaten us helpless."</p>
+
+<p>"Speakin' for li'l old Tim Ryan, that ain't no joke, neither. Lookit all
+the girls givin' us the laff. Who are them tall ones that's been rushin'
+the grub? Waitresses or somethin'?"</p>
+
+<p>"Those are the chief's wives," Louren&ccedil;o explained.</p>
+
+<p>"Huh? Gosh! he's one brave guy, that feller! Two&mdash;four&mdash;six&mdash;eight&mdash;nine
+of 'em! Swell lookers, too. I s'pose he has his pick o' the whole crowd
+here."</p>
+
+<p>"He does not have to pick them Senhor Tim. They pick him. He and the
+subchiefs are the only ones who can take more than one wife. When a girl
+wishes to become the wife of the great chief or of a subchief, she works
+for months making feather dresses and necklaces and hammocks, and when
+these are done she gives them all to him. If he likes her well enough he
+accepts the gifts and allows her to be a wife to him."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah? And she's flattered to death, I s'pose. Wisht they'd start
+somethin' like that up home, or, anyways, fix it so's a feller could get
+an even break. Way it is now, a feller blows in every dollar he's got,
+and then when he's fixin' to git the ring the girl leaves him flat for
+some other guy that 'ain't spent his dough yet. Yo-ho-hum! I'm goin' to
+take a snooze right there on the table. Wake me up, somebody, when the
+next mess call blows."</p>
+
+<p>And with no further ado he shut his eyes and drowsed.</p>
+
+<p>His companions lolled for some time, smoking and watching the family
+life of the ordinary members of the tribe, nodding now and then to some
+friendly-looking young fellow, but ignoring the mischievous glances of
+the girls. Monitaya himself lay back in his hammock and dozed. His
+wives, stepping nonchalantly among the strangers, cleared away the
+remnants of the feast by the simple process of eating them. Then they
+carried off the clay vessels.</p>
+
+<p>For another hour all hands rested. Then Monitaya sat up, stretched his
+big arms, looked casually around the house to see that all was well, and
+smiled down at his guests. Louren&ccedil;o, rising to a squat, began a new
+conversation. After a while he turned to McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"The Red Bones and the Mayorunas are neither friendly nor hostile toward
+each other, and there is little communication between them," he
+reported. "From those <i>malocas</i> to the town of the Red Bones is a
+journey of five long days, so the men of Monitaya hardly ever go there.</p>
+
+<p>"The Raposa whom we seek is known to the men of Monitaya, but he never
+has come here to the tribal houses. Hunters from this place have met him
+at times roving the wild forests, and some of the younger men fear him
+as the bad spirit of the jungle. The Mayorunas believe in two spirits or
+demons, one good and one bad, and the bad one is said to roam the
+wilderness, seeking lone wanderers, whom he kills and eats; the people
+sometimes hear this demon howling at night in the dark of the moon. So
+the young men have thought the Raposa might be this demon and have
+avoided him&mdash;it would do no good to try to kill a demon, and it would
+only make their own deaths more sure and horrible.</p>
+
+<p>"But the older men do not believe this. They say the wild man is of the
+Red Bone people, and that the reason why his bones are marked in red on
+his living body is that he is neither alive nor dead. If he were dead
+his body would be thrown into the water and left there until his bones
+were stripped by those cannibal fish, the piranhas, and then the bones
+would be dyed red and hung up in his hut, as is the custom among those
+people. If he were alive like other men he would not have those marks on
+his body, but would wear only the tribal face paint. The bone paint on
+him is a sign to all the <i>Ossos Vermelhos</i> that he is alive, but dead,
+and is not to be treated like other men."</p>
+
+<p>"Crazy!" exclaimed Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I think that is it. His body lives, but his mind is dead. Death in
+life."</p>
+
+<p>"Has he been seen lately?"</p>
+
+<p>The Brazilian repeated the question in the Indian tongue. The chief
+looked toward a certain hammock some distance off, called a name, raised
+an imperative hand. A slender savage came forward. To him the chief
+spoke, then to Louren&ccedil;o, who, as usual, relayed his information.</p>
+
+<p>"This young hunter saw him six days ago while following a wild-hog trail
+far out in the bush toward the Red Bone region. He came on the fresh
+track of a man who was following the same hogs, and later he caught up
+with that man. It was the red-boned wild man, and the wild man was very
+lame, having a hurt foot. They stood and looked at each other, and then
+the wild man walked away, watching him closely and ready to shoot with
+his bow. After he disappeared in the forest this hunter heard a long,
+shrill laugh and words that sounded like 'Podavi.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Podavi&mdash;Poor Davy!" ejaculated Knowlton. "That's he, sure enough! Then
+he's near his own town now&mdash;he won't go far with a bad foot. We'd better
+move as soon as we can. Ask about an escort."</p>
+
+<p>Once more the bushman conversed with Monitaya. The ruler's smile
+disappeared. For some time he sat gazing out over the heads of all,
+evidently weighing matters in his mind. When he responded, however, it
+was without hesitation.</p>
+
+<p>"There is neither friendliness nor enmity between the two peoples, as
+has been said," Louren&ccedil;o stated. "Our business among the Red Bones is
+our own affair, not that of Monitaya, and Monitaya will make no requests
+for us. But in order that we may go safely and return without harm he
+will send with us twenty of his best men. These men will have orders to
+protect us at all times, unless fighting is caused by our making a
+needless attack on the Red Bones. In that case the Mayorunas will do
+nothing to help us. They will only defend themselves."</p>
+
+<p>"Fair enough!" nodded McKay. "Tell him we'll start no fight. If any
+trouble comes it will be from the other fellows. We'll leave here
+to-morrow morning."</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o translated the promise into Mayoruna. But the chief seemed not
+to hear. His eyes had narrowed and were fixed on the face of Tim, who
+still lay on his back and was giving no attention to what went on.
+Following his look, the bushman gazed critically at the red-haired man.</p>
+
+<p>Tim's florid face had paled. His mouth was drawn and his eyes stared
+straight up, wide and glassy. Slowly he rolled his head from side to
+side.</p>
+
+<p>"Gee! Cap," he whispered, hoarsely, "I et too much. My head aches so I'm
+fair blind, and I'm burnin' up. Gimme some water."</p>
+
+<p>With a swift, simultaneous movement McKay and Knowlton put their hands
+on his forehead. Louren&ccedil;o and Pedro leaned closer and peered into his
+face. All four glanced at one another. Pedro nodded. His lips silently
+formed one dread word:</p>
+
+<p>"Fever!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>FRUIT OF THE TRAP</h3>
+
+
+<p>Heavy hypodermic doses of quinine, aided by Tim's rugged constitution
+and the fact that this was his first attack of the ravaging sickness of
+the swamp lands, pulled him back to safety within the next two days. To
+safety, but not to strength. Despite his stout-hearted assertions that
+he was ready to hit the trail and "walk the legs off the whole danged
+outfit," he was obviously in no condition to stand up under the grueling
+pack work that lay ahead. Wherefore, McKay, after consultation with the
+others of the party, and, through Louren&ccedil;o, with Monitaya, gave him
+inflexible orders.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll stay here. Stick in your hammock until you're in fighting trim.
+Then watch yourself. Don't pull any bonehead plays that'll get these
+people down on you. Take quinine daily according to Knowlton's
+directions&mdash;he's written them on the box. If we're not back in a
+fortnight Monitaya will send men to find out why. If they find that
+we're&mdash;not coming back&mdash;you will be guided to the river, where you can
+get down to the Nunes place."</p>
+
+<p>"But, Cap&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No argument!"</p>
+
+<p>"But listen here, for the love o' Mike! I ain't no old woman! I can
+stand the gaff! I'm goin' with the gang!"</p>
+
+<p>"You hear the orders!" McKay snapped, with assumed severity. "Think we
+want to be bothered with having you go sick again? You're out of shape
+and we've no room for lame ducks. You'll stay here!"</p>
+
+<p>Tim tried another tack.</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, but listen! Ye ain't goin' to desert a comrade amongst a lot o' man
+eaters&mdash;right in the place where I got sick, too. Soon's I git away from
+here I'll be all right&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That stuff's no good," the captain contradicted, with a tight smile.
+"You didn't get fever here. It's been in your system for days. You got
+it back on the river. These people don't have it, or any other kind of
+sickness. I've looked around and I know. As for the man eaters, they're
+mighty decent folks toward friends. We're friends. You'll be under the
+personal protection of Monitaya, and his word is good as gold. It's all
+arranged, and you're safer here than you would be in New York."</p>
+
+<p>In his heart the stubborn veteran knew McKay was right, but, like any
+other good soldier ordered to remain out of action, he grumbled and
+growled regardless. To which the ex-officers paid about as much
+attention as officers usually do. They went ahead with their own
+preparations.</p>
+
+<p>"Be of good heart, Senhor Tim," Pedro comforted, mischievously. "You
+will not lack for company. The chief has appointed two girls to wait
+upon you at all times."</p>
+
+<p>"Huh? Them two tall ones that's been hangin' round and fetchin' things?
+Are they mine?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. They are quite handsome in their way, and strong enough to help
+you about if your legs remain weak. In that case you will probably be
+allowed to put your arms around them for support. I almost wish I could
+get fever, too."</p>
+
+<p>Tim's voice remained a growl, but his face did not look so doleful as
+before.</p>
+
+<p>"Grrrumph! I always seem to draw big females, and I don't like 'em.
+Gimme somethin' cute like them li'l' frog dolls in Paree&mdash;sort o'
+pee-teet and chick. Still, a feller's got to do the best he can. Mebbe
+I'll live till you guys git back."</p>
+
+<p>With which he availed himself of the prerogative of a sick man and
+grinned openly at the two comely young women who stood near at hand,
+awaiting any demand for services. They were not at all backward in
+reciprocating, and, despite the tribal paint and their labial ornaments,
+the smiles softening their faces made them not half bad to look upon.</p>
+
+<p>"'O death, where is thy sting?'" laughed Knowlton. "Be careful not to
+strain your heart while we're away, Tim."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't worry. It's a tough old heart&mdash;been kicked round so much it's
+growed a shell like a turtle. Besides, I seen wild women before I ever
+come to the jungle."</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding his apparent resignation, however, Tim erupted once more
+when his comrades shouldered their packs, picked up their guns, and
+spoke their thanks and good-by to Monitaya. He arose on shaky legs and
+desperately offered to prove his fitness by a barehanded six-round bout
+with his commanding officer. When McKay, with sympathetic eyes but gruff
+tones, peremptorily squelched him he insisted on at least going to the
+door to watch his comrades start the journey from which they might or
+might not return. Nor did he take advantage of his chance to hug the
+girls on the way.</p>
+
+<p>With one arm slung over the shoulders of a wiry young warrior who
+grinned proudly at the honor of being selected to help a guest of the
+great chief, he followed the departing column out into the sunshine,
+where the entire tribe was assembled. And when the stalwart band had
+filed into the shadows of the trees and vanished he stood for a time
+unseeing and gulping at something in his throat.</p>
+
+<p>Straight away along a vague path beginning at the rear of the <i>malocas</i>
+marched the twenty-four, the two northerners bending under the weight of
+their packs, the pair of Brazilians sweeping the jungle with practiced
+eyes, the score of Mayorunas striding velvet footed, resplendent in
+brilliant new paint and headdresses, armed with the most powerful
+weapons of their tribe, and loftily conscious of the fact that they were
+chosen as Monitaya's best. Savage and civilized, each man was fit,
+alert, formidable. Nowhere in the loosely joined chain was a weak link.</p>
+
+<p>Before the departure the Americans had been at some trouble to rid
+themselves of Yuara, who, with his men, had tarried at the Monitaya
+<i>malocas</i> during Tim's sickness. While Knowlton was giving his ripped
+arm a final dressing he had calmly announced his intention of joining
+the expedition into the Red Bone country, and it had taken some skillful
+argument by Louren&ccedil;o to dissuade him without arousing his anger. All
+four of the adventurers would gladly have taken him along had he not
+been hampered by his injury, but, under the ruthless rule barring all
+men not in possession of all their strength, he had to be left.</p>
+
+<p>Now, as on the previous jungle marches, the way was led by two of the
+tribesmen, followed by the Brazilians and the Americans, after whom the
+main body of the escort strode in column. The leader and guide, one
+Tucu, was a veteran hunter, fighter, and bushranger, who had been more
+than once in the Red Bone region and withal possessed the cool judgment
+of mature years and long experience; a lean, silent man who, though not
+a subchief, might have made a good one if given the opportunity. With
+him Louren&ccedil;o had already arranged that a direct course should be
+followed, and that whenever dense undergrowth blockaded the way the
+machete men should take the lead.</p>
+
+<p>For some time no word was spoken. The path wound on, faintly marked, but
+easy enough to follow with Tucu picking it out. It was not one of the
+frequently used trails of the Monitaya people, but a mere <i>picada</i>, or
+hunter's track; yet even this had its pitfalls to guard the tribal
+house. Soon after leaving the clearing Tucu turned aside, passed between
+trees off the trail, went directly under one tree whose steep-slanting
+roots stood up off the ground like great down-pointing fingers, and
+returned to the path. All followed without comment.</p>
+
+<p>A considerable distance was covered before any further sign of the
+presence of ambushed death was shown by the savages. Then it came with
+tragic suddenness.</p>
+
+<p>Tucu grunted suddenly, and in one instant shifted his gait from the easy
+swing of the march to the prowl of a hunting animal. Behind him the line
+grew tense. The click of rifle hammers and of safeties being thrown off
+breech bolts blended with the faint slither of arrows being swiftly
+drawn from quivers. Eyes searched the bush, spying no enemy.</p>
+
+<p>Two more steps, and Tucu stopped, head thrust forward, eyes boring into
+something on the ground. The rest, taking care not to touch one
+another's weapons, crowded around and looked down at the huddled form of
+a man.</p>
+
+<p>A matted mass of black hair, a neck burned copper brown by sun, tattered
+cotton shirt and trousers, big, bare dirty feet, a rusty repeating rifle
+of heavy caliber&mdash;these were what they saw first. The man lay straight,
+his face in the dirt, his hands a little ahead as if he had been
+crawling forward at the moment of death. Tucu turned him on his back,
+revealing a blanched yellow-brown face which was proof positive of his
+race.</p>
+
+<p>"Peruvian," said Pedro.</p>
+
+<p>"What got him?" demanded Knowlton. "No wound on him."</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o questioned Tucu. The leader, who evidently knew just where to
+look, tore open the thin shirt at the left side and pointed to a tiny
+discoloration surrounding a red dot under the ribs. He muttered a few
+laconic words.</p>
+
+<p>"A blowgun trap," Louren&ccedil;o explained. "The gun is set a little way
+beyond here. This man, sneaking along the path, broke the little cord
+which shot the gun. The poisoned dart struck in his side. He must have
+pulled out the dart, but he could not go far before his legs became
+paralyzed, and he fell. Then, still trying to crawl, he died."</p>
+
+<p>Pedro picked up the dead man's gun and worked the lever. The weapon was
+fully loaded and showed no sign of recent firing. Pedro coolly pumped it
+empty, gathered up the blunt .44 cartridges, and pocketed them for his
+own use.</p>
+
+<p>Tucu watched the proceeding in satirical approval. Then, leaving the
+body where it lay, he went stooping along the path ahead, his keen eyes
+searching the undergrowth. In a few minutes he returned with the
+blood-stained dart which, as Louren&ccedil;o had guessed, the stricken prowler
+had pulled from his flesh and dropped. This he passed to a blowgun man.
+The latter carefully opened his poison pouch, redipped the point of the
+dart, held it a moment to dry in a shaft of sunlight, and slipped it
+into his dart case among a score of unused missiles.</p>
+
+<p>"No waste of ammunition here," was McKay's dry comment. "What happens to
+this corpse now?"</p>
+
+<p>Through Louren&ccedil;o's mouth Tucu answered.</p>
+
+<p>"It will be left here until police warriors come from the <i>malocas</i>.
+Certain men travel the paths daily to inspect the traps. When they find
+this man they will cut off his hands and feet with their wooden knives
+and throw the rest aside to be eaten by the animals. He has not been
+dead long or he would have been devoured by some wild thing before we
+came. The trail travelers will set the trap again and take the hands and
+feet to the <i>malocas</i>, where they will be washed, cooked, and eaten."</p>
+
+<p>The faces of the Americans contracted slightly. A simultaneous thought
+made them flash startled glances at each other.</p>
+
+<p>"Tim&mdash;" Knowlton said, and paused. Louren&ccedil;o smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"No, Senhor Tim will not be expected to eat man meat," he assured them.
+"I thought of that before we left&mdash;one never knows when these traps will
+yield human flesh. So, without letting Monitaya know why I spoke, I told
+him you North Americans believed the flesh of an enemy to be poisonous,
+and that you would not eat it on that account. Monitaya will remember
+that."</p>
+
+<p>"By George! you have a head on your shoulders, old scout! I was worried
+for a minute. If they offered Tim a broiled foot or a stewed hand he'd
+go for his gun."</p>
+
+<p>Briefly Tucu spoke. The Mayorunas separated and went into the forest,
+seeking any sign of other enemies.</p>
+
+<p>"Queer that this chap should come here alone&mdash;if he was alone," added
+Knowlton. "Suppose he's the fellow that's been swiping stray girls? Or a
+spy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Neither, I think, senhor. The girls were captured by more than one man,
+and I doubt if this one had been here before. Probably he was one of
+those lone prowlers of the bush whose hand is against every man. He is a
+half-breed, as you see, and came, perhaps, to steal a girl for himself.
+The jungle is well rid of him."</p>
+
+<p>"Uh-huh. Guess you're right. Say, I'd like to see how that blowgun trap
+operates. Can't understand what blows the dart when nobody is here."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know, either, senhor. Perhaps Tucu will show us."</p>
+
+<p>The savage guide, after a moment's hesitation, pointed along the trail
+and stalked away, the others at his heels. At a spot some fifteen yards
+farther on he turned into the bush at the right, walked a few paces away
+from the path, turned again sharply to the left, advanced once more, and
+halted. Before them, not easy to discern in the masking brush, even
+though they were looking for it, hung the long barrel of the blowgun,
+lashed to a couple of small trees and pointing toward the path.</p>
+
+<p>Tucu stepped to the mouthpiece of the slender tube and pointed to a
+sapling, just behind and in line with it, which had been cut off about
+shoulder-high from the ground. From the tip of this thin trunk dangled a
+wide strip of bark. The savage, having indicated this, stood as if the
+action of the device were perfectly clear.</p>
+
+<p>"Too deep for me," admitted McKay, after a puzzled study of the tube and
+the trunk. The others nodded agreement. Louren&ccedil;o confessed to the Indian
+the blindness of all.</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon Tucu bent the sapling far over and released it. As it sprang
+erect the bark strip slapped the end of the gun. Also, the watchers saw
+something hitherto unnoticed&mdash;a thin, flexible vine attached to the top
+of the thin stump. Louren&ccedil;o's face showed understanding.</p>
+
+<p>"See, comrades, this is it: The little tree is bent far down and held by
+the long vine. The vine passes around a low branch, then up over other
+limbs, and out across the path, where it is fastened to a root near the
+ground. A man following the path breaks the vine. The little tree then
+flies up and the bark sheet strikes the wide mouthpiece of the gun. The
+air forced into that mouthpiece by the blow of the bark shoots the
+little dart. The dart does not fly as hard as if blown by a man, but it
+goes swiftly enough to pierce the skin of anything except a tapir. As
+soon as the poison is in the blood the work is done."</p>
+
+<p>"It sure is done," Knowlton echoed, thinking of the short distance
+covered by the dead Peruvian after passing this spot. "Mighty ingenious
+apparatus. These people are no fools, I'll say."</p>
+
+<p>"You say rightly," Pedro muttered. Turning, they went out to the path,
+looking askance at the thin death tube as they passed along it.</p>
+
+<p>The scouting Mayorunas returned, having found nothing. Tucu resumed his
+place at the head of the line. Without a backward glance at the body
+sprawling in the trail at the rear, the column swung into its usual
+gait.</p>
+
+<p>The Americans, silent before, were silent again. They had looked for the
+first time on the work of the Mayoruna traps; had observed the
+cold-blooded way in which the Indiana handled the still form on the
+ground; had visualized the forthcoming mutilation of that body and the
+resultant cannibal rites. More vividly than ever before they realized
+that these men and Monitaya himself were relentless creatures of the
+jungle, and that, despite the present existent friendliness, there
+yawned between them and their barbarous allies an impassable gulf.</p>
+
+<p>For the moment the jungle itself seemed a poisonous green abyss of
+creeping, crawling, sneaking death. And though they had faced death too
+often in another land to fear it in any form, though they marched on
+with unwavering step, their eyes were somber as in their hearts echoed
+the last appeal of the man they had left behind them:</p>
+
+<p>"Ye ain't goin' to desert a comrade amongst a lot o' man eaters&mdash;"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE RED BONES</h3>
+
+
+<p>Four days the expedition tramped steadily onward through the rugged
+labyrinthine hills. Four nights its members slept in utter exhaustion.
+Neither by day nor by night was any sign of the Raposa seen, nor of any
+other human being.</p>
+
+<p>So tired from the constant struggle did the Americans become that their
+jaded brains began to picture the mysterious wild man as a mere
+legendary creature, which they never would find even though they
+searched the inscrutable forests until the end of time. Yet when, on the
+fifth day, Tucu informed them that they now were nearing the principal
+settlement of the Red Bones, the announcement cheered them as if they
+were about to enter a civilized city and there meet David Rand safe and
+sane.</p>
+
+<p>Not that any chance of striking his trail had been neglected in the
+meantime. It was thoroughly understood that if he were met anywhere he
+was to be made prisoner, and that thereafter the back trail should be
+taken. Louren&ccedil;o had impressed on Tucu the fact that the whole journey
+had for its object the finding of the wild man, and that he must not be
+killed if found. Since the Indians were not in the habit of hunting so
+assiduously anyone but a bitterly hated foe, it is quite possible that
+they misunderstood the spirit of the quest and believed the "dead-alive"
+prowler would, if captured, undergo some extremely unpleasant treatment
+at the hands of the white men. But so long as it was made clear that the
+Raposa must be caught alive, if caught at all, Louren&ccedil;o did not trouble
+about what the Mayorunas might surmise.</p>
+
+<p>Now, as the end of the long, pathless trail approached, arose a question
+of which McKay had previously thought but had not spoken&mdash;how he was to
+converse with the Red Bone chief. Louren&ccedil;o asked Tucu whether the Red
+Bones spoke the Mayoruna tongue. Tucu replied that they did not. He
+added, however, that the languages were not so dissimilar as to prevent
+some sort of understanding being reached between members of the two
+tribes. The veteran bushman nodded carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>"When the tongue fails, Capitao, the hands still can talk," he said. "It
+takes more time and work, that is all. Ah, here is a path!"</p>
+
+<p>It was so. For the first time since leaving the Monitaya region a path
+lay under their feet. And for the first time Tucu and his fellow
+Mayorunas, glancing along that faint track, showed hesitation.</p>
+
+<p>"Why the delay?" snapped McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"They suspect traps. I will go ahead and feel out the way. I have done
+it before on other paths."</p>
+
+<p>After a few words to Tucu, Louren&ccedil;o cut a long, slim pole. With this in
+hand he preceded the column, walking slowly, pausing sometimes,
+continually prodding the path, studying it with unswerving gaze as he
+progressed. The thin but rigid feeler, strong enough to tip the cover of
+any pit or to spring any concealed bow or blowgun, was at least ten feet
+long, and between the scout and the head of the line Tucu preserved
+another ten-foot interval. Progress was necessarily slow, but it was
+sure.</p>
+
+<p>In this fashion they advanced perhaps half a mile. Not once did they
+have to leave the path, but Louren&ccedil;o's caution did not diminish. Rather,
+it increased as they neared the Red Bone town. At length another path
+joined the one on which they were traveling. Here Louren&ccedil;o paused for
+minutes, inspecting with extreme care the ground and the bush.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he cocked his head as if listening. Then, with a backward
+motion of the hand to enjoin silence, he faced down the branch path and
+stood calmly waiting.</p>
+
+<p>To those behind came a light rustle of leaves and a scuffle of moving
+feet; a sudden cessation; then Louren&ccedil;o's voice speaking to some one
+concealed behind the intervening undergrowth. His tone was slow, quiet,
+easy&mdash;the tone which, even if the words were not understood, would
+soothe suspicious and abruptly alarmed minds. After another short
+silence he resumed talking, pointing carelessly to the place behind him
+where stood the silent file of Mayorunas. A guttural voice replied. A
+head peered cautiously from the edge of the bush, stared fixedly at
+Tucu, and withdrew. The voice sounded again. Immediately three Indians
+stepped into view, poised for action. Another interval of staring, and
+they relaxed.</p>
+
+<p>"Come forward, comrades," said Louren&ccedil;o. They came, halting again at the
+junction of the trails. Tucu spoke to one of the newcomers, who scowled
+as if only partly understanding, but grunted some sort of answer. Those
+behind the Mayoruna leader craned their necks and scanned the Red Bone
+men, who continued to eye with evident misgiving the tall-bonneted
+cannibals and the broad-hatted pair of whites.</p>
+
+<p>Man for man, these Red Bones were in every way inferior to the
+emissaries of Monitaya. Their bodies were more gaunt, their skins more
+coppery, their foreheads lower, and their expressions much less
+intelligent. Furthermore, they wore not even the bark-cloth clouts which
+formed the sole body covering of the Mayorunas&mdash;they were totally naked.
+The one point of similarity between the two tribes was that the faces of
+the Red Bone men were streaked with red dye. But the facial design was
+much different: two short transverse stripes on the forehead, and three
+lines on each cheek, running from the eyes, the end of the nose, and the
+corners of the mouth, straight back to the ears. Studying those visages,
+Knowlton and McKay recalled Schwandorf's statement that these people not
+only ate human flesh, but tortured prisoners of war. It was easy to
+believe that he had told truth.</p>
+
+<p>McKay, standing behind Pedro, shifted his position a bit. At once the
+eyes of the three Red Bones widened and riveted on his face. Heretofore
+they had seen only his hat and eyes, the rest being hidden from them by
+Pedro's neck and an intervening palm tip. Now that they saw his
+black-bearded jaw, they started slightly and peered intently at him.</p>
+
+<p>"I think, Capitao, you would do well to shave," Pedro suggested, with a
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>"'Fraid so," the captain granted. "Black beards evidently are <i>de trop</i>
+in the jungle social set at present."</p>
+
+<p>But then one of the Red Bone men came forward, still squinting narrowly,
+and his expression was not hostile. In fact, it was more friendly than
+it had yet been. After a closer scrutiny, however, his face turned
+blank. Slowly he stepped back and muttered something to his companions.</p>
+
+<p>At this Pedro's eyes narrowed speculatively. But his expression did not
+change, and he said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>A lengthy conference took place between Louren&ccedil;o and Tucu on the one
+hand and the three Red Bone tribesmen on the other; a difficult talk in
+which words and sign language both were used and frequently repeated.
+Eventually an understanding was reached. The three stepped back, picked
+up some small game which they had dropped on beholding Louren&ccedil;o,
+returned, and led the way along the path. Louren&ccedil;o cast aside his poke
+stick and resumed his usual place in the column. The whole line moved
+ahead at a much smarter gait than before.</p>
+
+<p>"Note&mdash;this path is not mined," thought Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>This proved true. Moreover, the way now was more broad and firm, so that
+travel on it was much easier. After twenty minutes of rapid tramping it
+debouched abruptly into a cleared space. Here all halted.</p>
+
+<p>Before them lay a town of small, low huts, crowded closely together in
+two parallel rows which curved together at one end. The other end lay
+open, giving access to a sizable creek whereon floated canoes. At the
+water's edge, along the crude street studded with charred stumps, and
+among the damp-looking huts moved naked figures of men and women
+occupied with various sluggish activities. Some of the men already had
+spied the invading party and were standing at gaze.</p>
+
+<p>"Comrades, we have reached the end of our trail," said Louren&ccedil;o, running
+a cool eye over the place. "Now all we have to do is to find your Raposa
+and get him and ourselves away alive."</p>
+
+<p>"That's all," Knowlton echoed, unsmiling. "The reception committee is
+forming now." And with the words he unbuttoned his holster.</p>
+
+<p>A shrill yell had run along the double line of houses, and out into the
+stumpy street now swarmed men armed with hastily seized weapons. Hands
+pointed, confused exclamations sounded, and a compact detachment of
+warriors came jogging toward the newcomers. The three guides drew away
+from the Mayorunas. The latter promptly fitted arrows to their bows,
+inserted darts in their blowguns, lifted spears or clubs, and with eyes
+glittering awaited whatever might befall.</p>
+
+<p>A couple of rods away the Red Bones halted, bows ready. A hatchet-faced
+savage who seemed to be in command rasped something at the three
+hunters, who quickened their pace toward him. Tucu strode out four paces
+beyond his own men and stopped. Then both parties waited while the
+hunters reported what they knew to the hatchet-face.</p>
+
+<p>"What did you tell them, Louren&ccedil;o?" asked McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"That we came on a friendly visit to the chief, for whom we had
+important words."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing of the Raposa?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. They wasted much time arguing that we must tell them all our
+business and let them inform the chief, while we were to stay back on
+the path until permitted to enter the town. We told them our talk was
+for the chief alone, and that we should come here whether they liked it
+or not. So, having no choice, they led us in."</p>
+
+<p>McKay made no comment. None was necessary. Furthermore, his steady eyes
+had caught a simultaneous head movement of the Red Bones&mdash;a peering
+movement, as if all were seeking some one man among the new arrivals.
+Pedro observed this. He spoke softly to Louren&ccedil;o.</p>
+
+<p>"Louren&ccedil;o, tell Tucu to say to the Red Bones that we come led by a
+black-bearded white man; that this blackboard comes from the far-off
+country where all men wear black beards; that the blackbeard will speak
+with the chief only."</p>
+
+<p>The Americans looked queerly at the young Brazilian, as did Louren&ccedil;o
+himself. But without question Louren&ccedil;o obeyed. Calling to Tucu, he gave
+the message. Tucu moved his head slightly, but gave no other sign of
+having heard.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Capitao, step forward a little and show yourself more clearly,"
+prompted Pedro.</p>
+
+<p>With another puzzled glance McKay did so. He saw that the brown eyes of
+the younger man held a dancing gleam, but he could not read the thought
+behind those eyes. Yet he noticed that as soon as he stepped out the Red
+Bones all focused their gaze on him. More than that, the spokesman of
+the three hunters pointed at him and said something to the
+sharp-featured leader.</p>
+
+<p>Now that leader came forward alone. Six feet from Tucu he halted again
+and talked in a growling tone. The Mayoruna leader, cool and dignified,
+made answer. After a somewhat protracted exchange Tucu turned his head
+and motioned to Louren&ccedil;o, who went forward, listened, replied shortly,
+and came back. Meanwhile the first detachment of Red Bones had been
+strongly reinforced by others who had come up singly or in small
+parties. Now the expedition was outnumbered at least four to one by
+hard-faced, brute-mouthed, naked men ready, if not eager, for trouble.</p>
+
+<p>"The Red Bone says we shall see the chief," Louren&ccedil;o stated. "At first
+he said only you, Capitao, should go to him. Then he insisted that we
+all lay down our arms. Tucu has told him we lay down our arms for no man
+or men; that we come in peace&mdash;otherwise there would be many more of us;
+that we leave in peace unless the Red Bones themselves bring on a fight.
+In that case, though we are few, there lies behind us the power of
+Monitaya, and behind Monitaya the power of the Mayoruna chiefs, all
+strong enough to wipe the Red Bone nation off the face of the ground."</p>
+
+<p>"Strong stuff, that," said Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"Strong, yes. But no stronger than is needed to impress these people.
+Tucu intends to prevent trouble if he can; and often the best way to
+prevent trouble is to make the other man realize what may happen to him
+if he starts it. Also he has his orders from Monitaya to stay with us at
+all times, and he will follow that order even if you, Capitao, try to
+change it. Now we go together to the chief."</p>
+
+<p>He nodded to Tucu, who grunted to the Red Bone leader. The hatchet-face
+in turn shouted something to the men behind. Slowly they drew apart into
+two groups.</p>
+
+<p>"You are the leader, Capitao," suggested Louren&ccedil;o. Promptly McKay
+marched forward, head up, eyes front, face bleak. The rest followed,
+Tucu falling in behind McKay when the captain passed him. Preceded by
+the Red Bone spokesman, the line advanced between the two bodies of
+copper-skins and swung along the evil-smelling avenue to its upper end.</p>
+
+<p>There, in the very center of the loop joining the two rows of huts, was
+a house twice as big as any other. From its doorway the inhabitant of
+that house could watch the whole life of the Red Bone town. Obviously it
+was the home of the chief. At its door a pair of warriors stood guard,
+but of the ruler himself there was no sign.</p>
+
+<p>Ten paces from it the thin-featured leader stopped and motioned to McKay
+to halt. As the captain and the line behind him did so he stalked
+onward, passed through the doorway, and faded from sight in the dimness
+beyond. With one accord the members of the visiting party looked around
+them.</p>
+
+<p>The street behind now was filled with the mass of Red Bone warriors who
+had trooped after the column. All exit in that direction was blockaded.
+But the ex-officers noted that between the houses were spaces each wide
+enough to hold a couple of men, and in an undertone McKay gave defensive
+instructions to Louren&ccedil;o.</p>
+
+<p>"If fighting starts, have the Mayorunas take cover along these houses on
+each side. We who have guns will use the chief's house. We can sweep the
+whole street from there. You two fellows capture the chief alive if
+possible. He'll be more useful as a hostage than as a corpse."</p>
+
+<p>Pedro beamed approval of this swiftly formed plan. Louren&ccedil;o muttered to
+Tucu, who in turn passed the word down the line. Then all stood waiting.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the Red Bone man came out. He shouted a name. From the doorway
+near at hand, where he had been standing and peering at the small but
+formidable body of newcomers, an old man now stepped forth and advanced,
+limping a little, to the hatchet-face. The latter talked briefly to him,
+then to Tucu. The Mayoruna leader pointed to Louren&ccedil;o. The old man spoke
+to the Brazilian, who answered at once. Thereupon the wizened old fellow
+entered the chief's house.</p>
+
+<p>"That old man speaks the Mayoruna tongue quite well, Capitao," said
+Louren&ccedil;o. "He says you and I shall enter and talk through his mouth with
+the chief. All others remain outside, and we must leave our rifles
+here."</p>
+
+<p>"All right. Glad we can leave Tucu out here to control these fellows.
+Here, Merry." He passed his rifle to Knowlton. Pedro took Louren&ccedil;o's
+gun. With packs still on their backs the chosen men proceeded to the
+doorway and entered the house where waited the ruler of the Red Bone
+tribe.</p>
+
+<p>Behind them the line settled into easier postures of waiting. The Red
+Bones, though so compactly ranged as to cut off any chance of escape,
+held their distance, obviously neither inclined to fraternize nor ready
+to precipitate conflict by crowding. Thus, while keeping their ears open
+for any sound of a concerted movement from behind, the visitors could
+use their eyes to inspect the huts nearest them.</p>
+
+<p>In some of these, women stood near the doorways, staring with unwinking
+absorption at the light-skinned, athletic men outside who were so much
+better to look upon than their own mates. The Mayorunas returned the
+stares with the brief glances of men accustomed to noticing everything
+but totally uninterested&mdash;as well they might be, for these poorly
+shaped, heavy-mouthed, mud-skinned females were not to be compared with
+their own women. Knowlton and Pedro, too, looked them over, but with the
+same expression as if inspecting a family of lizards. Then they glanced
+into other huts now empty of life, and in a couple of these they saw
+rigid red-hued objects hanging from the roofs.</p>
+
+<p>"The red bones of the dead, senhor," Pedro muttered, and his blond
+companion, peering again at the sinister decorations, nodded without
+reply.</p>
+
+<p>Voices came to them from the chief's house, talking with droning
+deliberation. Evidently no cause for friction had yet arisen. They let
+their eyes rove on beyond the guarded doorway, to pause at a house a
+short distance away at the right. There stood a clubman, who leaned idly
+on his weapon, but showed no intention of moving from his place. The
+door of that house was closed. Not only closed, but barred on the
+outside.</p>
+
+<p>"Hm! Looks like a jail," said Knowlton. Pedro smiled, but an intent look
+came into his face and he studied the closed house.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly both started. At one corner of the house, unseen by the
+clubman, a head had cautiously slipped forth. For only an instant it
+hung there before dodging back out of sight. But both the watching men
+had seen that the face, though half masked by long dark hair and a thick
+beard, was much lighter than that of any Red Bone savage. And in the
+hair above one ear was a white streak.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX"></a>CHAPTER XX.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE RAPOSA</h3>
+
+
+<p>McKay and Louren&ccedil;o, in a broad, low, musty-smelling room, faced a man
+who stood and a man who sat. The man who stood was the old savage who
+could talk in the Mayoruna language. The man who sat was the chief of
+the Red Bones.</p>
+
+<p>In his first words to the visitors the old interpreter revealed that the
+name of the Red Bone ruler was Umanuh. Later on Louren&ccedil;o informed McKay
+that in the Tupi <i>lengoa geral</i> of the Amazonian Indians (which,
+however, was not spoken by this tribe) the word "umanuh" meant "corpse."
+And whatever the name may have signified in the language of the Red
+Bones, its Tupi definition fitted with disagreeable precision. For
+Umanuh was a living cadaver.</p>
+
+<p>Gaunt, gray skinned, lank haired, hollow of cheek and eye, with thin,
+cruel lips so tight drawn that the teeth behind seemed to show through,
+ribs projecting, clawlike hands resting on bony knees, his whole frame
+motionless as that of a man long dead, the head man of the bone-dyeing
+tribe was the antithesis of both the piggish Suba and the herculean
+Monitaya. Only his eyes lived; and those eyes were cold and merciless as
+those of a snake or a vulture. A man who ruled by ruthless cunning, who
+would gaze unmoved on the most ghastly tortures, who would devour human
+flesh with ghoulish relish&mdash;such was the creature who sat in a red-dyed
+hammock and contemplated the impassive face of McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Umanuh, great chief, eater of his enemies, with fangs of the jaguar and
+wisdom of the great snake, awaits the greeting of the one-whose-hair
+grows-from-his-mouth," droned the old mouthpiece of the chief.</p>
+
+<p>"Makkay, leader of the fighting men of the Blackbeards, whose voice is
+the thunder and whose hand spits lightning and death, gives greeting to
+Umanuh," responded Louren&ccedil;o in a like droning tone.</p>
+
+<p>A pause. Umanuh gave no sign of life. McKay, straight and cold, met the
+unwinking stare of the chief with his own chill gray gaze. Between the
+two who spoke not was a testing of wills.</p>
+
+<p>"Makkay brings with him none of the Blackbeard warriors," pointed out
+the interpreter, who seemed to know his master's thought. "He comes with
+only the jungle men of light skins."</p>
+
+<p>"Makkay needs none of his own warriors when he comes in peace. If he
+came in war the terrible Blackbeards with him would cause the whole
+forest to fly apart in smoke and flame. Since he walks in peace to visit
+his friend Umanuh, of whose wisdom he has heard, he brings only his
+friends the Mayorunas, who are friends also to the men of the Red
+Bones."</p>
+
+<p>Another pause. The old man now seemed somewhat uncertain of himself. The
+silent duel between McKay and Umanuh went on. At length the chief's eyes
+flickered a trifle. In a hissing whisper he said something.</p>
+
+<p>"The men of the Mayorunas never come to this country unless seeking
+something," the interpreter promptly spoke up. "What do they seek?"</p>
+
+<p>"Only that which Makkay seeks."</p>
+
+<p>Then, turning to the captain, the Brazilian added: "Capitao, we now have
+reached the point to talk business. Have you any presents? And is it
+your wish to give them now or later?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have a few things. But I'll give them later&mdash;if at all. This chief is
+hostile. Tell him what we're here for and see how he acts."</p>
+
+<p>"It has come to the ears of Makkay," Louren&ccedil;o informed the man of
+Umanuh, "that a man of the Blackbeards lives among the men of the Red
+Bones. Makkay would see that man."</p>
+
+<p>Again the interpreter awaited his master's voice before answering.</p>
+
+<p>"No man of the Blackbeards is among the men of Umanuh," he then denied.</p>
+
+<p>"If he is not among them he is near them," was Louren&ccedil;o's certain reply.
+"He has been seen both by other Blackbeards and by the Mayorunas. I,
+too, have seen him. He bears on his bones the sign that his mind is out
+of his skull. His eyes are green and his hair touched with white. Umanuh
+and his men know well that I speak true."</p>
+
+<p>The pause this time was longer than before.</p>
+
+<p>"There was such a man, but he is gone."</p>
+
+<p>"Then Makkay asks his friend Umanuh to find that one. A chief so wise
+can easily find him where others would see only water and mud."</p>
+
+<p>"If he could be found what would the great Blackbeard leader do with
+him?"</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o thought swiftly. To say the Raposa was McKay's friend would do
+little good. Friendship meant nothing to this unfeeling brute. Therefore
+the bushman insinuated something which his cruel mind could comprehend.</p>
+
+<p>"If a Red Bone man abandoned his people and went to another tribe, what
+would Umanuh do to him when he was found?"</p>
+
+<p>A cold glimmer in the chief's eyes showed that he thought he understood.
+Moreover, he would much like to see what sort of torture this hard-faced
+Blackbeard would use on a fugitive. It might be something even more
+fiendish than his own pastimes. So the next reply came promptly.</p>
+
+<p>"If that man is found the blackbeard will pay for him?"</p>
+
+<p>"There are gifts of friendship for Umanuh," Louren&ccedil;o nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"The Blackbeard leader will pay more than the other Blackbeard?"</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o almost blinked. What other Blackbeard? The Raposa himself? But
+the Brazilian repressed his bewilderment.</p>
+
+<p>"Makkay will first see the man to make sure he is the Blackbeard whom
+Makkay wants," he dodged. "Then he will pay well."</p>
+
+<p>"Umanuh will see the gifts now."</p>
+
+<p>"The gifts cannot be shown now. They are packed away. When Makkay has
+looked on the man Umanuh shall look on the gifts."</p>
+
+<p>Another eye duel between the chief and McKay. As before, the captain's
+eye proved the harder.</p>
+
+<p>"Umanuh will think of the matter. Night comes. The man hunted by the
+Blackbeard is not here. The Blackbeard and his men may stay to-night
+across the water. When the sun rises again Umanuh will talk further."</p>
+
+<p>"It is well. Let Umanuh tell his men to stay on this side of the water,
+that we may not mistake them in the night for enemies."</p>
+
+<p>When Umanuh had hissed assent the old man stepped to the doorway and
+summoned the hatchet-faced warrior. To him instructions were given. He
+turned and carried the commands to the tribesmen.</p>
+
+<p>"Makkay wishes Umanuh peaceful rest," said Louren&ccedil;o. With which he
+flicked his eyes toward the door. McKay, with stiff stride, stalked out.
+Louren&ccedil;o followed. Both felt the snake eyes of the cadaverous chief
+dwelling on their backs.</p>
+
+<p>To the waiting Knowlton, Pedro, and Tucu it was briefly explained that
+preliminary negotiations had been concluded and that camp now would be
+made on the farther side of the creek. Tucu, observing that the Red Bone
+mass behind was dividing again to let the visitors pass through, gave
+the word to his men. The column began to move out, marching in reverse
+order. Pedro muttered swiftly to his partner.</p>
+
+<p>"Louren&ccedil;o, see that house with the barred door where the clubman stands
+guard. Remember where it is."</p>
+
+<p>The other swept the loop in one quick glance, located the house, and
+fell into step without a word, the guarded structure fixed on his brain
+as clearly as if he had studied it for an hour. Walking down the
+malodorous street, he said, quietly, "There will be a small moon
+to-night."</p>
+
+<p>"You are becoming a reader of the mind, comrade," Pedro grinned. No more
+was said.</p>
+
+<p>Down to the shore of the creek trooped the party, followed closely by
+the hatchet-face and a score of tribesmen. The whites and the Mayorunas
+got into half a dozen of the waiting canoes and paddled across. In other
+dugouts the Red Bone men also crossed, but they did not land. As soon as
+the borrowed boats were empty the tribesmen took them in tow and
+returned to their own bank. The visitors were left on a partly cleared
+shore, separated from their uncordial hosts by some twenty yards of deep
+water. Not one canoe was left them. Furthermore, the Red Bones now began
+activities indicating an intention to establish a night-long watch on the
+irside of the stream.</p>
+
+<p>"Taking no chances of our raiding them to-night, or even snooping around
+town," said Knowlton. "Keeping everything in their own hands. Reckon
+we'd better post sentries to-night, Rod, just to keep an eye on that
+outpost of theirs."</p>
+
+<p>McKay nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"We four will take it in turn," he agreed. "Louren&ccedil;o&mdash;Pedro&mdash;you&mdash;I.
+Three-hour tours."</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon, Capitao," interposed Pedro. "It would be well to change that.
+You two senhores take the first two watches."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?" frowned McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Because Louren&ccedil;o and I wish to go visiting. We are much smitten with
+the charms of the ladies here."</p>
+
+<p>The captain's frown deepened, but he studied Pedro's devil-may-care face
+keenly before answering.</p>
+
+<p>"Humph! What's up your sleeve? Out with it!"</p>
+
+<p>Pedro glanced around him and across the water. The tribesmen, both of
+the Mayoruna force and of the Red Bones, were watching the colloquy.</p>
+
+<p>"We are watched, Capitao. Let us make camp now and talk later. These men
+do not understand our words, but we cannot tell what they may see in our
+faces. Now speak harshly, as if I had been insolent."</p>
+
+<p>McKay did. He thundered at the young bushman as if about to do him
+bodily injury.</p>
+
+<p>Pedro retreated a step, as if taken aback by the storm he had unleashed.
+When McKay stopped he replied: "Excellent, Capitao. Now I go to start
+work on the <i>tambo</i>."</p>
+
+<p>He trudged away with a sullen gait. On both sides of the stream the
+Indians muttered and looked at the tall commander with increased
+respect. Truly, the Blackbeard was a fierce ruler and one who must not
+be angered; he had the voice of a great gun and the temper of a jaguar.
+That other man was lucky to have his head still on his shoulders!</p>
+
+<p>When the camp was made at the edge of the bush and the four comrades
+were grouped in their hammocks, Louren&ccedil;o narrated in detail the
+conversation with Umanuh. Knowlton reciprocated with news of what he and
+Pedro had seen at the corner of the barred house.</p>
+
+<p>"I almost jumped after him, Rod," he admitted. "Had all I could do to
+hold myself. But I knew anything sudden like that might start war right
+there, and we wouldn't have a Chinaman's chance of getting away with
+him, so I stood fast. But he's here, and old Umanuh's a liar by the
+clock if he says otherwise."</p>
+
+<p>"He is the same man we saw in the forest, Louren&ccedil;o, or my eyes are
+twisted," added Pedro.</p>
+
+<p>"Hm! Something very fishy here," commented McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Very fishy indeed, Capitao," Louren&ccedil;o echoed. "The man is within call,
+yet Umanuh says he is not here. And Umanuh wants us to buy the man. What
+is more, he asks if we will pay more than the other Blackbeard. What
+other Blackbeard? The man himself has a dark beard, and since we left
+headquarters Pedro and I have grown black whiskers, too. Yet Umanuh
+cannot mean the crazy man would pay him to stay here, or that either of
+us Brazilians would try to buy him. There are no other men with black
+beards&mdash;except the German woman-stealer; and of course he cannot be the
+one."</p>
+
+<p>"No?" Pedro asked, softly.</p>
+
+<p>"No, certainly. Why? Of what were you thinking?"</p>
+
+<p>Pedro's brown eyes twinkled, but he made no answer. He only inhaled a
+long puff from his cigarette and looked across the water at the
+hairpin-shaped town.</p>
+
+<p>"What about that visiting trip of yours to-night?" McKay asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish to see what is in that house with the barred door, Capitao. When
+I am curious about such a matter Louren&ccedil;o always becomes curious, too,
+so I shall have to take him with me. If I did not he would say I was
+making love to the chief's wives."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Por Deus!</i> That may be all the barred house holds&mdash;the wives of the
+chief," guessed Louren&ccedil;o. "Why waste time and risk death to look into
+that place?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Quem nao arrisca nao ganha</i>, as the coronel would say&mdash;he who risks
+nothing gains nothing. I feel that we should visit that house. Something
+calls me back to it."</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o studied his partner a moment, then nodded slowly. But McKay
+interposed decided objection.</p>
+
+<p>"Too dangerous. Also unnecessary. We'll get Rand&mdash;if the man is
+Rand&mdash;through the chief. Your night spying might ruin everything and get
+you killed into the bargain. Nothing to gain and all to lose. Stay
+here."</p>
+
+<p>Pedro's eyes hardened. But it was Louren&ccedil;o who answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Capitao, I think we had best do as Pedro says. It is a queer thing and
+I cannot explain it, but I have known him to have such ideas in the past
+and they have always worked out for the best. He himself does not know
+why he does some things&mdash;things which look totally foolish and which
+often are very dangerous&mdash;except that he feels like doing them. Yet I
+have never known this foolishness to fail to turn out well. He and I
+will go over to-night and see what we may see."</p>
+
+<p>The captain's brows drew together. Flat insubordination! Then he
+remembered that these men were not subordinates at all; remembered also
+what Coronel Nunes said concerning their ability to get into and out of
+dangerous situations. When Knowlton sided with them he capitulated.</p>
+
+<p>"Up in the States we'd say Pedro was 'riding his hunch,'" was the
+lieutenant's remark. "And I've known a hunch to bring all kinds of good
+luck. Gee! I'd like to go across with you lads myself! But I'm no jungle
+expert, especially after dark, and I'd only be in the way. Besides,
+we'll sure have to stick here and keep up appearances while you're gone.
+How will you get over? There's no way but swimming, and this creek's
+probably inhabited by the usual 'gators and snakes and things."</p>
+
+<p>"When one can travel only by swimming, one swims," Pedro smiled. "Leave
+that to us, senhores. Now the sun sinks fast and I have hunger. Let us
+eat."</p>
+
+<p>Night was at hand. While the whites talked some of the Mayorunas had
+quietly slipped away into the bush, seeking whatever fresh meat might be
+obtainable without straying too far from camp. Naturally, the hunting
+was poor so near an inhabited place, but now the absent men came
+stealing back with a few small birds and one monkey. Though the savages
+asked nothing and evidently expected nothing from the whites to eke out
+this scant provision, the latter opened their meager larders to Tucu,
+ordering him to see that every man had at least a few mouthfuls to eat.
+Tucu, like a good commander, made no bones of accepting the invitation
+for the good of his men. When all hands had stowed away the last meal of
+the day the rations were reduced almost to the vanishing point.</p>
+
+<p>"Those miserable whelps over there might have had the decency to give us
+a few bites," Knowlton growled, looking at the Red Bone men on the other
+bank, who were gorging themselves on meat brought by their women.</p>
+
+<p>"It is quite possible that they intend to give us several bites later
+on," Pedro suggested, with a mirthless smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Uh-huh. Shouldn't wonder. But it's also possible that they'll have to
+assimilate a few lead pills before chewing us up. Rod, we'll have our
+work cut out standing guard to-night. I wouldn't put it past that lying
+old Umanuh to try rubbing us out before morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor I," concurred McKay. "Only question is whether he dares take a
+chance against our guns and against the likelihood that Monitaya will
+send other men to investigate our disappearance. Better keep well out of
+sight."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke the last light of day vanished. Stars and a quarter moon
+leaped out in the swiftly darkening sky. The small fire of the
+expedition threw dim shadows against the poles of the night shelters.
+Lights glimmered in the Red Bone huts, and other lights began to streak
+across the gloom&mdash;the bright little lanterns of fireflies coasting along
+the stream. But at the point where the Red Bone night guard lurked no
+light shone. They had built no fire, and now they were almost invisible
+in the faint moonshine&mdash;sinister shadows which even now might be
+meditating murder or worse.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o lounged over to Tucu, who was watching those shadows with a
+fixed cat stare, and informed him that until morning a man with a gun
+would be always on guard while the rest slept. The Indian grunted
+approval. By way of precaution against being killed by his own men, the
+Brazilian added the information that later on he and his comrade would
+leave the camp and go upstream for a time. At this Tucu's eyes dwelt on
+his, veered to the lights of the town, and returned. In them was a
+plain, though unspoken, question. The bushman ignored it and strolled
+back to his <i>tambo</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The moon sailed higher. The animal uproar of early night began to
+diminish. The fire, almost buried under slow-burning wood whose acrid
+smoke alleviated the insect pests, smoldered dull red. McKay and
+Knowlton drew lots for the first sleep, the captain winning and promptly
+getting under his net. In the Mayoruna shelter all was dark and silent,
+each man sleeping lightly with one hand on a weapon. The two Brazilians
+also were out of sight in their hut.</p>
+
+<p>Up and down, a barely distinguishable figure, Knowlton passed slowly
+with holster unbuttoned and rifle cocked, eyes turning periodically to
+the Red Bone outpost and ears intent to pick any unusual sound out of
+the night noise. Gradually the small lights of the town faded out. To
+all appearance, sleep had whelmed it for the night. The watchers on the
+farther shore stirred a little at times, but the blot they made in the
+moonshine remained fixed in the same spot. The only moving things were
+the khaki-clad sentinel and the blazing fireflies.</p>
+
+<p>Another hour rolled slowly by. The sentinel stopped and stood at a
+corner of the <i>tambo</i>. Now was as good a time as any for the Brazilians
+to start their perilous reconnaissance. Perhaps they had gone to sleep.
+He squinted at their hammocks. Yes, they were occupied. Stepping softly
+to the hammock of Pedro, he lifted the net to whisper to the occupant.
+Then he stared, dropped the net, and lifted Louren&ccedil;o's curtain. A soft,
+self-derisive chuckle sounded in his throat as he stole out again.</p>
+
+<p>The hammocks were occupied, yes; but only by packs and rifles. Armed
+only with machetes, the two bushmen now were&mdash;where? He did not even
+know when or which way they had gone. Fine sentinel, wasn't he, to let
+two full-grown men sneak away right under his nose? And if they could
+get out so slick, why couldn't somebody else&mdash;a murderous Red Bone, for
+instance&mdash;get in with equal facility?</p>
+
+<p>Wherefore he became all the more alert. Instead of resuming his slow
+pace, he stood quiet at a corner, scrutinizing everything within his
+range of vision, listening more intently than ever. Two or three times
+he leaned forward and lifted his piece as some splashing noise in the
+creek came to him; but each time the cannibal guards on the other bank
+also sprang to see what caused the sound, then grunted to one another
+and relaxed, so he knew it was made by piscatory or reptilian life. Near
+him nothing moved. And the moon sailed on westward, smoothly, steadily
+measuring off the silent hours of the night watch.</p>
+
+<p>Then all at once every nerve in him strained toward the back of the
+<i>tambo</i>. Something was there! He had not heard it&mdash;seen it&mdash;smelled
+it&mdash;but he felt it; a nameless thing that did not belong there. With
+smooth speed he pivoted, looked, listened. Nothing there.</p>
+
+<p>Motionless, feeling slightly creepy, concealed under the roof corner, he
+waited. A sound came&mdash;a stealthy sound. Something was creeping in.
+Louren&ccedil;o and Pedro, perhaps? Stooping low, he peered along the ground
+under the hammocks.</p>
+
+<p>A man was coming&mdash;coming on all-fours like an animal. He was too
+stealthy to be either of the Brazilians. Knowlton glimpsed him only
+dimly, but he was sure this was no man who belonged here. And now, as on
+a previous occasion almost identical in its circumstances, the watchman
+acted in accordance with Tim Ryan's General Order Number Thirteen.</p>
+
+<p>In three jumps he was upon the invader. His gun butt crashed down on the
+rising head. The other collapsed on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>Swiftly Knowlton snapped a match with his thumb-nail. The sudden flare
+half blinded him, but what he saw made him suck in his breath. When the
+match went out he turned the senseless body over, drew his pocket
+flashlight, stabbed its white ray downward. Then he committed the
+unpardonable sin of the army&mdash;he dropped his rifle.</p>
+
+<p>Dark haired, dark bearded, streaked with red dye and bleeding slightly
+at the nose, at his feet lay the man for whom the indomitable trio had
+traveled thousands of miles and dared all the deaths of the jungle&mdash;the
+Raposa.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
+
+<h3>SHADOWS OF THE NIGHT</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Rod! Wake up!"</p>
+
+<p>The tense whisper aroused McKay instantly. With one sweep of the arm his
+net was torn aside and he leaped out with pistol drawn.</p>
+
+<p>"Right, Merry. What is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"We've got him! Look!"</p>
+
+<p>The electric ray again streaked the gloom. The astounded captain did not
+drop his gun, but he came near it. For a long minute he stood as in a
+trance. When he attempted to holster his weapon he fumbled three times
+for the sheath before he found it.</p>
+
+<p>"Whew!" he breathed. "Have you killed him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nope&mdash;don't think so. Lord! I hope not! Now that I think of it, I did
+give him a mighty solid smash. Used the butt. He was crawling in here,
+and naturally I didn't stop to ask for his card. Feel his head."</p>
+
+<p>McKay complied. His exploring fingers found only a huge bump under the
+thick hair.</p>
+
+<p>"No, his skull's whole. Didn't even split the scalp. You crowned him
+hard, but unless he got concussion he's still useful. His nosebleed
+comes from hitting the ground, I think. Turn off the light. Are you
+still on guard?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. The Brazilians are out."</p>
+
+<p>"Take a turn and see that all's clear. Can't tell what might break any
+minute now. Leave your flash here."</p>
+
+<p>Passing the flat, nickel light-box to the captain, Knowlton retrieved
+his gun from the ground and resumed his patrol. Slight as the
+disturbance had been, uneasiness was in the air. The savages on the far
+shore were up, peering at the <i>tambo</i> and muttering to one another.
+Measuring the distance, the lieutenant saw that, though they had
+undoubtedly seen the flashlight switched on and off and made out the
+movements of men, they could not have discerned what lay on the ground
+beyond the hammocks. Nearer at hand, Tucu and a couple of the Mayorunas
+were awake and looking out. But the sight of the sentinel strolling up
+and down in apparent unconcern and the absence of light in the <i>tambo</i>
+gradually quieted the suspicions on both sides of the water. Soon the
+Red Bones squatted again and the Mayorunas lay back with minds at ease.</p>
+
+<p>Then a dim sheen of light showed for a time at the back of the white
+men's shelter, fading out after a few minutes into the usual gloom.
+McKay had pulled a blanket over himself and the unconscious man, masking
+his torch glare from any watching eye while he studied the face and form
+of the invader. After the faint radiance vanished certain sounds came to
+the sentry's ears. Then McKay's tall figure loomed in the vague
+moonshine. Knowlton stopped beside him.</p>
+
+<p>"It's Rand," the captain vouchsafed in an undertone. "No question of it.
+Features identical, though face is drawn. White hair mark, broken nose,
+green eyes. I opened one eye. Got a bad foot, partly healed; looks as if
+he'd torn it on a stub. Poor devil seems nearly starved."</p>
+
+<p>"So? Then that's why he sneaked in like that&mdash;wanted to steal some grub.
+Those mutts over yonder probably haven't fed him since he got hurt."</p>
+
+<p>"That's it. He's had to do his own foraging, and his foot has given him
+mighty little chance. Damn those brutes!"</p>
+
+<p>"Right! But now what? Look out that he doesn't sneak away again."</p>
+
+<p>"He won't. I tied his feet. He's in Pedro's hammock, still dead to the
+world. If he wakes up and starts to yell I'll gag him. We've got to get
+away now as soon as we can."</p>
+
+<p>"How?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't know. By water, perhaps. Wish those bushman were here. Haven't
+heard any noise over there, have you?"</p>
+
+<p>"All quiet. They're safe&mdash;or dead."</p>
+
+<p>"Hm! Confounded foolishness, anyway. But we've no means of getting out
+until they're back. Couldn't desert them, besides. What time is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ten-thirty. You go on watch at midnight."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm on watch now, inside. They may be back any time. If they don't show
+up in the next couple of hours I'll send Tucu to find out why. We'll
+have to get those canoes over here, too. Water leaves no trail."</p>
+
+<p>He turned back into the hut, leaving Knowlton figuring chances. To
+obtain those canoes was a man-sized job. To put the Red Bone guards out
+of action without arousing the whole tribe was an even bigger job. But
+no boats could be brought over until the outpost was silenced, that was
+sure.</p>
+
+<p>Another half-hour crept past. Still no noise from the town, no
+suspicious move on the other shore. Then from the <i>tambo</i> itself came a
+low mumble of voices. Knowlton stepped swiftly into it. As noiselessly
+as they had gone the two bushmen had returned.</p>
+
+<p>In his usual concise phrases McKay was informing them of the capture of
+the Raposa. With his back to the stream and the flashlight held close to
+his body, he played the light for an instant on the face of the still
+unconscious man. Then, once more in darkness, he asserted:</p>
+
+<p>"Now that we have him, we must get out of here. Only chance to do that
+is to get the canoes. With them we can at least be away from this town
+by sunrise, and it will take the Red Bones just so much longer to find
+our trail where we take to the bush. We'll get a flying start that way.
+Anything else to suggest?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is the best plan, Capitao," Louren&ccedil;o agreed. For the first time
+since the Americans had known him his voice held a note of suppressed
+excitement. "It is the only plan worth while. And I do not think we
+shall have to take to our legs soon&mdash;if at all. I believe this creek
+connects with that which flows past the Monitaya <i>malocas</i>. We have
+learned some things. <i>Por Deus!</i> If only we had known the Raposa was
+here!"</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because then we could have brought company with us. Senhores, guess
+what the barred house holds."</p>
+
+<p>"Well?"</p>
+
+<p>"Women of the Mayorunas! Girls stolen from Monitaya and other
+settlements!"</p>
+
+<p>"Jumping Judas!" ejaculated Knowlton. "Are you sure?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure, comrades! These foul Red Bones are the men who have been lurking
+around the Mayoruna tribe houses and capturing girls who went into the
+bush. They have taken the prisoners to the water, where the trails
+always were lost and where they could find hiding places until night,
+then drive their canoes past the clearings and get out of that country.
+So there must be some water connection by which these men travel, and by
+which we too can travel. If we go downstream we are almost sure to find
+it by daylight."</p>
+
+<p>"But why&mdash;what's the idea of their stealing the girls? For victims? If
+so, how are the girls still alive?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you not see, senhor?" Pedro broke in, impatiently. "Did not Umanuh
+ask if we would pay more than the other Blackbeard for the Raposa? What
+other Blackbeard?"</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf!" the Americans blurted, simultaneously.</p>
+
+<p>"Not so loud! Schwandorf, of course! Umanuh works with the German. He
+catches girls by stealth and sells them to the German to add to his
+slave gangs. While the Mayorunas all blame the Peruvians for the
+disappearances, Umanuh works unsuspected. He is holding these women
+until Schwandorf comes again&mdash;and it may be that Schwandorf is not far
+off at this moment. Now that we have come seeking the wild man, Umanuh
+at once thinks of selling him also; and he wonders whether we or
+Schwandorf will pay the more for him."</p>
+
+<p>"By thunder! I believe you're right!" Knowlton coincided. "He's stalling
+for time, holding us here while Schwandorf comes up, I'll bet. No wonder
+he and his men are wary of the Mayorunas&mdash;they thought we'd come to
+snoop around and catch 'em with the goods. You fellows must have done a
+mighty slick job to find out this stuff without getting caught. Isn't
+the house guarded at night?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed it is! Two clubmen are there now, and there is only the one
+door. Not even a window. But Louren&ccedil;o worked a small hole between two
+logs at the back while I watched the clubmen, and through the hole he
+whispered with one of the women inside. If only we had known the wild
+man was here we could have jumped the guards and tried to bring back the
+women. But of course your business about the Raposa had to be thought of
+first, so all we could do was to tell them friends were here."</p>
+
+<p>For a few seconds there was the silence of thought. Then Knowlton
+chuckled.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll say we have our hands full this night. Now we not only have to get
+ourselves and Rand out of here, but also rescue the fair damsels from
+the clutches of the ogre. 'Twon't do to leave them here while we go back
+to Monitaya and get the rest of his army. By the time we could come back
+they'd be gone&mdash;one way or another. What's done has to be done now or
+never."</p>
+
+<p>"Right!" McKay commended. "We'll have to save the women, of course.
+Question is&mdash;how?"</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o answered at once.</p>
+
+<p>"My idea, Capitao, is this: We two will return. With us we will take
+Tucu. The three of us can handle those guards quietly. We must have
+Tucu, because the women do not know us and might balk at the last
+moment. Women are queer creatures, and these might think themselves
+safer inside prison walls than following two strange men through the
+night; but Tucu can handle them. When once we are clear of the houses
+Tucu can lead the women to the bank above here, and we shall try for the
+canoes. Then it will be fast work to get away, but if we have good
+fortune it can be done."</p>
+
+<p>"Confound it! You fellows are taking all the risks! Can't you take more
+men&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No. No man but Tucu. He has a cool head. These others, if they knew,
+would go blood-mad and attack the Red Bones to avenge their lost women,
+and so would get us all killed. Now I will talk with Tucu."</p>
+
+<p>He slipped into the Mayoruna shelter and returned with the cannibal
+leader, whom he led to the far side of the <i>tambo</i> before speaking.
+Then, in whispers which the other tribesmen could not overhear, he
+explained the situation. Knowlton took another turn or two along his
+post, finding that the Red Bones across the water were stirring about
+and evidently aware that something was going on; but they made no move
+either to get into a canoe or to send a man to the houses beyond. As he
+stopped again at the corner near the whispering pair he heard Tucu
+grinding his teeth, and as the savage turned his face toward the Red
+Bone outpost it was a mask of murder. But he spoke no word as he slipped
+back to his own men.</p>
+
+<p>"He will wake another man and tell him what to do," Louren&ccedil;o explained.
+"But only we four shall know of the women until they are freed. Will one
+of you lend Tucu a machete? He may need a weapon, and he cannot carry
+his big bow on this trip."</p>
+
+<p>A few minutes later the three crept out behind the <i>tambo</i>, Tucu
+gripping McKay's machete. As a final word Louren&ccedil;o said: "Our men here
+may move about a little after a time, but do not try to keep them quiet.
+It is a part of the plan."</p>
+
+<p>With that he was gone. Listen as they might, the Americans could hear no
+sound to indicate that three men now were traversing the black tangle
+beyond.</p>
+
+<p>McKay took up his rifle and assumed the sentry work. Knowlton sat in his
+hammock, grateful for the chance to rest his weary legs. From the
+hammock where the Raposa lay no sound came. With a worried frown the
+lieutenant leaned over him and laid hand on his heart. After a while he
+sat up again in relief.</p>
+
+<p>"Lord! I sure knocked him cold!" was his thought. "But he's still with
+us, and there's no use in reviving him now; the less noise over here the
+better. Hope I didn't jar his brains loose altogether; he might wake up
+a murderous maniac. Poor devil! A millionaire, yet half starved and more
+than half nutty."</p>
+
+<p>He glanced at the dim scene before the hut. The moon now had journeyed
+so far westward that the creeping shadows of the tall trees had moved
+out almost to the creek, and the two crude shelters and the sentinel
+were surrounded by dense gloom. The Red Bone men opposite must rely on
+their ears alone hereafter, for they could not see through this
+darkness. McKay was visible enough to his own party, but not to the
+enemy. The blond man in the hammock watched the somber figure of his
+comrade, followed the flight of a big firefly whose light floated near,
+thought of the two bushmen out in the dark, and looked again at the
+still form of Rand.</p>
+
+<p>"Drifters all," he soliloquized. "The fireflies and Rod and Tim and I
+and those Brazilian dare-devils&mdash;all floating around because we can't
+keep still, and never getting anywhere. And you, you silly-ass Rand,
+have a mint waiting for you up home, and we have to come find you and
+lead you up there and shove your nose into it. And if you get your
+brains back you'll be a nine days' wonder and a hero of the jungle and
+all that, and the girls will all tumble over you&mdash;because you've got a
+couple of millions in your sock. And we fellows who yanked you out of
+hell by the left hind leg can pocket our pay and go jump off the dock,
+for all anybody cares. Ho-hum! All the same, I'd rather be me than you,
+old thing. Free to drift and able to handle myself. You can have the
+money and the moths that hang around it."</p>
+
+<p>With which he yawned, squinted again at the sinister figure squatting
+out yonder in the moonshine, arose, and made himself useful. Working
+very quietly, he took down three of the hammocks, rolled them up, laid
+them at the corner nearest the creek; made up the packs by sense of
+touch and placed them and the rifles of the absent pair in the same
+place. Then he lifted the Raposa from the one remaining hammock, laid
+him on the packs, rolled up the hammock itself, and put it under the
+unconscious man's head. If given time when the crisis came, he meant to
+save all equipment. If not, Rand lay where he could be grabbed without
+delay.</p>
+
+<p>Before he completed the work he became aware that the Mayorunas all were
+awake. Not only awake, but moving stealthily about, as Louren&ccedil;o had
+predicted. McKay also knew it and stepped back into the hut, where
+Knowlton told him what he had done. But so softly did the men of
+Monitaya move that the Red Bone watchers showed no sign of alarm. Both
+the Americans observed, however, that the cannibals across the stream
+had their heads together and that occasionally one looked up at the
+little moon.</p>
+
+<p>"Get that, Rod? They're waiting for the shadows to crawl over there and
+cover them and the water. They know that then we can't see what they're
+up to. I'm betting they intend to pull some dirty work after that."</p>
+
+<p>"Yep. But intention and accomplishment are two different birds. Wonder
+what these Mayorunas are fixing to do. Wish I could talk their
+language."</p>
+
+<p>"Tucu evidently left orders for them to get up at a certain time, but
+why I don't know. We'd better let them alone."</p>
+
+<p>The shadow line passed out upon the water, slipping by infinitesimal
+gradations across its mirror surface. The Mayorunas had become quiet.
+The whites waited in silent suspense for they knew not what. Far out in
+the forest a jaguar gave his coughing roar at intervals. Little by
+little the Red Bone men arose from their squat until they stood erect. A
+tense stillness held both forces. And the shadows crawled on&mdash;on&mdash;and
+reached the farther bank.</p>
+
+<p>Then a Red Bone man shoved his head forward, squinting upstream as if he
+had heard something move in the rank grass. He began to sneak softly in
+that direction. At that moment, from the water's edge a little above the
+camp, sounded a loud hiss.</p>
+
+<p>Before the sound died a sudden thrum of bow cords filled the air. A
+whisper of five-foot shafts speeding over the water&mdash;a rapid-fire series
+of tiny impacts&mdash;a couple of short groans&mdash;the thumps of falling
+bodies&mdash;and the Red Bone outpost was no more. Shot through and through
+by the deadly war arrows of the Mayorunas, they were dead before they
+struck the ground. And from the men of Monitaya sounded one short,
+subdued "Hah!" of savage satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>Up from the ground where that hiss had sounded rose a tall figure which
+waved its arms and danced about in impromptu signals. Then it ran for
+the canoes. Out from the gloom upstream other figures took shape,
+running fast for the same point. With one simultaneous movement Knowlton
+and McKay seized the Raposa and rushed with him to the stream.</p>
+
+<p>"Senhores!" sounded Pedro's voice, low but tense, across the water. "Be
+ready!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ready and waiting!" snapped McKay. "Who are those people. Your women?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i> We are not discovered&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Across his words smote a long shrill yell from the town.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Por Deus.</i> We <i>are</i> discovered! Get our rifles, for the love of <i>Deus
+Padre</i>."</p>
+
+<p>He leaped into a canoe, drove it headlong across, and dived for the
+<i>tambo</i>. Behind him the other figures dashed panting up to the landing.
+Tucu's voice rasped in swift commands. The fugitives swarmed into other
+dugouts. The Mayoruna men, still ignorant of the identity of these
+people, but assured by Tucu's voice and manner that they were not
+enemies, lowered their weapons and rushed for the water. Up in the town
+the yelling swiftly grew into a roar, and running figures came pelting
+toward the creek.</p>
+
+<p>The canoes struck the bank. Some were partly filled, some empty and in
+tow. Into Pedro's canoe the whites bundled the Raposa, while the
+Mayorunas got into anything within reach. Louren&ccedil;o appeared from nowhere
+and urged the Americans to open fire. As he spoke, arrows thudded into
+the ground and the water.</p>
+
+<p>"Take this man and go!" rasped McKay. "We're losing our equipment,
+but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>His rifle leaped to his shoulder. Flame spat from it. From the van of
+the charging Red Bones shrilled a death scream.</p>
+
+<p>Again and again the captain's gun cracked. Knowlton's joined in. Before
+their rifles grew silent the blunt roar of Pedro's repeater broke out.
+And with the emptying of their long guns the Americans drew their short
+ones, and in a concerted ripping crash the forty-fives volleyed death
+and dismay into the oncoming cannibals.</p>
+
+<p>The rush was checked. For a few seconds the Red Bones wavered and milled
+about. Into their mass poured a cloud of arrows and blowgun darts from
+the silent but no less deadly weapons of the Mayorunas. As the whites
+paused to reload, Pedro opened a new blast from Louren&ccedil;o's rifle, which
+his comrade had passed to him on the run. Louren&ccedil;o was not shooting, but
+working madly and alone to save the equipment. And, thanks to the
+renewed deadly fire of the guns, he saved it.</p>
+
+<p>Before the wicked belch of the three rifles and the two automatics the
+Red Bones gave back more and more. Their arrows plunged all around the
+fighting men, but they fell at random, for the gunmen and the canoes
+were virtually invisible in the deep shadows. Downstream, Tucu's harsh
+voice jarred in commands as he straightened out the line of boats.</p>
+
+<p>At the next lull in the firing Louren&ccedil;o panted: "In, comrades! We are
+loaded. In!"</p>
+
+<p>"Great guns! Are you still here?" snapped McKay. "I told you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"In! Talk later. Come!"</p>
+
+<p>The three gun fighters swiftly obeyed. With a powerful heave Louren&ccedil;o
+sent the canoe after the others. Americans, Brazilians, and the Raposa
+hunched up among the packs, all went sliding down a jungle Styx.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later the Red Bone warriors, taking heart from the cessation of
+firing, poured an avalanche of arrows into the spot where they had been.
+And as the canoe, last in the escaping line, was swallowed up in the
+impenetrable blackness of the forest a hair-raising screech of
+diabolical fury blended with a swift succession of splashes back where
+the cannibals were plunging headlong into the stream to reach the dead
+or wounded men whom they vainly hoped to find on the farther shore.</p>
+
+<p>"I told you to take this man and go!" McKay fumed. "By disobeying orders
+you risked losing him."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, pipe down, Rod!" remonstrated Knowlton. "If they had, where'd we be
+now? This was the last canoe."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i> It is so," added Louren&ccedil;o, his voice hard edged. "As it is, the
+man and the equipment and you also are here. And let me tell you this,
+Capitao Makkay, whether you like it or not: Pedro and I would see this
+wild man and a million others like him in a hotter place than this
+before we would abandon fighting comrades."</p>
+
+<p>To which McKay, finding no adequate answer, made none whatever.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE SIREN OF WAR</h3>
+
+
+<p>Like a fleet manned by sightless sailors the line of boats blundered on
+through the blackness. With no guiding light, the canoes bumped the
+banks and collided with one another in perilous confusion. Speed was
+impossible, yet speed was imperative. Knowlton and his little flashlight
+solved the problem.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, fellows, let's take the lead," he suggested. "This little light
+isn't much, but it's something, and there are some extra batteries in my
+haversack when this burns out. We can see a little way ahead, and pass
+back the word to the rest. What say?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Na terra dos cegos quem tem um olho e rei</i>&mdash;in blindman's land he who
+has one eye is king," said Pedro. "That little white eye in your box may
+save us all. Louren&ccedil;o, tell those ahead to let us pass."</p>
+
+<p>Without question the preceding dugouts swerved, and the boat of the
+white men slipped by. At the head of the line they found Tucu and his
+crew struggling manfully to make progress without wrecking the whole
+fleet at the turns. Vast relief and instant acceptance of the new
+leadership followed Louren&ccedil;o's explanation. At once the floating column
+began to pick up speed. And it was well that it did.</p>
+
+<p>Howls of baffled hate came faintly through the tree mass from the Red
+Bone town. Some time later more yells of rage sounded, much nearer&mdash;back
+at a place on the creek which the last boat had cleared only a few
+minutes previously. Some of the Umanuh men had made torches and run
+along one of the Red Bone trails to a bend in the stream, only to find
+the water bare of everything but dying ripples.</p>
+
+<p>Whether the enemy attempted to follow in canoes the escaping party never
+knew, for none succeeded in overtaking the rearmost boat. And after that
+one snarling uproar on the creek bank they heard no more of the land
+pursuit. The narrow margin of safety gained by the aid of the flashlight
+proved enough to give a commanding lead, and from that time on the only
+obstacles to their retreat were those of darkness and winding waters.</p>
+
+<p>Hour after hour Knowlton squatted in the extreme bow, picking out the
+turns and snags just ahead and passing the word back to Louren&ccedil;o, who,
+in the stern, steered in accordance with his orders and relayed the
+course to Tucu, just behind. Amidships, Pedro and McKay plied steady
+paddles and the Raposa lay all but forgotten on the baggage. There were
+no halts. If any boat back in the blackness got into difficulties it
+extricated itself as best it could, unaided by the rest, and fell into a
+new place in the column.</p>
+
+<p>At last a wan light, which was scarcely a light, but rather a lessening
+of the density, came about the stream. The renewed racket of birds and
+beasts announced that up overhead the sky had paled into dawn. Slowly
+the nearest tree trunks began to take shape in the void, and presently
+the shore line became visible to all eyes. At the same time Knowlton's
+tiny lamp dimmed and faded out.</p>
+
+<p>"Another battery gone," he announced, opening the case and dropping its
+contents into the creek. "Ho-yo-ho-hum! Gee! I'm all in! Eyes feel like
+a couple of burnt holes. Well, gents, I move that at the first available
+spot we go ashore, feed our faces, look at the ladies, and perform our
+morning salute to Umanuh&mdash;said salute consisting of applying the right
+thumb to the end of the nose and snappily twiddling four fingers."</p>
+
+<p>"Motion carried." McKay's set face relaxed. Then, his glance dropping to
+the Raposa, it tightened again. "Oh, hullo, Rand! How you feeling?"</p>
+
+<p>The unconscious man was unconscious no longer. Moreover, his expression
+was not that of one just emerging from a stupor and bewildered as to his
+surroundings. Though he had made no movement to change his position, his
+eyes indicated that he had been awake for some time. They dwelt steadily
+on McKay, then strayed past the captain to Pedro, Louren&ccedil;o, and the
+first Mayoruna crew following a few feet behind. His face was
+inscrutable, and he spoke no word.</p>
+
+<p>"You're with friends. Understand? Friends. You're going home. These
+Indians are friends, too. Get that? <i>Friends!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>The green eyes hung on McKay's face again; but, as before, no answer
+came in word, movement, or expression.</p>
+
+<p>"No good, Rod," said Knowlton, who could not see the rescued man's face,
+but watched McKay's. "'Fraid I knocked his last brains down his throat.
+Dead from the neck up."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know about that. He doesn't look vacant. See here, Rand. We're
+going to land and eat! You hungry? Uh-huh. Thought you'd understand
+that. He's alive, Merry. Maybe not all here, but enough to get us."</p>
+
+<p>"Good!"</p>
+
+<p>The blond man turned his attention downstream again. Soon he suggested,
+"How about landing at that little open space down there at the left,
+Louren&ccedil;o?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very good, senhor. It looks dry."</p>
+
+<p>The canoe swerved and floated down to a spot on the left shore where
+bright light poured down from an opening in the overhead wall of
+foliage.</p>
+
+<p>"Now look here, Rand," warned the captain. "We'll untie you. But if you
+try to duck into the bush, now or later, you get shot. Shot!
+Understand?"</p>
+
+<p>He tapped his pistol, and the gray eyes boring into the green ones were
+hard as chilled steel. For the first time Rand responded&mdash;a slow, short
+nod.</p>
+
+<p>McKay cut the cord around the wild man's ankles, then stepped ashore and
+held out a hand. Rand arose quietly, jumped to the earth unassisted,
+lifted his bad foot and stared at it, then limped onward into a spot
+where the sun now shone bright and warm, and sat down to bask.</p>
+
+<p>"Have to fix that foot, I expect," yawned Knowlton. "But my eyes right
+now are one solid ache, and I'm going to rest them. Watch him, will you,
+Rod? Can't tell what he might do. Of course you wouldn't shoot him,
+but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't I? Not to kill, no. But if he makes one break I'll drill a leg
+for him. He's going to the States!"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure. I'm with you all the way. Now beat it and let me repose myself."</p>
+
+<p>He bathed his eyes, then lay down in the canoe with a wet handkerchief
+across them. Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o already were ashore and raiding the
+slender packs for food. The Mayorunas were debarking and watching each
+new boat as it drew up, their eyes on the women who had wielded paddles
+with them but whose faces they now saw closely for the first time. In
+the shaft of sunlight McKay stood tall and forbidding, rifle in the
+crook of one arm, hat pulled low, guarding the gaunt man at his feet and
+viewing the landing of the expedition.</p>
+
+<p>The women, all young, numbered eleven. Their skins looked slightly
+pallid, their eyes too big and black, their faces somewhat drawn&mdash;the
+results of close confinement and anxiety; but none showed any sign of
+abuse. For commercial reasons alone, Umanuh had seen to it that the
+woman flesh he held for sale should remain uninjured. Now, saved from
+the slave trail or worse, the girls showed no more emotion than if on a
+mere journey after turtles or fish. A few spoke to men whom they
+evidently knew. Others gathered in a dumb cluster and awaited whatever
+might come next. With these Tucu talked in gruff monosyllables.</p>
+
+<p>When all were ashore, a dozen of the men went into the jungle to hunt.
+The others sought firewood, inspected weapons, talked with one another
+and with the girls, who stared at McKay and asked who he was. A number
+of the warriors looked sourly at Rand, whose face still bore the Red
+Bone tribal streaks which now, to Mayoruna minds, was the insignia of
+the enemy. All knew he was the man who had been sought, all saw that he
+was not a Red Bone, but a white man; yet their mental reaction to the
+sight of the sinister red cross on the forehead and the straight cheek
+lines was rabidly hostile. McKay, all-seeing, decided to wash Rand's
+face for him before journeying much farther. But Rand himself gave no
+sign that he either knew or cared what the feeling of the Mayorunas
+might be. Utterly impassive, he stared back at them.</p>
+
+<p>Then one of the women pointed at him and said something to Tucu. The
+tall watchdog's jaw set a little harder as he waited the effect.
+Somewhat to his surprise, Tucu and a couple of the other men now gave
+Rand a more friendly look. Soon afterward Tucu passed Louren&ccedil;o, who
+talked with him a few minutes. Catching the Brazilian's eye, the captain
+motioned him nearer and asked for any news.</p>
+
+<p>"Tucu says, Capitao, that most of these girls are from <i>malocas</i> other
+than that of Monitaya, though some of Monitaya's women also are here.
+And one of them says this man, the Raposa, tried to release them a short
+time ago and was nearly killed by the Red Bones for it. They let him
+live only because he is crazy, and they fear to kill a crazy man."</p>
+
+<p>"What! He tried to get them clear?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. He opened the door and motioned for them to run, but before they
+could escape they were caught. He was badly beaten. You will remember
+that he was hiding behind that same house when Pedro and Senhor Knowlton
+saw him. Perhaps he meant to try again."</p>
+
+<p>"Hm! Crazy and wild, but a white man for all that. How did you manage to
+free the women?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very simple," was the cool answer. "We stabbed the guards, opened the
+door, and came back to the creek with the women."</p>
+
+<p>"Just like that, eh? And the guards made no resistance, I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>"Not much," grinned the bushman. "They were not allowed to."</p>
+
+<p>"I see. Very simple, as you say. About as simple as our calm and
+unhurried departure."</p>
+
+<p>"Something like that, Capitao. What do you desire for breakfast&mdash;salt
+fish and coffee, or coffee and salt fish?"</p>
+
+<p>"A little of everything, thanks. Here comes some monkey meat, too."</p>
+
+<p>The first of the hunters had returned, bringing two big red howlers.
+Others drifted in at intervals, and not one returned empty handed; for
+here in the virgin jungle the game was plentiful, particularly at this
+early hour. Soon the air was heavy with the odor of broiling meat, and
+from the fire of the Brazilians the fragrance of coffee was wafted to
+the nostrils of the recumbent Knowlton. He arose, swallowing fast.</p>
+
+<p>"Gee! I'm half drowned!" was his humorous complaint. "The smell of eats
+makes my mouth water so fast I have to gasp for air. Must tickle your
+nose, too, eh, Rand, old top?"</p>
+
+<p>Rand, famished though he was, gave no sign of assent or of hunger. In
+fact, he gave no sign of anything. Stoically he sat, eyes front.</p>
+
+<p>"By thunder! the man's got pride!" the lieutenant added, in a lower
+tone. "Almost ready to keel over from lack of food, but stiff as a
+cigar-store Indian. Darned if I'm not beginning to respect him!"</p>
+
+<p>Tucu approached, carrying two big monkey haunches. One he offered to
+McKay, the other to Rand. The latter's immobility vanished in a flash.
+With a lightning grab he seized the proffered meat and sank his teeth in
+it. As he wolfed down the tough flesh the three men standing over
+exchanged glances. Tucu laid a hand on his stomach and pressed inward,
+signifying that the man had long gone hungry. The others nodded. Then
+they split the other haunch between them and fell to gnawing.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o, bringing coffee to the captain, asked Tucu in what direction
+the Monitaya houses lay. Without hesitation the Indian pointed off to
+the left. The Brazilian glanced at the creek, estimating its general
+direction and rate of flow, then returned to his fire.</p>
+
+<p>Offered coffee, Rand took it and sipped it with evident relish. Likewise
+he accepted a cigarette, which he puffed like a man just learning to
+smoke&mdash;or one who has not smoked for years. For his meat, his drink, and
+his smoke he gave no indication of gratitude. His attitude was as
+indifferent and matter-of-fact as if he were one of the Mayorunas. When
+his smoke was ended he began inspecting his bad foot.</p>
+
+<p>"Let's see that," said Knowlton, dropping on one knee. "Looks pretty
+sore. Yes, it's more than sore; it's infected. How'd you get it,
+anyway?"</p>
+
+<p>No answer. Knowlton probed his face keenly. Rand straightened out his
+legs, wriggled his toes, and scowled.</p>
+
+<p>"Queer!" muttered the lieutenant, rising. "He looks as if he actually
+didn't know how he got that wound. You'd think he'd remember that much,
+anyhow. I sure am afraid his head is all scrambled up."</p>
+
+<p>He went to the canoe, returned with his meager medical kit, and knelt
+again.</p>
+
+<p>"Now listen here, Rand. I don't know how well you understand me, but I'm
+taking the chance. This foot has to be opened up and cleaned out.
+Otherwise you're going to have serious trouble with it. I'm going to
+hurt you. If you raise a row you'll get an an&aelig;sthetic&mdash;a swift punch
+under the ear. Better sit still and make no fuss."</p>
+
+<p>With which he went to work. He did a thorough job, and there was no
+doubt that it hurt. But Rand gave no trouble, nor even a sign of
+pain&mdash;except that he dug his fingers into the dirt.</p>
+
+<p>"Good boy!" the amateur surgeon approved, when he finished. "You're a
+Spartan&mdash;if you happen to remember what that is. Now we'll move on. But
+before we go, wash your face good and hard. Get that tribe paint off.
+These Indians with us don't like it. You're no Indian, anyhow; you're
+white, like us. Savvy? White man. Wash off paint!"</p>
+
+<p>He rolled up his kit and returned to the canoe. The Mayorunas, men and
+women, were entering their own craft. Rand sat motionless a moment,
+McKay and the Brazilians watching him keenly. Slowly then he got up of
+his own accord, limped to the water's edge, and began to scrub his face.</p>
+
+<p>When he desisted the marks still showed, for the red dye clung
+stubbornly to his skin; but they were fainter than before. The other men
+eyed him thoughtfully, none speaking. He settled himself in his former
+place, curled up, and began to doze.</p>
+
+<p>"A queer fish!" Pedro said, softly. "Is he crazy or not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hanged if I know," replied McKay. "He's no maniac, anyhow. I'd give
+real money to know just what his mental condition is. But we can forget
+him for a while. I'm going to let you fellows sleep by turns now. I had
+some sleep last night; you've had none at all. Merry, your eyes need
+rest. You curl up in the bow and snooze one hour. Then another man, and
+so on. And how about letting Tucu lead the parade again?"</p>
+
+<p>"Excellent, Capitao! I was thinking of that." Louren&ccedil;o talked to Tucu,
+who swung out into the current. The boat of the white men followed, then
+the others. At a steady cruising speed the brigade surged on downstream.</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton's allotted hour passed. Pedro took his place and was instantly
+asleep. In turn he was aroused, and Louren&ccedil;o laid down his paddle. But
+just then Tucu's canoe slowed and floated in to the left bank.</p>
+
+<p>The others backed water and looked at a very narrow ravine&mdash;almost a
+cleft&mdash;in a rising hillside. Through it led a lane of water. From the
+third boat, in which were two women of the Monitaya tribe, now came
+voices carrying information to the Indian leader. At once he turned his
+boat into the cleft.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the connection we have been seeking." Louren&ccedil;o explained. "The
+women say the boats of their captors came through this crack in the
+hill. At the end we shall find the creek of Monitaya."</p>
+
+<p>The women spoke truth. After threading their way along the weedy
+water-path, which was barely wide enough to give passage for the boats,
+they emerged at a slant into another stream. Down this, with the sure
+instinct for direction of the hereditary jungle-dweller, Tucu turned his
+prow without asking the women whether to go with or against the current.
+Once more on the waters of their home creek, the Mayorunas quickened
+their strokes and howled merrily on toward their <i>malocas</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o took his nap and resumed his place. Hour after hour the fleet
+sped on. Noon passed without a halt, the paddlers munching at whatever
+fragments remained from breakfast. By turns the Americans and Brazilians
+each got another hour's sleep, McKay consenting to relax when all his
+mates had rested. Rand dozed and awoke at intervals, seeming content and
+comfortable despite his cramped position.</p>
+
+<p>By four o'clock even the Mayorunas began to lag in their strokes.
+Excluding the halt at sunrise, they now had been journeying for fifteen
+hours, in the last nine of which they had covered many miles of
+serpentine water. The heat of the day and the constant drive of the
+paddles had taken their toll, and now the body of every man fiercely
+demanded more food. McKay, knowing that in jungle travel distance is not
+a matter of miles, but of hours, had begun to figure that the journey
+which had taken nearly five days of overland work might be completed
+that night by the swiftly moving canoes. But now, recognizing the signs
+of exhaustion, he realized that without some powerful spur the Indians
+would not attempt to reach the home <i>malocas</i> until the morrow.</p>
+
+<p>Then the spur came. Even as Tucu began scanning the shores for a good
+camp site, he and every other Mayoruna suddenly ceased paddling and
+threw up his head. Faint and far, a xylophonic call of beaten wooden
+bars rapped across the jungle, rising and falling in swift, regular
+cadence&mdash;a sirenical flow and ebb of sound waves. Over and over it
+undulated, rapid, incessant, imperative.</p>
+
+<p>A chorus of excited grunts broke from the canoe brigade. The dugout of
+Tucu leaped away like a roweled horse. Louren&ccedil;o and Pedro buried their
+paddles in mighty strokes, hurling their boat ahead to keep from being
+run down by those behind.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o barked at Tucu, who flung back an answer.</p>
+
+<p>"Paddle hard, Capitao! If we do not keep up we shall be wrecked. That
+message is the war call of the Mayorunas&mdash;calling in the hunters from
+the forest to take arms against an enemy. We must race now with these
+madmen around us, or we go under. Paddle!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>STRATEGY</h3>
+
+
+<p>In the last light of the fast-fading day the canoes darted from the
+forest into the clearing where stood the Monitaya <i>malocas</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Long before their arrival the siren call had ceased, but there had been
+no lessening of speed by the racing dugouts. On the contrary, the last
+long mile had been covered in a final desperate spurt, the paddles
+swinging in swift unison to the accompaniment of a ferocious chant of
+one syllable: "Hough! Hough! Hough!" This explosive cadence had echoed
+down the stream ahead of them; and now, as the panting crews emerged
+from the jungle, they found themselves flanked by a long line of their
+fellow-warriors, bristling with drawn arrows and ready spear points. But
+of the enemy whose presence that great xylophone had betokened there was
+no sign.</p>
+
+<p>At sight of the familiar feather bonnets of their own men the tense
+Monitayans let their weapons slowly sink. And when Tucu, leaping ashore,
+gaspingly demanded news of the fight, the line dissolved into a mob
+which rushed to welcome him and his mates. In the first few breaths it
+was learned that no fight had yet taken place, but that all the warriors
+had been brought in and ordered to prepare to march at the next sunrise;
+and that the sudden war call had been sent out as the result of the
+arrival of a stranger.</p>
+
+<p>Then the crowd parted, and through it came striding two men whose
+appearance caused the white men to erupt into hoarse shouts of greeting.
+One, whose hard face swiftly relaxed into a half smile of relief, was
+the great chief himself. The other, whose jutting jaw suddenly dropped
+and whose blue eyes opened in incredulity, was Tim&mdash;Tim, once more
+strong and florid and aggressive, gripping his rifle, astounded at the
+sight of his comrades standing there alive and alert. They soon learned
+why.</p>
+
+<p>Dropping his gun, he sprang at them with an inarticulate roar of
+welcome. He wrung their hands, pounded their shoulders, laughed, cried,
+swore, all at once. Then he burst out:</p>
+
+<p>"Glory be! Ye're alive, homelier 'n ever and tough as tripe! We thought
+ye was wiped out sure! We was all set to start in the mornin' and pull
+them Red Bones to pieces. Mebbe we'll do it yet, too. How'd ye break
+through? Did ye kill Sworn-off and his gang?"</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf? Gang? Haven't seen anybody but Red Bones&mdash;though we sure
+saw plenty of them," replied Knowlton. "What are you talking about?"</p>
+
+<p>"Then ye missed him by about one point windage. When'd ye leave? Last
+night? I bet he's there by now. Gee! Where'd ye git them girls? And
+who's this guy? Great gosh! Is he the Raposy? Wal, for the love o'
+Mike&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Tim!" broke in McKay. "What's all this about? Now wait. This is the
+Raposa. These girls are Mayoruna women held prisoners by the Red Bones.
+We got them last night and lit out in the middle of a general
+engagement. Now open up with your news."</p>
+
+<p>"Right, Cap. We got a visitor to-day&mdash;old friend of ourn&mdash;li'l' old
+Hozy, the only white guy in that Peruvian crew we had. He's all dolled
+up like an Injun&mdash;shaved face, tribe paint, and so on. He come through
+the Injun country that way&mdash;I dunno yet how he done it, him bein' a
+Peruvian and all, but he got through, and he says Sworn-off and a whole
+gang of bad eggs is back here to git this Raposy guy and all the girls
+they can lay hands on. He says Sworn-off's got them Red Bones workin'
+for him, and you fellers must be massacreed sure by now.</p>
+
+<p>"Good thing I was here when he come, or he'd be cut up and in the
+stewpot. Monitaya's a good skate, but he sure is poison to anything
+Peruvian, and soon as Hozy begun to try to talk he got wise and dang
+near bumped him off. I got him to cool down some, and he believes Hozy's
+tellin' the truth, but even at that they got Hozy tied up like a dog.
+Come look at him."</p>
+
+<p>But it was necessary to wait awhile for Tucu and Louren&ccedil;o to tell
+Monitaya the tale of what had taken place; for the chief demanded
+immediate and full details, and not until he had them would he return to
+his <i>maloca</i> and his hammock throne. By that time the little moon was
+again ruler of the sky and the keen hunger of the voyagers had grown
+ravenous. Followed by the rescued and the rescuers, he then stalked into
+the tribal house and to his usual place, where he commanded that food be
+brought.</p>
+
+<p>On the ground, directly in front of the chief's hammock, sat a gaunt,
+painted Indian around whose neck was a stout noose, the other end of the
+cord being held by a muscular savage whose skull-smashing club was
+gripped loosely in his other fist. As the whites reached them the noosed
+man's face cracked in a grin.</p>
+
+<p>"Greetings, se&ntilde;ores," said the voice of Jos&eacute;. "You will pardon me for
+remaining seated, yes? The man behind me is itching for an excuse to
+crush my head."</p>
+
+<p>"Jos&eacute;!" exclaimed both Knowlton and McKay. Though Tim had said Jos&eacute; was
+"tied like a dog," they had not thought to find the expression literal
+truth. The sight angered them and they turned to Louren&ccedil;o.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell Monitaya we want this man freed!" McKay snapped. At his peremptory
+tone the cannibal chieftain looked oddly at him, and when Louren&ccedil;o
+translated the demand&mdash;though in a more diplomatic manner&mdash;he scowled.
+But he gave the clubman the word and the rope was lifted from the
+prisoner's neck.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Gracias, amigos</i>," he bowed. "If I still remain seated, it is because
+I am very weary&mdash;and I have not eaten since yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>His thin face and his projecting ribs not only corroborated his simple
+announcement, but indicated that for more than one day his food and rest
+had been almost <i>nil</i>. Naked, painted, minus his fierce mustache and
+flamboyant headkerchief, he appeared a far different man than the
+domineering <i>puntero</i> of a short time back. But his bold black eyes, his
+reckless grin, and his mocking tone proved him the same swashbuckling
+Jos&eacute;, undaunted by hunger, exhaustion, or his position as prisoner of
+man eaters whose enmity was implacable.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you're going to eat now, or we'll know why not!" vowed Knowlton.
+"We understand that you brought a warning to Monitaya. Is this his way
+of treating men who risk their lives to befriend him?"</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; shrugged.</p>
+
+<p>"Once an enemy, always an enemy. That is their rule. And do not think
+that I traveled the bush and threw myself into this snake heap from love
+of Monitaya. I do not care if he and all his race are blown to hell. I
+am here because, as I once told you, Jos&eacute; Martinez never forgets. Thank
+you, se&ntilde;or, I will eat now and talk later."</p>
+
+<p>Deftly he extracted a chunk of meat from a clay pot which had been
+placed before Knowlton and in turn tendered to him. Monitaya watched him
+eat, but gave no sign of disapproval; and the Americans, and even the
+Brazilians, made an aggressive show of friendship toward the lone
+Peruvian for the express benefit of the chief. They knew well that by
+their rescue of the Mayoruna women they had made their own position
+among these people virtually impregnable, and that their recognition of
+Jos&eacute; as a friend probably would be his only bulwark. Wherefore they left
+no doubt in the minds of the watchers as to where he stood in their
+regard.</p>
+
+<p>Monitaya, sitting in regal dignity, looked down upon two parties of
+seven feasting with famished speed&mdash;the rescued women who were not
+members of his own tribe, and the four Americans, two Brazilians, and
+one Peruvian. All the others had scattered&mdash;Tucu and his band to their
+own family triangles, and the four Monitaya girls to become the nuclei
+of feminine groups which demanded intimate accounts of their capture and
+treatment by the captors.</p>
+
+<p>To the strange women at his feet the chief paid scant attention now,
+though he meant to interrogate them after their hunger was satisfied.
+His eyes dwelt on Rand, the strange combination of white man, Indian,
+and jungle demon of whom he had heard so much and on whose tanned skin
+the red skeleton streaks told the tale of a "mind out of the skull."
+Jos&eacute; and Tim stared in frank curiosity at the dead-alive newcomer, whose
+silent composure remained totally unperturbed. But the seven new girls,
+though ignored by the chief and his guests, were by no means neglected
+by the other men of the <i>maloca</i>, being thoroughly stared at by most of
+the young bucks&mdash;and, it must be confessed, by a goodly proportion of
+the married men also.</p>
+
+<p>When at length the meal was finished Monitaya commanded the girls to
+stand before him and narrate their experiences. The men lit smokes, Jos&eacute;
+seizing the proffered cigarette with avidity, Rand accepting his with
+the usual odd deliberation.</p>
+
+<p>"Wal, Hozy, old feller, ye're in right with the chief now," asserted
+Tim. "Ye got all our gang with ye, and she's some li'l' old gang, I'll
+tell the world. This feller Renzo can talk cannibal so good he makes
+Monitaya hunt for the dictionary, and he'll tell the chief in ten
+seconds what I tried half an hour to say this afternoon&mdash;that ye belong.
+I 'ain't been here long enough to learn much o' their lingo, ye
+understand. If I could spout it like French, now, there wouldn't been no
+trouble."</p>
+
+<p>McKay and Knowlton snickered. They knew Tim's French was several degrees
+worse than the usual American doughboy's "frog" talk.</p>
+
+<p>"Good thing you couldn't," derided Knowlton. "You'd have had Jos&eacute;
+crucified before we got here."</p>
+
+<p>"That's right, gimme the razz! Course, I did have a li'l' trouble makin'
+some o' them frogs understand, but that was because they was so ignorant
+they didn't know their own language when they heard it spoke right.
+Anyways, ye got to admit Hozy's still with us and sassy as ever, and he
+wouldn't been if Timmy Ryan hadn't been round to powwow for him."</p>
+
+<p>"You have it right, se&ntilde;or," Jos&eacute; agreed, gravely. "Without you I should
+now be dead. I can speak the Mayoruna tongue quite well, but of what use
+is it to talk any language when men will not listen? It was you and your
+gun that saved me."</p>
+
+<p>"Gun? Good Lord! Did you pull a gun on Monitaya?" ejaculated the
+lieutenant.</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, no. That is&mdash;I guess mebbe I did wave me piece around while I was
+arguin'&mdash;I can always convince a guy better if I got somethin' in me
+hand. But I didn't git real rough."</p>
+
+<p>"You are lucky to be still alive, Senhor Tim," said Louren&ccedil;o. "If
+Monitaya were not the man he is you would not be alive. I am glad we
+have returned."</p>
+
+<p>"Meanin' I need a guardeen? Say, lookit here now&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"As you were!" clipped McKay. "We're all wasting time. Jos&eacute;, let's hear
+your report. I thought you were going to put Schwandorf out of action
+for good?"</p>
+
+<p>"And I am, Capitan! That is why I now am here. If I had reached him
+immediately after leaving the Nunes place it would have been done at
+once. But a man travels slowly when he is alone and has lost much blood,
+and before I met Schwandorf again I had time to think coolly. Then when
+I saw him I changed my plans.</p>
+
+<p>"Some days down the river I met him traveling fast in a canoe paddled by
+hard men whom I know. He pretended to be greatly grieved when I told him
+you all were dead. Oh yes, se&ntilde;ores, I told him that! I was playing with
+him, and it amused me to see how he thought he was deceiving me when I
+was really fooling him. I said we were attacked by Indians a short way
+above the Nunes place and that I alone escaped. Then he said something
+that made me decide not to kill him for a time.</p>
+
+<p>"He told me he had learned that this man here&mdash;his name is Rand,
+yes?&mdash;that the man Rand was a bank thief who had run away from North
+America, and that a reward would be paid for him. He said your real
+reason for coming here was that you were detectives trying to earn the
+reward. That is false, is it not, se&ntilde;ores?"</p>
+
+<p>"We're no detectives. Rand's no thief."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, so I thought. But Schwandorf often tells truth to conceal his lies,
+so that it is sometimes hard to know which is true and which untrue. He
+went on to say he had warned you not to come into this Indian country,
+and he was sorry you had been killed&mdash;the snake&mdash;but since you were dead
+we might get the money for ourselves. If we succeeded in catching the
+man Rand and taking him out alive I should get half the reward, or five
+hundred dollars.</p>
+
+<p>"I saw plainly what his plan was. I might be useful to him in catching
+Rand if Rand was out in the bush, for I have traveled this country alone
+more than once and am a far better bushman than the German. But whether
+I got Rand or not, I never should live to demand my part of the money. I
+know too much about Schwandorf&mdash;things which I shall not tell now. So
+when the right time should come, Jos&eacute; would meet with a fatal accident,
+such as a bullet in the back, or a knife in the throat while sleeping.
+But I did not let him know I saw this. I pretended to fall in with his
+plan like the fool he thought me to be.</p>
+
+<p>"It was not Rand alone that brought him here. You have brought back
+Mayoruna women from the Red Bone country, so you know the Red Bones are
+women stealers. And they steal for Schwandorf. You may believe me or
+not, se&ntilde;ores, but I did not know this until the German told me. Oh yes,
+I knew he dealt in women, but of the Red Bone part of his business I was
+ignorant. As soon as I learned it I saw how I could put the illustrious
+Se&ntilde;or Schwandorf out of action, as you say, and at the same time try to
+save you.</p>
+
+<p>"I sharpened my knife to a razor edge, deserted the German when we
+reached the right place, shaved with my knife, painted myself with the
+red and black plant dyes, and came overland to this place, thinking you
+would be here if still alive. But you had traveled faster than I
+expected and had gone into the Red Bone country, so my chance to save
+you seemed to have passed. I could only try to tell this chief the Red
+Bones were stealers of his women and that the German was with them,
+knowing that if he believed me he would go on the war trail against them
+and kill them all. But if Se&ntilde;or Tim had not befriended me I should have
+died too soon to tell my tale. That is all, se&ntilde;ores. Now can you spare a
+little more tobacco?"</p>
+
+<p>They could and they promptly did. With a new cigarette glowing he lay
+back and looked quizzically at the women lined up before Monitaya.</p>
+
+<p>"How many men has Schwandorf?" asked McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"About twenty in all, Capitan. There were eight in his crew, and they
+were to meet a dozen more at a place on the Peruvian side."</p>
+
+<p>"All riflemen?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i> He brought many cartridges for them. They are to raid tribe
+houses of these people."</p>
+
+<p>"Capture women and run them into Peru?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i>" Jos&eacute; yawned as if speaking of a deal in salt fish.</p>
+
+<p>The Americans looked thoughtfully around the big house. They saw that
+every man near them was inspecting some kind of weapon&mdash;making sure that
+bow cords were unfrayed, that arrow heads and spear points were firm,
+that the long blowguns had received no cast from suspension, and that
+darts were absolutely straight and true. The strong but cruel faces of
+the warriors were stamped with malignant hatred of the Red Bone tribe
+and the Blackbeard who enslaved their women. The command to prepare for
+a march at dawn had not been withdrawn.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll be expected to go, too, and I'd sure like another crack at
+Umanuh, not to mention the Schwandorf outfit," said Knowlton, "but we
+have friend Rand on our hands now, and our first duty is to get him out
+of here safely."</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, Looey, have a heart! I 'ain't had no action since that li'l' scrap
+down the river, and I got to have some excitement before we blow. What's
+more, we can't beat it now, with Monitaya dependin' on us to fight on
+his side. He'd git sore, and I don't blame him."</p>
+
+<p>His superior officers and the Brazilians frowned. Every man of them
+itched to close with the enemy in one final decisive battle. Yet&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"What 'll we do with Rand?" Knowlton voiced the general thought.</p>
+
+<p>The green eyes of the Raposa turned to him, rested long on his, traveled
+deliberately along the other faces. And then, to the utter astonishment
+of all, the dumb spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll fight," said Rand.</p>
+
+<p>Speechless, the men around him stared. His face was inscrutable as ever,
+his eyes fathomless, his voice flat and toneless. But slowly he raised
+his hands as if holding a bow; twitched his right thumb and forefinger
+in the motion of loosing a shaft; let the hands sink. His gaze calmly
+lifted from theirs and dwelt on the farthest wall. Not another word did
+he speak.</p>
+
+<p>"Begorry! there's yer answer!" triumphed Tim. "He says, 'Fight!' And I
+bet he can sling a wicked bow and arrer, at that. Don't ye s'pose he
+wants a crack at them Red Bones, after the way they used him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think, comrades, that the man has settled the matter for us," Pedro
+seconded. "None of us wants to run away; and, as Tim says, we are
+expected to help Monitaya. We should be considered cowards, worse than
+dogs, if we refused. If we do not fight the Red Bones we may have to
+fight these Mayorunas, who now are our friends. We must stay."</p>
+
+<p>McKay nodded, still studying the expressionless countenance of Rand.</p>
+
+<p>"That's settled," he announced, crisply. "Now, Louren&ccedil;o, find out
+Monitaya's plan of battle."</p>
+
+<p>The chief had finished his examination of the women and Louren&ccedil;o
+promptly put the question. Monitaya laconically replied.</p>
+
+<p>"His purpose is not changed by our arrival, Capitao. He and his men go
+to-morrow to attack and destroy the Red Bones. When they reach the town
+of Umanuh they will surround it, and all will rush in when the chief
+gives his yell of war."</p>
+
+<p>"About what I expected. An Indian has a single-track mind always. But
+his strategy is rotten. Might be good enough if he had only Umanuh to
+deal with, but with Schwandorf in the game it's different. Ask him how
+he expects to protect his women while he's gone."</p>
+
+<p>"He says," Louren&ccedil;o reported, "that there will be no danger to the
+women, because his warriors will be between the women and their enemies
+until those enemies are dead."</p>
+
+<p>"Very simple. So simple that it's foolish. He doesn't figure on the
+other fellow's mind at all; doesn't realize that a man like Schwandorf
+is bound to outguess him on such straightaway tactics and isn't at all
+likely to play into his hands. But that's the exact situation. The
+German will outguess him, and it's up to him to outguess the German in
+turn. We'll do his guessing for him.</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf goes into Umanuh's town, learns what's happened, finds the
+Red Bones frothing at the mouth, and is sore himself. He figures that
+we've returned here with the women, that Monitaya's men are blood-mad
+against the Red Bones, and that they'll do just what they are planning
+to do&mdash;march on Red Bone town and leave their women unprotected except
+by the old men, whose defensive power is negligible. He is in this
+country for the express purpose of getting girls, and with Monitaya's
+men away from their <i>malocas</i> he has a wide-open chance to make the
+biggest slave haul of his life. So he plans to outmaneuver Monitaya,
+attack this place, capture all the young women, allow the Red Bones to
+massacre everyone else and burn the houses, and then move on without the
+loss of a man. After that perhaps he intends to find us and get Rand, or
+perhaps to attack other Mayoruna <i>malocas</i>. At any rate, his first
+objective is this place. Am I right so far?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dead right," Knowlton nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well. Now he may figure that, having found the water connection
+between the two creeks, the Mayorunas will come against Umanuh by the
+canoe route. Or he may think they'll make the overland trip. In either
+case, the Red Bones have to come through the bush, for the simple reason
+that they haven't boats enough to carry all their force. Their canoes
+were rather few when we were there, and we commandeered several of them
+for our own use. If they decide to come part of the way in canoes
+they'll have to work a come-and-go transport service, bringing the
+fighting men down in batches to some rendezvous from which they must
+finish the journey on foot. Chances are that they'll disregard the
+canoes and all march overland by some route that would dodge the
+Mayoruna line of march. But in either case they're coming here. And it's
+here, in the place where he's not expected to be, that Monitaya should
+meet them. Let him fortify himself and await the assault. It will come."</p>
+
+<p>"And we shall be saved many weary miles of leg work," Jos&eacute; smiled.
+"Capitan, your strategy is magnificent."</p>
+
+<p>"Begorry! it ain't so bad at that!" Tim approved. "Hozy, me and you will
+have our hammicks slung out front here when the show starts and do our
+shootin' prone. Suits me fine. Put it up to the chief, Renzo."</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o did. Very carefully he explained it all to Monitaya, dwelling
+on the fact that McKay himself was a warrior chieftain and familiar with
+the fighting methods of such men as the atrocious Blackbeard, and
+depicting graphically the horror of an attack by the barbarous Red Bones
+on the defenseless women. It took him some time to divert the chief's
+stubborn mind from the original plan, but in the end he succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>To the vast astonishment and disappointment of the vengeful warriors,
+Monitaya curtly announced that the projected march would not take place.
+They stared as if disbelieving their ears, and more than one black look
+was given Louren&ccedil;o. But not a man questioned the countermanding of
+orders, not a mutter was heard. The great chief had spoken, and his word
+was final.</p>
+
+<p>Reluctantly they laid aside the weapons on which they had been toiling
+with such purposeful zeal. The chief watched them with a little smile of
+pride&mdash;pride in their zest for war, pride in their unquestioning
+acceptance of his dampening order. Then he coolly told them to continue
+their work; told them, further, that the next morning all the streams
+were to be poisoned, new traps set, and scouts stationed far out on
+every trail to await and report the approach of foes. Instantly their
+faces flamed again and from every quarter of the wide house rose an
+excited hum. They were to fight, after all!</p>
+
+<p>"Tough eggs, these lads, if ye ask me," yawned Tim. "Bet ye we'll see a
+row worth lookin' at when she does break."</p>
+
+<p>He forebore to mention the fact that in rifle power their assailants
+would outnumber them four to one.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXIV.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BATTLE OF THE TRIBES</h3>
+
+
+<p>The next four days, though they were days of waiting, were busy enough
+to satisfy the most impatient Mayoruna warrior.</p>
+
+<p>Outposts were established on every route by which the attacking force
+would be likely to approach the twin <i>malocas</i>, the watchmen being given
+the strictest commands not to fight, nor even to allow themselves to be
+seen, but to run at top speed with the warning.</p>
+
+<p>Poison detachments went forth to collect the ingredients for making
+deadly the water and the weapons. Those detailed to the work of
+polluting the streams gathered quantities of blue-blossomed,
+short-podded plants with yellow roots, the roots being pulped and thrown
+into the slow currents, which straightway became fatal to man or beast
+The wurali squad procured their favorite materials and, in a flimsy shed
+well away from the houses, prepared a plentiful supply of the venomed
+brew.</p>
+
+<p>New traps were set at points where a man or two might be picked off,
+though it was realized that these would have little effect on the final
+result. And inside the big houses men especially skilled in the
+manufacture of arrows and darts toiled swiftly and steadily from dawn
+till far into the night.</p>
+
+<p>These activities, however, were only the usual defensive preparations
+made by the warriors whenever they knew a sizable body of foes was
+somewhere in the vicinity. It remained for the brains of the white men
+to devise additional features, simple enough in themselves, but
+astounding to the savages, who were accustomed only to the primitive
+battle tactics of their ancestors. For the first time in their lives the
+cannibals found themselves digging in&mdash;and also digging out.</p>
+
+<p>After a survey of the terrain and a catechism of Louren&ccedil;o and Monitaya
+as to the usual methods of attack and defense, the two officers broached
+an idea born of the exigencies of the situation. As they expected, the
+great chief was somewhat slow to approve it, for it involved a literal
+undermining of the walls of his fortresses. But despite the natural
+inflexibility of his mental processes he was an unusually intelligent
+savage, and eventually the patient reiteration of the advantages of the
+scheme won him first to assent and then almost to enthusiasm. Wherefore
+the amazed tribesmen were set to work, armed with crude wooden shovels,
+in digging holes under the logs which sheltered them from man, beast,
+and jungle demon.</p>
+
+<p>All along the walls, at intervals marked by McKay and Knowlton, the
+tunnels were dug. At the same time another large gang excavated before
+each of the <i>malocas</i> a deep, curving trench, the two long pits being
+separated by a ten-foot space of solid earth affording free passage from
+the houses to the creek. Meanwhile the women and the older children were
+weaving flimsy covers from withes and vines. As soon as a tunnel was
+completed it was masked outside the walls by one of these covers, on
+which a thin layer of earth and grass was laid. The two trenches were
+likewise concealed, and the loose earth was carried inside the house and
+packed solidly against the walls flanking the doors.</p>
+
+<p>At sundown of the fourth day the work was ended. And so well was it done
+that when the great chief, his subchiefs, and his foreign allies went on
+a final tour of inspection they could find no sign that the houses were
+honeycombed with exits or that the ground in front of the little
+entrances was not solid at all points.</p>
+
+<p>"Rod and I took the idea from those pit traps out on the trails,"
+Knowlton explained for the dozenth time. "Holes are covered to look
+exactly like the rest of the ground. Every man of us has to be inside
+when the enemy arrives, but we have to get out quick when the right time
+comes, so we go under the walls. And can't you see those brave women
+stealers go kerplunk down into the trenches? Oh boy!"</p>
+
+<p>Whereat Louren&ccedil;o and Jos&eacute; smiled as if enjoying a secret joke. They
+were. For they knew something of which the Americans were not
+aware&mdash;that Monitaya had improved on the trench-trap idea of the whites
+by studding the bottom of those trenches with barbed araya bones smeared
+with wurali.</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah, and I figger them guys 'll git some jolt when these houses, which
+'ain't got nobody in 'em but women and kids, begin to spit lead out o'
+loopholes and spew screechin' cannibals up out o' the ground. Gosh! I
+wouldn't miss seein' Sworn-off's face for a keg o' beer&mdash;and that's
+sayin' somethin'."</p>
+
+<p>Wherein Tim expressed the general sentiment.</p>
+
+<p>So ended the fourth day. When the fifth broke no man showed himself
+outside the walls. Except the few outposts, every male of the Monitaya
+<i>malocas</i> bided within, awaiting with growing tension the arrival of the
+enemy. It was more than likely, McKay had pointed out, that the main
+body of the barbarous force led by Schwandorf would be preceded by a
+handful of scouts, and quite possible that one or more of these would
+slip past the outguards and spy on the tribal houses. The sight of even
+one warrior would instantly apprise any such spy that the others must be
+near, and the word would go back at all speed to the Red Bones.
+Wherefore the only Monitayans to pass through the tiny doorways that
+morning were a few young women sent out as bait. These, naturally, took
+good care to stay near the entrances.</p>
+
+<p>Within, the men waited at their appointed places. Each tunnel had its
+quota of warriors, the number being divided evenly to assure a speedy
+and simultaneous exit. The Americans had elected to fight from the
+<i>maloca</i> of the great chief, while the Brazilians and Jos&eacute; were to
+garrison the doorway of the other house as soon as the warning came.
+Rand, wordless and imperturbable as ever, now was armed with a strong
+bow and plenty of new arrows with unpoisoned heads; and he, of course,
+would remain with his own countrymen. Thus, preparations completed, all
+settled themselves to the interminable hours of waiting.</p>
+
+<p>Up on the heaped earth near the doorway, which made the walls
+practically bullet-proof to a height of six feet and thus would protect
+the women and children, one or more of the Americans was constantly on
+the lookout through some inconspicuous loophole. Hour after hour dragged
+past, and no unusual movement or sound came to reward their vigilance.
+Under the glare of the sun the roof and walls grew hot; under the silent
+strain of endless anticipation the impatience of the fighting men became
+a ferment. At length Pedro, unable to keep still, mounted to a peephole
+near Knowlton. Scarcely had he put his eye to the opening when both men
+sucked in their breath.</p>
+
+<p>At the edge of the bush a man's head peered from behind a tree. And at
+the same moment a single canoe came creeping out of the bush and up to
+the landing place. The head behind the tree was that of a Red Bone spy.
+The two in the small canoe were Yuara and a companion from the Suba
+tribe.</p>
+
+<p>"Louren&ccedil;o!" hoarsely whispered Pedro. "Yuara comes. Tell girls to run to
+welcome him and guide him between the pits. A spy is watching. If Yuara
+walks on the pits he dies and our trap is revealed. <i>Por amor de Deus</i>,
+send girls quickly!"</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o acted instantly. Seizing two young women, he propelled them
+doorward, talking swiftly the while. Yuara and his mate were already
+advancing innocently toward the few girls outside, none of whom had wit
+enough to warn him. But the two whom the Brazilian had grasped happened
+to be of quick intelligence, and now they darted out. Before the
+visiting pair could reach the death trap the girls were upon them,
+laughing as if delighted to see a man once more, and deftly turning them
+aside to the point where two unobtrusive stubs marked the bridge of
+safety.</p>
+
+<p>Vastly astonished by such effusive welcome from two girls whom they did
+not know, but by no means displeased thereby, the young warriors of the
+Suba clan were piloted to the door and inside. As they disappeared, the
+head of the spy also vanished.</p>
+
+<p>"Woof!" muttered Knowlton, wiping sweat from his brow. "That was close!
+Here's hoping we have no more visitors."</p>
+
+<p>Yuara and his companion meanwhile were being interrogated by both
+Louren&ccedil;o and Monitaya, who in turn enlightened them as to the present
+state of affairs. At the promise of war the faces of the Suba men lit
+up.</p>
+
+<p>"Yuara comes only on a visit to learn news," Louren&ccedil;o told the rest.
+"You remember that the day after our return a canoe was sent downstream
+to a point where the wooden bars could be beaten and heard by Suba's
+men, and that a warning against the Red Bones and Schwandorf was given
+in that way. Yuara has become anxious to know more, so he is here."</p>
+
+<p>"If he sticks around he'll learn a lot," predicted Tim.</p>
+
+<p>With no waste of words or motion Yuara coolly attached himself and his
+fellow-tribesman to McKay. Monitaya and his subchiefs were informed of
+the arrival and departure of the enemy scout. The word passed among the
+warriors, who, despite their innate equanimity, began to grit their
+pointed teeth and quiver like dogs held in leash. But another hour
+passed, and yet another; and still no word from the outposts arrived.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly a chorus of screams shrilled from the women outside. In a
+frenzy of fear they plunged through the doorways. Blending with their
+outcries, a hoarse yell of ferocity rose raucously from the direction of
+the creek. At once a louder ululation burst forth at the rear and sides
+of the clearing. Monitaya's outguards had failed and the <i>malocas</i> were
+surrounded.</p>
+
+<p>Loping from the bush fringing the stream came a score of yellow-faced,
+shirtless, barefooted brutes crisscrossed with cartridge belts and
+gripping rifles. At their head loomed a burly black-whiskered creature
+with a revolver in each hand&mdash;the malignant Schwandorf himself.</p>
+
+<p>Grinning like a pack of yellow-fanged wolves, they doubled toward the
+low entrances, their guns spouting wantonly at the upper walls&mdash;a ragged
+volley meant to terrorize the defenseless women within, none of whom
+were to be killed until the handsomest had been cut out and set aside
+for slavery. Some of the heavy bullets bored through between logs and
+thudded wickedly into rafters and roof poles within. But from the
+loopholes where the defending rifles lurked no shot cracked in reply.</p>
+
+<p>The fiendish howling of the Red Bones, sweeping in from all sides to the
+butchery, swelled into a feline screech that almost drowned the roar of
+the rifles. Into the view of the watchers at the loopholes streamed
+hideous faces and naked brown bodies swerving inward from left and right
+to follow at the heels of the Blackbeard and his gunmen. In a few
+seconds more the trotting line of Peruvians was backed and flanked by a
+horde of demons hungering for the taste of women and babes. On they
+came&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>With the suddenness of a cataclysm the ground opened. Riflemen vanished
+in midstride. Savages screaming triumphant hate were gone in the flick
+of an eye. Others, instinctively digging their heels into the ground the
+instant those ahead of them disappeared, were hurled forward and down by
+the momentum of the following mass. Before the rush could be checked the
+trenches were packed with men struggling in frenzy to get out, wounding
+themselves and one another with the deadly points of their poisoned
+weapons.</p>
+
+<p>Of the twenty gunmen only four remained. They were the four immediately
+behind Schwandorf. By blind chance the German had set foot on the narrow
+isthmus separating the twin trenches, saving himself and the henchmen at
+his heels from being engulfed. Now, as the Red Bones fought back from
+the trap yawning before them, he and the surviving Peruvians stood
+staring in momentary stupefaction at the welter of death on their
+flanks. The malevolent yells of the savages had been cut short by the
+catastrophe, and for the moment no sound was heard but the grunts and
+snarls of struggling men.</p>
+
+<p>Then into the semisilence burst a mighty voice&mdash;the battlefield voice of
+McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Now! Fire at will!"</p>
+
+<p>The walls spat flame and lead. A scythe of death swept above the ground
+where stood Schwandorf and his riflemen. The Peruvian half-breeds
+collapsed and lay still. But Schwandorf, shocked into activity by the
+impact of that first word, dodged death by an infinitesimal fraction of
+a second. Hurling himself backward, he struck the earth just as the
+bullets sped through the air over him. With a lightning rebound he was
+up while fresh cartridges were jumping into the rifle barrels menacing
+him. Headlong he dived into the mass of Red Bones just behind. And the
+next bullets darting after him killed the savages, leaving him unharmed.</p>
+
+<p>The command of McKay and the crack of the rifles sent the quivering
+Mayorunas into the fight. In a flash every masking tunnel cover was
+thrown bodily into the air. Before the thunderstruck Red Bones had
+recovered from the shock of finding their gun-armed leaders annihilated
+and their mass being swept by swift-shooting rifles hidden in the walls,
+they beheld a horde of vindictive foes erupting from under those walls
+like warrior ants rushing from subterranean galleries. A blood-chilling
+yell of concentrated fury smote their ears; a hastily loosed storm of
+war arrows and short throwing-spears ripped into their flesh; a
+swift-running arc of light-skinned men swerved around them, shooting and
+stabbing as they went. They, who had so exultantly surrounded the homes
+of women and children, now were surrounded in turn.</p>
+
+<p>From the doorway of Monitaya's <i>maloca</i> the two Brazilians and Jos&eacute; now
+leaped forth and, firing as they ran, dashed to hold the entrance of the
+other big house. A few arrows whirred around them during their transit,
+but the shafts were shot hurriedly and missed. Meanwhile the three
+bushmen were striking down enemies at every flash of their guns, firing
+with the swift surety of veterans of many a running fight. They reached
+their objective unwounded; and when they reached it a fringe of dead
+foes marked their passage along the face of the hostile array. Once
+within the door, they rapidly reloaded and sprayed lead along the
+trenches, which, though now nearly full, had become a dead-line past
+which no Red Bone sought to go.</p>
+
+<p>Up on the earth embankments within the chief's house the four Americans
+fought steadily on; the soldiers shooting as coolly as if engaged merely
+in rapid-fire target practice, the silent Rand methodically driving
+arrows in swift succession from his wall-slit. Arrows thudded thickly
+into the logs masking them. Bullets, too, slammed into their
+rampart&mdash;bullets from the heavy revolvers of Schwandorf, who, ever
+keeping himself protected by the bodies of his cannibal allies, shot
+with both hands as the chance came. And the German could shoot. With
+only the small gun muzzles as targets, he planted bullets so close as to
+knock dirt more than once into the eyes of the riflemen and render them
+momentarily useless. After a time he got a bullet fair into a loophole.</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton grunted suddenly, swayed back, toppled, fell down the parapet.
+For a few seconds he lay still.</p>
+
+<p>"Looey!" howled Tim. "How ye fixed? Hurt bad?"</p>
+
+<p>The lieutenant heaved himself into a sitting position, stared around,
+clapped a hand to his right shoulder, looked at the red smear his palm
+brought away, reeled up, and scrambled back to his rifle. Schwandorf's
+bullet had drilled clear through the shoulder, and in falling his head
+had struck one of the upright poles. Without a word he got his gun into
+action once more, shooting now from the left shoulder. Tim, with a tight
+grin of relief, devoted himself once more to trying to shoot down the
+dodging German.</p>
+
+<p>The encircling Mayorunas, their first paroxysm of fury vented, now
+settled in cold hate to their work. On all sides their clubmen and
+spearmen were bludgeoning and stabbing at the close-packed Red Bones,
+leaping in, killing, springing back and onward with terrible efficiency.
+Beyond these a thin but deadly line of bowmen poured arrows in
+high-looping curves over the heads of the hand-to-hand combatants, the
+shafts whizzing far up, turning, and plunging down unerringly into the
+center of the enemy force. Each of those arrows could, and many did, end
+the lives of two or three adversaries by gouging their skins and letting
+the fearful wurali into their blood. The blowgun men too were darting
+into every opening, handling their clumsy weapons like feathers and
+constantly moving to spy out fresh targets.</p>
+
+<p>But the men of Monitaya were by no means escaping unscathed. The Red
+Bones, assailed from every quarter and milling about in hopeless
+disorder, were fighting now with desperate frenzy. Their own clubbers
+and stabbers were charging out and smashing skulls or piercing abdomens,
+their arrows rose in all directions at once, and some into whose veins
+the wurali had struck sprang in the last moments of life on nearby foes
+and bit like mad dogs. With a leader and a chance to form into any sort
+of flying wedge they might have broken through with comparative ease and
+taken a far heavier toll. But they had no leader: for Umanuh, whose name
+meant "corpse," now was a corpse in truth, his merciless brain oozing
+from a skull shattered by a Mayoruna clubman; and Schwandorf was very
+busy looking out for Schwandorf. So it was every man for himself, with
+the devil rapidly taking not only the hindmost, but the foremost as
+well.</p>
+
+<p>Thicker and thicker fell the dead. The trenches now not only were filled
+to the level of the ground, but piled with a windrow of bullet-torn
+bodies knocked down by the ever-spitting rifles. Jos&eacute;, Pedro, and
+Louren&ccedil;o abandoned all shelter and knelt in plain sight before the door
+which they had kept clear of all close attack. Monitaya, until now a
+field general who strode up and down roaring commands and encouragement,
+suddenly cast away his regal role and, seizing a club from one of his
+bodyguard, hurled himself on the nearest Red Bones&mdash;a raving, ravening
+demon of destructiveness whose glaring eyes smote terror into those
+fronting him and whose weapon swung like the club of Hercules. His
+bowmen and blowgun men, at last out of missiles, came charging in with
+bare hands or weapons seized from fallen warriors. Maneuvering had
+ended. Henceforth the fight was a grappling m&ecirc;l&eacute;e.</p>
+
+<p>Then the gunfire dwindled and died. The rifle cartridges were spent.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV"></a>CHAPTER XXV.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE PASSING OF SCHWANDORF</h3>
+
+
+<p>The three soldiers flung down their hot, empty guns.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothin' left but the gats and the steel," rumbled Tim. "Me, I'm goin'
+out and git some fresh air."</p>
+
+<p>With which he drew pistol and machete, leaped down, and lunged through
+the door. McKay bounded at his heels.</p>
+
+<p>"Merry! Rand! Stay here!" he commanded. Then he was outside, his pistol
+roaring in unison with Tim's.</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton and Rand looked at each other. The lieutenant fumbled his
+pistol from its holster, got it firmly in his left hand, slid down the
+embankment, and staggered out. Rand coolly walked over to Tim's
+discarded gun, picked it up, and followed.</p>
+
+<p>Over at the other doorway the bushmen threw aside their useless guns and
+drew their machetes. Jos&eacute;, grinning like a death's-head, whirled the
+bush knife aloft and mockingly dared the Red Bones still fronting him to
+come and take it from him. Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o indulged in no such
+bravado, but leaped like jaguars at their foes. Whereupon Jos&eacute;,
+muttering a curse on them for getting the jump on him, dashed forward
+with furious abandon.</p>
+
+<p>Their pistols emptied, the Americans also drew machetes&mdash;all except
+Rand, who had no weapon but the bulletless rifle&mdash;and waited. Few
+unwounded Red Bones now were left; but among those few Schwandorf still
+lived.</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf!" bellowed McKay. "You yellow cur&mdash;you <i>Schweinhund</i>! Come
+and fight!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah!" taunted Tim. "The women and kids are inside. Come and git 'em!"</p>
+
+<p>Schwandorf came. He came not because he wanted to, however, for his
+guns, too, were empty. He came because the Red Bones, sensing the
+challenge and loathing the Blackbeard who had shielded himself so long
+among them, threw him out bodily. They had no time to stand and watch
+what might happen to him, but they took time to cast him out where he
+must stand on his own legs. Then, snarling, they resumed their now
+hopeless battle against their encompassing executioners.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment the German stood glowering at McKay. Then, with a dramatic
+gesture, he threw aside his useless revolvers and advanced empty handed.</p>
+
+<p>"Man to man?" he growled.</p>
+
+<p>"Man to man!" echoed McKay, passing his pistol to Tim and sheathing his
+machete. Fists clenched, he sprang forward.</p>
+
+<p>Schwandorf halted. His hands remained empty&mdash;until the captain was
+within eight feet of him. Then he leaped back, his machete jumped into
+his fist, and its point stabbed for his antagonist's abdomen.</p>
+
+<p>An instantaneous side-step and twist of the body saved the captain from
+evisceration. The blade ripped through breeches and shirt and scraped
+the skin. As Schwandorf yanked it back for another thrust McKay struck
+it away with one hand and, without drawing his own steel, jumped again
+at his assailant. An instant later the two blackbeards were clenched in
+a death grapple.</p>
+
+<p>Schwandorf found his long knife useless and dropped it. He strove for a
+back-breaking hold, but found it blocked. McKay, though an indifferent
+swordsman, was a formidable wrestler and fist fighter, and the German's
+advantage in weight was more than offset by the American's quickness and
+wiry strength. Science was thrown to the winds. A heaving, choking,
+wrenching man-fight it was, stumbling over bodies, each straining every
+muscle, trying every hold to twist and break the other and batter him
+down to death.</p>
+
+<p>Smashing fist blows brought blood dripping from their faces.
+Bone-wringing grips forced gasps from their lungs and superhuman spasms
+of resistance from their outraged nerve centers. They fell across a
+corpse, rolled on the ground, throttled, kicked, struck, and tore.
+Finally, in a furious outburst of energy, the American fought his enemy
+down under him, clamped his body with iron knees, and crashed a terrific
+punch squarely between the German's glaring eyes. Schwandorf went limp.</p>
+
+<p>At that instant a backward eddy of the battle surged over the pair. The
+maniacal Red Bones, fighting to the last bitter drop of doom, found two
+white men under their feet. Screeching, snarling, they fell on them like
+wild beasts, tearing with tooth and nail. Their arrows were gone, their
+darts exhausted, and no spearman was among them; they fought with
+nature's weapons, while above them one lone clubman struggled to swing
+down his lethal bludgeon without killing his fellows.</p>
+
+<p>McKay, wrenching his machete loose and gripping it with both hands, got
+its point upward and jabbed blindly at the weight of flesh bearing him
+down. Faintly to his ears came yells of rage and the impact of
+blows&mdash;the battle roars of Tim and Knowlton, who with their machetes
+were cleaving a way to their captain. But the beastly demons over him
+still crushed him down on Schwandorf, smothering him under the burden of
+bodies dead and alive. His stabs grew weak. Exhaustion and lack of air
+were killing him more surely than the savages.</p>
+
+<p>Pedro, Louren&ccedil;o, Jos&eacute; and the inexplicable Rand came slashing and
+clubbing a path of their own to the beleaguered Scot&mdash;the Brazilians
+cutting straight ahead with deadly surety, the painted Peruvian chopping
+and thrusting with a fixed grin, Rand swinging the gun butt down on head
+after head. From still another direction Yuara and his satellite came
+boring in with spears snatched from dead hands. The three rescue parties
+reached the squirming heap at almost the same moment. But Yuara was the
+one whose arrival counted most.</p>
+
+<p>In one last convulsive struggle McKay heaved himself up until he was
+once more on his knees. His head came out of the welter, his mouth wide
+and gulping for breath. The lone clubman grunted, swung his weapon high,
+and with all the power of his muscular body drove it down at that
+upturned, unprotected face.</p>
+
+<p>With a mighty plunge Yuara threw himself over the captain. His spear
+sank into the stomach of the clubman. But the heavy wooden war hammer
+fell with crushing force. As the Red Bone collapsed with the spear head
+buried in his middle, his slayer also dropped under that terrible stroke
+with head mangled beyond recognition.</p>
+
+<p>Yuara, son of Rana, warrior of Suba, who owed his life to McKay's rough
+surgery, had paid his debt.</p>
+
+<p>Under the impact of his body McKay also slumped forward, senseless.</p>
+
+<p>Over them now burst the bloodiest berserk battle of that bloody day. The
+soldiers, the bushmen, and the reclaimed Raposa, already smeared from
+head to foot with red stains from their own veins and those of foemen,
+went stark mad. Before their united ferocity the men of Umanuh dropped
+as if rolled under by an inexorable machine of war. Backward they
+reeled, striving now to escape the red wall of cold steel surging at
+them&mdash;only to fall under a fresh attack of ravening Mayorunas who came
+pouring in upon them from the sides. The last of the group lurched
+headless to the ground under a decapitating side-swing from the awful
+club of Monitaya himself.</p>
+
+<p>Then Knowlton, his lifeblood still draining slowly but surely away
+through his wounded shoulder, pitched on his face and was still.</p>
+
+<p>"Back!" gasped Tim. "Git looey and cap out o' this! Here, you Raposy!
+Lend a hand!"</p>
+
+<p>The Raposa, his green eyes ablaze and his obdurate calmness totally
+gone, glared around as if seeking one more Red Bone to kill. Then, as
+Tim heaved the lieutenant across his shoulders and went lunging across
+contorted bodies toward the <i>malocas</i>, he ran back to the heap where
+McKay lay and dug him clear. Louren&ccedil;o aided him in lifting the captain,
+and they bore him off after Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>Pedro and Jos&eacute; shoved the other bodies aside until they uncovered the
+prone figure of Schwandorf&mdash;a ghastly form dyed from hair to heels with
+the blood of the cannibals whom he had led there. To all appearances he
+was dead. Yet the Brazilian and the Peruvian looked keenly at him, then
+at each other.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a saying, is there not, that the devil takes care of his own?"
+grinned Jos&eacute;. "It would be sad if this man should yet live and escape.
+See! What is that tall Red Bone doing over yonder?"</p>
+
+<p>Pedro followed his pointing finger. He saw no such Red Bone as Jos&eacute; had
+mentioned. But when he looked back at Schwandorf he noticed something
+that made him glance quickly at Jos&eacute; once more.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah yes, Se&ntilde;or Schwandorf is truly dead," the Peruvian added, wiping his
+machete carelessly on one bare leg. "Whether or not the devil takes care
+of his own, as I was saying, there is no doubt that <i>el Aleman</i> now is
+with the devil. So, since we can do nothing for him, let us look after
+the two North American se&ntilde;ores."</p>
+
+<p>Pedro, with a grim smile, turned with him toward the tribal houses.
+There was nothing else for them to do, for the Mayorunas now were
+dispatching the last survivors of the attacking force. Before the pair
+entered the low doorway a long, triumphant yell burst from the hoarse
+throats of the men of Monitaya. Of all the Red Bones who had swept in
+such ghoulish glee into that clearing not one now remained alive.</p>
+
+<p>At that shout of victory and the entrance of the men to whose
+precautions and prowess they owed so much, the women flocked again into
+the center of the <i>maloca</i> and the children dived out through the
+tunnels to behold the battlefield. Though bullets and arrows had come
+through the doorway, those inside had escaped all injury by hugging the
+protective earth embankment or taking refuge in the vacant shafts under
+the walls. Now the older women, experienced in treatment of wounds,
+busied themselves with the white warriors, while the younger ones
+fetched water and pieces of isca&mdash;a natural styptic made by ants&mdash;or
+made up pads of poultices of healing herbs.</p>
+
+<p>Tim, who had expected to play surgeon with his crude knowledge of first
+aid, found himself not only relieved of his job, but being bathed and
+plastered with the others. He, Jos&eacute;, Pedro, Louren&ccedil;o, and even Rand were
+gashed by thrusts from broken spear hafts, bleeding from open bites,
+ripped by glancing sweeps of tooth-set clubs, bruised by fierce
+blows&mdash;minor injuries all, but such as might easily have resulted in
+blood poisoning unless given prompt attention. Later on they were to be
+thankful for those ministrations, but now they tolerated them only
+because they could do nothing for the captain and the lieutenant.</p>
+
+<p>McKay and Knowlton were under the direct and capable treatment of the
+wives of the great chief. Of the two McKay looked by far the worse, but
+actually was in much better condition. From the waist up he was clawed,
+bitten, and bruised so badly that he was a fearsome spectacle; his left
+arm was dislocated, three fingers of his right hand were broken, and his
+muscles were so wrenched that for a week afterward he moved like a
+cripple; but his present unconsciousness was largely due to exhaustion
+and partial asphyxiation. Knowlton, whose skin was comparatively
+unmarked, but whose veins had continued to pour vital fluid from his
+gaping bullet wound during his stubborn fight, now was badly weakened.
+But whatever could be done for him was being done, and the others could
+only stand by.</p>
+
+<p>The women not engaged in caring for the fighting visitors soon found
+themselves busy with their own male relatives, who came stumbling in by
+themselves or were carried by others. The Red Bones, though finally
+annihilated, had made their mark in the Mayoruna tribe. At that moment
+thirty-six of Monitaya's warriors lay dead among the bodies of their
+enemies, and before the next sunrise several more passed on to join the
+spirits of their comrades in arms. Yet all who survived, though some
+were crippled for life, thought only of the victory and gloated on their
+scars of combat. As for those who had fallen, they were dead, had died
+as Mayorunas should, and so needed no sympathy or regret. Even now their
+bodies were being collected for immediate transportation into the
+forest, where, in accordance with the tribal custom, they would be
+burned.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the men who brought in the wounded men continued on to the
+bushmen and, in significant sign manual, requested a loan of their
+machetes. Having received them, they hastened out to join those who,
+equipped with hardwood knives, were gathering the sinister trophies of
+triumph before heaving the dead Red Bones out to the waiting vultures.</p>
+
+<p>"Urrrgh!" growled Tim. "'Twas a lovely scrap, but I wisht I was
+somewheres else, now it's over. While ye was away they brought in the
+fists and feet o' some guy they caught in a trap&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"We know," nodded Pedro.</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah. Wal, I s'pose we got to look pleasant. Dog eat dog, as the feller
+says. Long as somebody has to git et, I'm glad it ain't us." Wherewith
+he turned to the Raposa and changed the subject. "Raposy, old sport, ye
+sure done some good work, for a crazy guy. I'll tell the world ye
+cracked heads like a Bowery cop full o' bootleg booze."</p>
+
+<p>The Raposa's green eyes glimmered. In fact, they almost twinkled. And
+for the second time the wild man spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not crazy."</p>
+
+<p>"Huh? My gosh! Ye spoke four whole words! That makes six in a week. Be
+careful, feller, or ye'll strain yerself. And as far's bein' crazy's
+concerned, don't let it worry ye none. We're all crazy, too, or we
+wouldn't be here."</p>
+
+<p>Under cover of his banter the veteran eyed the other sharply. As he
+turned his gaze aside to the moving figures about him he thought:
+"Begorry! he don't look like a nut, at that. Mebbe somethin's
+unscrambled his brains again. Here's hopin', anyways."</p>
+
+<p>The big tribe house now was full of life. Small groups of warriors,
+their hurts dressed with primitive poultices, gathered around the
+hammocks of those more seriously injured and discussed the battle.
+Others came in bearing armfuls of severed Red Bone hands and feet, which
+were distributed among the family triangles. The women, their remedial
+work done, now turned to the clay cooking vessels, freshened the fires,
+stripped the flesh of their enemies from the bones, and set it to boil.
+Among the hammocks moved the subchiefs, their eyes still shining with
+the light of battle, examining the wounded men and glancing at the
+preparations for the dire feast to come.</p>
+
+<p>Over all drifted a steadily thickening smoke which rolled up and out
+through the vent in the peak of the roof, where the setting sun smote it
+with rays of gleaming red. Around the <i>maloca</i> gleamed the red light of
+the cooking fires among whose burning fagots bubbled the red pots and
+pans. Red men and women passing about in a crimson setting&mdash;the scene
+formed a fitting end to the reddest day in the unwritten records of the
+tribe, who since noon had proved themselves worthy champions of the
+ancient god whose name they never had heard, but who nevertheless ruled
+their lives&mdash;the red god Mars.</p>
+
+<p>Monitaya himself, head high and chest swelling with pride, now came
+striding lithely in, followed by a young warrior carrying something. He
+stopped between the hammocks of McKay and Knowlton, studied their faces
+gravely, listened as his wives told of what had been done. At almost the
+same moment the eyes of the pair slowly opened and stared up at him.</p>
+
+<p>The face of the great chief melted in one of its transforming smiles.
+The captain and the lieutenant grinned pluckily back. With a nod of
+silent comradeship the big savage turned to his own hammock and sat
+down. Two of his women built up the royal fire and fell to work on the
+things handed over by the young warrior. Tim and his mates took one
+squint at what they were doing. Then they moved between the fire and the
+two officers, blocking the view.</p>
+
+<p>"'Bout time ye woke up and listened to the birdies," Tim chaffed.
+"Fight's over, and we been hangin' round waitin' for ye to quit snorin'
+so's we could hear ourselves think. Lay still, now! Ye're all plastered
+up nice and comfy&mdash;and don't preach to me no more about the girls. Ye
+had every dang one o' the big chief's wives hangin' over ye and kissin'
+ye so hard it sounded like a machine gun. Ain't that right, fellers? Me,
+I'm so jealous I could bite the both of ye."</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf dead?" hoarsely queried McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Huh? Oh, him? Sure. Ye fixed him right, Cap. The pretty li'l'
+blackbirds has flew away with him by now. Say, ye mind that feller
+Yuarry? Know what he done? Wal&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>And while he talked, behind his back the wives of Monitaya completed
+their task and dropped into the great chief's stewpot the flesh of the
+black-bearded slaver and slayer who would menace them no more.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXVI.</h2>
+
+<h3>PARTNERS</h3>
+
+
+<p>Seven men squatted around a camp fire on the river bank. Beyond them,
+half revealed by the flickering light of the flames, rose the poles of a
+<i>tambo</i> wherein empty hammocks hung waiting. At the edge of the water
+lay two canoes.</p>
+
+<p>Five of the men wore the habiliments of civilized beings, though their
+shirts and breeches were so tattered and stained that a civilized
+community would have looked askance at them. The other two were nude as
+savages, but their beards and tanned skins were those of white men.
+Beards of varying length seemed, in fact, to be the fashion, for
+everyone present wore one, and all but two were very dark. Of the odd
+pair, one's thin face was partly covered by stubby, blond hair, while
+the other's jaw was masked by a growth of unmistakable red.</p>
+
+<p>Lifting their cigarettes, the blond man and a tall, eagle-faced comrade
+moved their arms stiffly, as if still hampered by injuries. Newly healed
+scars showed on the skins of the rest.</p>
+
+<p>"Injuns are a funny lot," declared the red-haired one. "There's
+Monitaya, now. Keeps us a couple weeks, doctors us half to death, feeds
+us till we gag, gives us new canoes, sends a platoon o' hard guys with
+us to see that we git to the river safe&mdash;and don't even say good-by. No
+handshake, no 'Good luck, fellers'&mdash;jest a grin like we was goin' to
+walk round the house and come right back. And the lads that come out
+with us done the same&mdash;turned round and quit us without a word. I bet if
+we lived amongst 'em long we'd git to be dummies, too."</p>
+
+<p>For a moment there was silence. For no apparent reason all glanced at
+one of the naked men, on whose skin faintly showed reddish streaks.</p>
+
+<p>"You would," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Huh! Gee! Rand's talkin' again! First time since we licked them Red
+Boneheads. Two whole words. Go easy, feller, easy!"</p>
+
+<p>"I will be easy. But it's time I talked. I am not dumb. I am not crazy."</p>
+
+<p>The green-eyed man spoke slowly, as if forming each word in his mind
+before pronouncing it. The rest squatted with eyes riveted on his face.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not talked before because I had to find myself. I had to hear
+English spoken and become used to it. I had to put things together in my
+mind. Even now some things are not clear. But I can talk and make sense
+of my talk. I will tell what I can remember. First tell me one thing.
+McKay, am I a murderer?"</p>
+
+<p>"A murderer? You? If you are we never heard of it."</p>
+
+<p>"A man named Schmidt. Gustav Schmidt. German merchant at Manaos."</p>
+
+<p>"Gustav Schmidt? Piggy little runt, bald and fat, with a scar across his
+chin?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"He's dead, but you didn't kill him. He was shot a little while ago by a
+young Brazilian for getting too intimate with the young fellow's wife.
+We heard about it while we were in Manaos, and saw his picture. What
+about him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I thought I killed him. I struck him with a bottle. I was told he was
+dead. How long have I been here?"</p>
+
+<p>"You left the States in 1915. It is now 1920."</p>
+
+<p>"Five years? My God! What has happened in that time? Is my mother well?"</p>
+
+<p>The others looked pityingly at him. Slowly Knowlton spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Your mother died two years ago from heart trouble. Your uncle, Philip
+Dawson, also is dead."</p>
+
+<p>Rand's jaw set. The others shifted their gaze and busied themselves with
+making new cigarettes, spending much time over the simple task.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor mother!" Rand said, huskily. "Uncle Phil&mdash;he was a good old scout.
+And I was here&mdash;buried alive&mdash;only half alive! My head&mdash;Tell me, what
+happened on the night before you dressed my lame foot? I remember
+clearly everything from the time I woke in the canoe before daylight
+that morning. Before that there is a blur."</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton sketched the events of that night, and told also of the glimpse
+which he and Pedro had caught of the "wild man" while waiting outside
+the house of the Red Bone chief. A flash lit up Rand's face.</p>
+
+<p>"So that is how I got my sore head. You struck me with your rifle butt.
+That explains much. Before I became a wild beast I was shot in the head.
+The bullet did not go through the skull. It struck me a terrible blow on
+the crown. When I recovered consciousness I was not myself. I have never
+been the same until&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Gee cripes!" exploded Tim. "That's it. I seen that same thing up home.
+Bug Sullivan, it was. When he was a li'l' feller he tumbled downstairs
+and hit his head, and for 'most ten years he was foolish. Then a brick
+fell off a buildin' and landed on his bean. It knocked him for a gool,
+but when he come out of it he was bright as a new dime. Looey, when ye
+busted Rand with yer gun ye jarred somethin' loose inside, and now he's
+good as any of us."</p>
+
+<p>"By George! You're right!" cried the lieutenant. "Things like that do
+happen. I've heard of them. Haven't you, Rod?"</p>
+
+<p>McKay nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"That is it," affirmed the Raposa. "I have not been insane. But much was
+gone from me. My mind was a house full of closed doors which I could not
+open. I knew who I was and why I was here, but I knew also that
+something had happened to my brain; knew I was defective; believed I was
+wanted for murder. So I could not go out. I could only stay here, prowl
+the jungle, live the jungle life.</p>
+
+<p>"Now that the closed doors have opened again, others have swung shut. I
+cannot remember much of my wild-beast life here. Some things are clear.
+Too clear. Torturings and horrible feasts. Perhaps I should be grateful
+that some things are forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>"But now my life up to the time I was shot is plain again. I talked with
+a man who had traveled the Amazon and the Andes. I never had seen
+either, and I was ripe for something new. A steamer was just sailing
+south, and I got aboard in a hurry. No baggage but a suitcase and five
+thousand dollars. I had traveled a good deal&mdash;Europe, Canada, Japan&mdash;and
+always found that plenty of money was all a man needed. Thought it was
+the same way here. I've learned better.</p>
+
+<p>"I visited Rio&mdash;a few hours&mdash;and then came up along the coast and
+inland. At Manaos I got into trouble. Went ashore and got to drinking
+with two Germans. One of them&mdash;Schmidt&mdash;grew ugly and said a lot of
+rotten things about the States. Tell me something, men&mdash;is the war over
+and did our country get into it?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is, and it did." And Knowlton outlined the epochal occurrences of
+the world conflict.</p>
+
+<p>"And I missed that, too!" mourned Rand. "But I started a war of my own
+down here, anyway. When I quit seeing red I had a bottle neck in my hand
+and both the Germans were down. Somebody said Schmidt was dead. A couple
+of men tried to grab me. I fought my way clear, hid awhile, got back on
+the boat without being noticed, and paid one of the crew well to hide me
+in the hold and feed me. Nearly died from heat and suffocation down
+there, but lived to reach Iquitos, where my man smuggled me ashore. I
+thought I was safe there. But before I could make a move to travel on I
+fell into the hands of that cursed Schwandorf."</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf!"</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf. He was in Iquitos. The sailor who hid me must have sold me
+out to him. Schwandorf told me he was a police officer in Brazilian
+employ. Said he would take me back to stand trial for murdering Schmidt.
+The dirty blackmailer took all my money to keep his mouth shut and take
+me to a 'safe place.' The safe place was up this river. I came up here
+with him in a canoe paddled by some tough Peruvians. Then he began
+trying to bully me into doing dirty work for him&mdash;running women into
+Peru. I saw red again and jumped for him. He gave me that bullet on the
+head.</p>
+
+<p>"After that things are badly blurred. I found myself among savages. How
+I got there, why I wasn't killed, I don't know. Schwandorf was there
+awhile. Then he went away with his gang, leaving me very sure of only
+one thing&mdash;I was a murderer and would be executed if caught. And&mdash;well,
+that's about all, except that the savages seemed rather afraid of me and
+didn't want me around."</p>
+
+<p>There was another silence. Then Louren&ccedil;o remarked:</p>
+
+<p>"Between Schmidt and Schwandorf you have suffered much. It is possible
+that there was a connection of some sort between them. But neither can
+ever trouble you again. I do not see why Schwandorf took the trouble
+even to put you among the Red Bones. One more bullet would have ended
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Any ideas on that subject, Jos&eacute;?" asked McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Only a guess, Capitan. I was not here five years ago, and I knew
+nothing of Schwandorf then. But I know he always schemed for his own
+good and overlooked no chances. So perhaps, finding this man not dead,
+but darkened in mind by his bullet, he thought he might be able to use
+him in some way at some future time. A dead man is not useful to anyone.
+If this man should never become valuable he could live and die forgotten
+among savages, where he could do Schwandorf no harm. If worth something
+he could be found again."</p>
+
+<p>"Cold-blooded Prussian efficiency," nodded McKay. Then he spoke directly
+to Rand.</p>
+
+<p>"Since you're mentally sound," he went on, "we may as well tell you how
+you happen to be among us. We three&mdash;Merry, Tim, and I&mdash;came here to
+find you. The settlement of the Dawson estate hinges on you."</p>
+
+<p>"On me? How? I've no claim to it. Paul Dawson, Uncle Phil's son&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Is dead, too. Killed in action in the Argonne, You're next in line."</p>
+
+<p>McKay watched him keenly. So did Knowlton. The half-expected jubilance
+did not come.</p>
+
+<p>"So Paul's gone," was Rand's reply. "Hard luck. Suppose I hadn't been
+found&mdash;then what?"</p>
+
+<p>"In due time the money would go to a school. Boys' school."</p>
+
+<p>"Orphans? Blind? Cripples?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hardly." McKay's mouth curved sardonically. He named a preparatory
+school of the "exclusive" type. Rand's mouth also twisted.</p>
+
+<p>"That hotbed of snobbery? That twin sister to a society girls' finishing
+school? Might have known it, though. Uncle Phil was fond of the sort of
+education that doesn't educate. I'm glad you fellows found me. I'll go
+home and collect every red cent, just to keep it out of the hands of the
+supercilious bunch of bishops that run that sissy-spawner."</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton chuckled appreciatively.</p>
+
+<p>"It's not the sort of school that breeds he-men, for a fact," he agreed.
+"But you don't seem much enthused over having a couple of millions
+dropped into your lap."</p>
+
+<p>Rand sat still. His face remained cheerless, impassive.</p>
+
+<p>"What is money?" he said, presently. "I've always had plenty of it.
+What's it done for me? When you have it you can't tell whether people
+are friends to you or only friends to your money. It makes you cynical,
+suspicious. What's worse, you depend too much on it. You think it will
+do everything. Then if you land in a place where it's no good and you
+haven't got it, anyway, you're up against it a good deal harder than the
+fellow who never had it but knows how to handle himself without it."</p>
+
+<p>"True for ye," Tim concurred, heartily. "All the same, I bet ye'll
+change yer tune after ye git home."</p>
+
+<p>"Will I?" The green eyes impaled him. "Maybe. But I don't think so. I've
+had my run at blowing in money on myself alone. Now I'm going to blow
+some on other folks. I missed out on the war, but&mdash;There must be quite a
+few of our fellows lamed and crippled by that war. And I'll gamble that
+the government isn't treating them all like princes. I know something
+about governments."</p>
+
+<p>"Princes? Say, feller, there's many a dog that's took better care of
+than some of our boys back home!"</p>
+
+<p>"So I thought. The income from a couple of millions, along with some of
+the principal, will do a lot of good if used right. And&mdash;" His eyes
+turned to the three bushmen.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not look at us in that way," said Louren&ccedil;o, reading his thought. "We
+can make all the money we need, and we came with the capitao and his
+comrades only because we wanted excitement. Use your money for the
+crippled men who need it."</p>
+
+<p>"And Jos&eacute; Martinez also is well able to provide for his wants," coolly
+added the other naked man. "I am here only to settle old scores, and now
+they are settled. Each man is goaded by his own spur&mdash;money, wine,
+women, excitement, revenge. Money is not mine."</p>
+
+<p>He yawned, arose, stretched like a cat, and stepped toward his hammock.
+The two Brasilians also moved toward the <i>tambo</i>. The others stood a
+moment longer beside the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, since we three didn't come here because of wine, women, or
+revenge," Knowlton said, whimsically, "it must have been for money and
+excitement. Don't know which was the stronger lure, but if we could have
+only one of the two I think we'd let the money slide. How about it,
+Rod?"</p>
+
+<p>"Right! And, Rand, let me say this: Before we knew you we had an
+impression that you were more or less of a worthless pup. We've changed
+our ideas. If you ever go broke and want to hit a trail into some new
+place to make a strike of your own, and you need partners, let us know."</p>
+
+<p>And he held out his hand.</p>
+
+<p>The naked millionaire took it. For the first time a faint smile
+lightened his face.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll do that, partners!" he promised.</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah! That's the word. Pardners! Only, li'l' Timmy Ryan bucks at ever
+travelin' back into this here, now, Ja-va-ree jungle. I got enough of
+it. Right now I'm homesick."</p>
+
+<p>"So say we all," affirmed Knowlton. "Now let's turn in."</p>
+
+<p>But Tim stood a little longer looking out at the moonlit river and the
+two waiting canoes. His gaze roved along the stream, northward. He
+lifted his head, opened his mouth, expanded his lungs, and then the
+astounded denizens of forest and stream cut short their discordant
+concert to listen to something they never had heard before and never
+would hear again&mdash;a great voice thundering a censored version of a North
+American army song.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Home, boys, home! Home we want to be!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Home, boys, home, in God's countree!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We'll raise Ol' Glory to the top o' the pole<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And we'll all come back&mdash;not a dog-gone soul!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30324 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #30324 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/30324)
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Pathless Trail, by Arthur O. (Arthur
+Olney) Friel
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Pathless Trail
+
+
+Author: Arthur O. (Arthur Olney) Friel
+
+
+
+Release Date: October 24, 2009 [eBook #30324]
+[Last updated: October 11, 2022]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PATHLESS TRAIL***
+
+
+E-text prepared by David Garcia, Mary Meehan, and the Project Gutenberg
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+THE PATHLESS TRAIL
+
+by
+
+ARTHUR O. FRIEL
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+New York
+Grosset & Dunlap
+Publishers
+
+Made in the United States of America
+
+THE PATHLESS TRAIL
+
+Copyright, 1922, by Harper & Brothers
+Printed in the United States of America
+
+
+
+
+ TO
+ THE MEMORY OF
+ MY FATHER
+ GEORGE WILLIAM FRIEL
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ I. SONS OF THE NORTH
+
+ II. AT SUNDOWN
+
+ III. THE VOICE OF THE WILDS
+
+ IV. THE GERMAN
+
+ V. INTO THE BUSH
+
+ VI. IN THE NIGHT WATCH
+
+ VII. COLD STEEL
+
+ VII. THE DOUBLE-CROSS
+
+ IX. FIDDLERS THREE
+
+ X. BY THE LIGHT OF STORM
+
+ XI. OUT OF THE AIR
+
+ XII. THE ARROW
+
+ XIII. THE WAY OF THE JUNGLE
+
+ XIV. A DUEL WITH DEATH
+
+ XV. THE CANNIBALS
+
+ XVI. BLACKBEARD
+
+ XVII. FEVER
+
+ XIX. FRUIT OF THE TRAP
+
+ XIX. THE RED BONES
+
+ XX. THE RAPOSA
+
+ XXI. SHADOWS OF THE NIGHT
+
+ XXII. THE SIREN OF WAR
+
+ XXIII. STRATEGY
+
+ XXIV. THE BATTLE OF THE TRIBES
+
+ XXV. THE PASSING OF SCHWANDORF
+
+ XXVI. PARTNERS
+
+
+
+
+THE PATHLESS TRAIL
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+SONS OF THE NORTH
+
+
+Three men stood ankle deep in mud on the shore of a jungle river,
+silently watching a ribbon of smoke drift and dissolve above the somber
+mass of trees to the northwest.
+
+Three men of widely different types they were, yet all cradled in the
+same far-off northern land. The tallest, lean bodied but broad
+shouldered, black of hair and gray of eye, held himself in soldierly
+fashion and gazed unmoved. His two mates--one stocky, red faced and red
+headed; the other slender, bronzed and blond--betrayed their thoughts in
+their blue eyes. The red man squinted quizzically at the smoke feather
+as if it mattered little to him where he was. The blond watched it with
+the wistfulness of one who sees the last sign of his own world fade out.
+
+Behind them, at a respectful distance, a number of swarthy individuals
+of both sexes in nondescript garments smoked and stared at the trio with
+the interest always accorded strangers by the dwellers of the Out
+Places. They eyed the uncompromising back of the tall one, the easy
+lounge of the red one, the thoughtful attitude of the light one. The
+copper-faced men peered at the rifles hanging in the right hands of the
+newcomers, their knee boots, khaki clothing, and wide hats. The women
+let their eyes rove over the boxes and bundles reposing in the mud
+beside the three.
+
+"_Ingles?_" hazarded a woman, speaking through the stem of the black
+pipe clutched in her filed teeth.
+
+"_Notre-Americano_," asserted a man, nodding toward the broad hats.
+"Englishmen would wear the round helmets of pith."
+
+"_Mercadores?_ Traders?" suggested the woman, hopefully running an eye
+again over the bundles.
+
+"_Exploradores_," the man corrected. "Explorers of the bush. Have you no
+eyes? Do you not see the guns and high boots?"
+
+The woman subsided. The others continued what seemed to be their only
+occupation--smoking.
+
+The smoke streamer in the north vanished. As if moved by the same
+impulse, the three strangers turned their heads and looked
+south-westward, upriver. The red-haired man spoke.
+
+"So we've lit at last, as the feller said when him and his airyplane
+landed in a sewer. Faith, I dunno but he was better off than us, at
+that--he wasn't two thousand miles from nowheres like we are. The
+steamer's gone, and us three pore li'l' boys are left a long ways from
+home."
+
+Then, assuming the tone of a showman, he went on:
+
+"Before ye, girls, ye see the well known Ja-va-ree River, which I never
+seen before and comes from gosh-knows-where and ends in the Ammyzon.
+Over there on t'other side the water is Peru. Yer feet are in the mud of
+Brazil. This other river to yer left is the Tickywahoo--"
+
+"Tecuahy," the blond man corrected, grinning.
+
+"Yeah. And behind ye is the last town in the world and the place that
+God forgot. What d'ye call this here, now, city?"
+
+"Remate de Males. Which means 'Culmination of Evils.'"
+
+"Yeah. It looks it. Wonder if it's anything like Hell's Kitchen, up in
+li'l' old N'Yawk."
+
+They turned and looked dubiously at the town--a row of perhaps seventy
+iron-walled and palm-roofed houses set on high palm-trunk poles, each
+with its ladder dropping from the doorway to the one muddy street. Then
+spoke the tall man.
+
+"Before you see it again, Tim, you'll think it's quite a town. Above
+here is nothing but a few rubber estates, seven hundred miles of unknown
+river, and empty jungle."
+
+"Empty, huh? Then they kidded us on the boat. From what they said it's
+fair crawlin' with snakes and jaggers and lizards and bloody vampires
+and spiders as big as yer fist. And the water is full o' man-eatin' fish
+and the bush full o' man-eatin' Injuns. If that's what ye call empty,
+Cap, don't take me no place where it's crowded."
+
+A slight smile twitched the set lips of the tall "cap."
+
+"They're all here, Tim, though maybe not so thick as you expect. Lots of
+other things too. Who's this?"
+
+Through the knot of pipe-puffing idlers came a portly coppery man in
+uniform.
+
+"Well, I'll be--Say, he's the same chap who came onto the boat in a
+police uniform. Now he's in army rig," the light-haired member of the
+trio exclaimed. "O Lordy! I've got it! He's the police force and the
+army! The whole blooming works! Ha!"
+
+Tim snickered and stepped forward.
+
+"Hullo, buddy!" he greeted. "What's on yer mind?"
+
+"_Boa dia_, senhor," responded the official, affably. With the words he
+deftly slipped an arm around Tim's waist and lifted the other hand
+toward his shoulder. But that hand stopped short, then flew wildly out
+into the air.
+
+Tim gave a grunt and a heave. The official went skidding and slithering
+six feet through the mud, clutching at nothing and contorting himself in
+a frantic effort to keep from sprawling in the muck. By a margin thin as
+an eyelash he succeeded in preserving his balance and stood where he
+stopped, amazement and anger in his face.
+
+"Lay off that stuff!" growled Tim, head forward and jaw out. "If ye want
+trouble come and git it like a man, not sneak up with a grin and then
+clinch. Don't reach for no knife, now, or I'll drill ye--"
+
+"Tim!" barked the black-haired one. "Ten-_shun_!"
+
+Automatically Tim's head snapped erect and his shoulders went back. He
+relaxed again almost at once. But in the meantime the tall man had
+stepped forward and faced the raging representative of the government of
+Brazil.
+
+"Pardon, comrade," he said with an engaging smile. "My friend is a
+stranger to Brazil and not acquainted with your manner of welcome. In
+our own country men never put the arm around one another except in
+combat. He has been a soldier. You are a soldier. So you can understand
+that a fighting man may be a little abrupt when he does not understand."
+
+The smile, the apology, and most of all the subtle flattery of being
+treated as an equal by a man whose manner betokened the North American
+army officer, mollified the aggrieved official at once. The hot gleam
+died out of his eyes. Punctiliously he saluted. The salute was as
+punctiliously returned.
+
+"It is forgotten, Capitao. As the capitao says, we soldiers are
+sometimes overquick. I come to give you welcome to Remate de Males. My
+services are at your disposal."
+
+"We thank you. Why do you call me capitao?"
+
+"My eyes know a capitao when they see him."
+
+"But this is not a military expedition, my friend. Nor are any of us
+soldiers now--though we all have been."
+
+"Once a capitao, always a capitao," the Brazilian insisted. Then he
+hinted: "If the capitao and his friends wish to call upon the
+superintendente they will find him in the intendencia, the blue building
+beyond the hotel. It will soon be closed for the day."
+
+The tall American's keen gray eyes roved down the street to the
+weather-beaten house whose peeling walls once might have been blue. He
+nodded shortly.
+
+"Better go down there," he said. "Come on, Merry. Tim, stick here and
+keep an eye on the stuff. And don't start another war while we're gone."
+
+"Right, Cap." Tim deftly swung his rifle to his right shoulder. "I'll
+walk me post in a military manner, keepin' always on the alert and
+observin' everything that takes place within sight or hearin', accordin'
+to Gin'ral Order Number Two. There won't be no war unless somebody
+starts somethin'. Hey, there, buddy, would ye smoke a God's-country
+cigarette if I give ye one?"
+
+"_Si_," grinned the soldier-policeman, all animosity gone. And as the
+other two men tramped away through the mud they also grinned, looking
+back at the North and the South American pacing side by side in
+sentry-go, blowing smoke and conversing like brothers in arms.
+
+"Tim likes to remember his 'general orders,' but he's forgotten Number
+Five," laughed the blond man.
+
+"Five? 'To talk to no one except in line of duty.' Don't need it here,
+Merry."
+
+"Nope. The _entente cordiale_ is the thing. Here's hoping nobody makes
+Tim remember his 'Gin'ral Order Number Thirteen' while we're gone, Rod."
+
+He of the black hair smiled again as his mate, mimicking Tim's gruff
+voice, quoted:
+
+"'Gin'ral Order Number Thirteen: In case o' doubt, bust the other guy
+quick.'"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+AT SUNDOWN
+
+
+Past the loungers in the street, past others in the doorways, past
+children and dogs and goats, the pair marched briskly to the faded blue
+house whence the federal superintendent ruled the town with tropic
+indolence. There they found a thin, fever-worn, gravely courteous
+gentleman awaiting them.
+
+"Sit, senhores," he urged, with a languid wave of the hand toward
+chairs. "I am honored by your visit, as is all Remate de Males. In what
+way can I serve you?"
+
+The blond answered:
+
+"We have come, sir, both for the pleasure of making your acquaintance
+and for a little information. First permit me to introduce my friend Mr.
+Roderick McKay, lately a captain in the United States army. I am
+Meredith Knowlton. There is a third member of our party, Mr. Timothy
+Ryan, who remained on the river bank to talk with--er--a soldier of
+Brazil."
+
+The federal official nodded, a slight smile in his eyes.
+
+"We are here ostensibly for exploration," Knowlton continued, candidly,
+"but actually to find a certain man. I think it quite probable that we
+shall have to do considerable exploring before finding him."
+
+"Ah," the other murmured, shrewdly. "It is a matter of police work,
+perhaps?"
+
+"No--and yes. The man we seek is not wanted by the law, and yet he is.
+He has committed no crime, and so cannot be arrested. But the law wants
+him badly because the settlement of a certain big estate hinges upon the
+question of whether he is alive or dead. If alive, he is heir to more
+than a million. If not--the money goes elsewhere."
+
+"Ah," repeated the official, thoughtfully.
+
+"I might add," McKay broke in with a touch of stiffness, "that neither I
+nor either of my companions would profit in any way by this man's death.
+Quite the contrary."
+
+"Ah," reiterated the other, his face clearing. "You are commissioned,
+perhaps, to find and produce this man."
+
+"Exactly," Knowlton nodded. "From our own financial standpoint he is
+worth much more alive than dead. On the other hand, any absolute proof
+of his death--proof which would stand in a court of law--is worth
+something also. Our task is to produce either the man himself or
+indisputable proof that he no longer lives.
+
+"The man's name is David Dawson Rand. If alive, he now is thirty-three
+years old. Height five feet nine. Weight about one hundred sixty. Hair
+dark, though not black. Eyes grayish green. Chief distinguishing marks
+are the green eyes, a broken nose--caused by being struck in the face by
+a baseball--and a patch of snow-white hair the size of a thumb ball, two
+inches above the left ear. Accustomed to having his own way, not at all
+considerate of others. Yet not a bad fellow as men go--merely a man
+spoiled by too much mothering in boyhood and by the fact that he never
+had to work. This is he."
+
+From a breast pocket he drew a small grain-leather notebook, from which
+he extracted an unmounted photograph. The superintendent looked into the
+pictured face of a full-cheeked, wide-mouthed, square-jawed man with a
+slightly blasé expression and a half-cynical smile. After studying it a
+minute he nodded and handed it back.
+
+"As you say, senhor, a man who never has had to work."
+
+"Exactly. For five years this man has been regarded as dead. It was his
+habit to start off suddenly for any place where his whims drew him,
+notifying nobody of his departure. But a few days later he would always
+write, cable, or telegraph his relatives, so that his general
+whereabouts would soon become known. On his last trip he sent a radio
+message from a steamer, out at sea, saying he was bound for Rio Janeiro.
+That was the last ever heard from him."
+
+"Rio is far from here," suggested the Brazilian.
+
+"Just so. We look for Rand at the headwaters of the Amazon, instead of
+in Rio, because Rio yields no clew and because of one other thing which
+I shall speak of presently.
+
+"It has been learned that he reached Rio safely, but there his trail
+ended. As he had several thousand dollars on his person, it was
+concluded that he was murdered for his money and his body disposed of.
+This belief has been held until quite recently, when a new book of
+travel was published--_The Mother of Waters_, by Dwight Dexter, an
+explorer of considerable reputation."
+
+The Brazilian's brows lifted.
+
+"Senhor Dexter? I remember Senhor Dexter. He stopped here for a short
+time, ill with fever. So he has published a book?"
+
+"Yes. It deals mainly with his travels and observations in Peru, along
+the Marañon, Huallaga, and Ucayali. But it includes a short chapter
+regarding the Javary, and in that chapter occurs the following, which I
+have copied verbatim."
+
+From the notebook he read:
+
+"'It falls to the lot of the explorer at times to meet not only hitherto
+unclassified species of fauna and flora, but also strange specimens of
+the _genus homo_. Such a creature came suddenly upon my camp one day
+just before a serious and well-nigh fatal attack of fever compelled me
+to relinquish my intention to proceed farther up the Javary.
+
+"'While my Indian cook was preparing the afternoon meal, out from the
+dense jungle strode a bearded, shaggy-haired, painted white man, totally
+nude save for a narrow breechclout and a quiver containing several long
+hunting arrows. In one hand he carried a strong bow of really excellent
+workmanship. This was his only weapon. He wore no ornament, unless
+streaks of brilliant red paint be considered ornaments. He was wild and
+savage in appearance and manner as any cannibal Indian. Yet he was
+indubitably white.
+
+"'To my somewhat startled greeting he made no response. Neither did he
+speak at any time during his unceremonious visit. Bolt upright, he stood
+beside my crude table until the Indian stolidly brought in my food.
+Then, without a by-your-leave, the wild man rapidly wolfed down the
+entire meal, feeding himself with one hand and holding his bow ready in
+the other. Though I questioned him and sought to draw him into
+conversation, he honored me with not so much as a grunt or a gesture.
+When the table was bare he stalked out again and vanished into the dim
+forest.
+
+"'After he had gone my Indian urged that we leave the place at once. The
+man, he said, was "The Raposa"--a word which denotes a species of wild
+dog sometimes found on the upper Amazon. He knew nothing of this
+"Raposa" except that he apparently belonged to a wild tribe living far
+back in the forest, perhaps allied with the cannibal Mayorunas, who were
+very fierce; and that he appeared sometimes at Indian settlements,
+where, without ever speaking, he would help himself to the best food and
+then leave. My man seemed to fear that now some great misfortune would
+come to us unless we shifted our base. When the fever came upon me soon
+afterward, the superstitious fellow was convinced that the illness was
+attributable directly to the visit of the human "wild dog."
+
+"'Aside from the nudity and barbarism of the mysterious stranger,
+certain personal peculiarities struck me. One was that his eyes were
+green. Another was a streak of snow-white hair above one ear.
+Furthermore, the red paint on his body outlined his skeleton. His ribs,
+spine, arm- and leg-bones all were portrayed on his tanned skin by those
+brilliant red streaks. In this connection my Indian asserted that in the
+tribe to which "The Raposa" probably belonged it was the custom to
+preserve the bones of the dead and to paint them with this same red dye,
+after which the bones were hung up in the huts of the deceased instead
+of being given burial. Beyond this my informant knew nothing of the "Red
+Bone" people, except that to enter their country was death.'"
+
+Knowlton returned the book to his pocket and carefully buttoned the
+flap.
+
+"When that appeared," he continued, "efforts were made to get hold of
+Dexter, with the idea of showing him the photograph of the missing man
+and learning any additional details. Unfortunately, by the time the book
+was published Dexter had gone to Africa to seek a race of dwarfs said to
+exist in the Igidi Desert, and thus was totally out of reach. Then we
+were called upon to follow up this clew and find the Raposa if possible.
+Men with green eyes and patches of white hair above one ear are not
+common. So, though our knowledge of this strange wild man is confined to
+those few words of Dexter's, we are here to learn more of him and to get
+him if we can."
+
+He looked expectantly at the official. The latter, after staring out
+through the doorway for a time, shook his head slightly.
+
+"Something of this Raposa and of those red-streaked people has come to
+my ears, senhores, but only as rumors," he said, slowly. "And one does
+not place great faith in rumors. Yet I have repeatedly been surprised to
+learn, after dismissing a story as an empty Indian tale, that the tale
+was true.
+
+"Of the Mayorunas more is known. They are eaters of human flesh,
+inhabiting both sides of the Javary, deadly when angered, and very
+easily angered. Their country is not many days distant from here, but as
+they never attack us we do not attack them. It is an armed neutrality,
+as you senhores would say. True, we have to be careful in drinking
+water, for they sometimes poison the streams against real or imaginary
+enemies, and the poisoned waters flow down to us, causing those who
+drink it to die of a fever like the typhoid. Yet," and he smiled, "there
+is a saying, is there not, that water is made not to drink, but to bathe
+in?"
+
+Knowlton laughed. McKay's eyes twinkled.
+
+"I'm sorry to say that water's about all a fellow can get to drink in
+the States now," the blond man said, ruefully. "That is, of course,
+unless a man knows where to go."
+
+"_Si._ It is a pity. But here in Brazil one need not drink water unless
+he wishes, and often it is better not to. Of the Mayorunas, senhor--you
+do not intend to go among them, seeking this wild man of the red bones?
+If you should do so it would be a matter of regret to me."
+
+"Meaning that we should not come out again? That's a risk we have to
+face. We go wherever it is necessary."
+
+"I am sorry. I regret also that I can give you no definite information.
+Yet I wish you all success, senhores, and a safe return. This much I can
+do and gladly will do: I can send word to another white man who now is
+in the town and who knows much of the upper river. He may be able to
+assist you, and without doubt will be eager to do so. He is staying at
+the hotel, just below here--Senhor Schwandorf."
+
+The eyes of the two Americans narrowed. The official coughed.
+
+"Senhor McKay has been a soldier. And Senhor Knowlton--"
+
+"I was a lieutenant."
+
+"Ah! But the war has passed, senhores. Senhor Schwandorf was not a
+soldier of Germany--he has been in Brazil for more than six years."
+
+"War's over. That's right," McKay agreed. "But don't bother to send
+word. We'll find him if he's at the hotel. Going there ourselves. Glad
+to have met you, sir. Good luck!"
+
+"And to you also luck, Capitao and Tenente," smiled the official. McKay
+and Knowlton strode out.
+
+"Guess this is the hotel," hazarded McKay, glancing at a house which
+rose slightly above the others. "I'll go in and charter rooms. You get
+Tim and have somebody rustle our impedimenta up here."
+
+He turned aside. Knowlton trudged on through the glare of sunset to the
+river bank where Tim and the army of Remate de Males still loafed up and
+down, the admired of all beholders.
+
+"All right, Tim. We're moving to the hotel. No more war, I see."
+
+"Lord love ye, no," grinned Tim. "Me and this feller are gittin' on
+fine. He's Joey--I forgit the rest of his names; he's got about a dozen
+more and they sound like stones rattlin' around inside a can. But Joey's
+a right guy. After me tour o' duty ends he's goin' to buy me a drink and
+maybe introjuce me to a lady friend o' his. Want to join the party,
+Looey?"
+
+"Not unless the ladies are better looking than these," laughed the
+ex-lieutenant, moving his head toward the pipe-smoking females.
+
+"Faith, I was thinkin' that same meself. Unless he can dig up somethin'
+fancier 'n what I see so far, I'd as soon have Mademoiselle."
+
+"Who?"
+
+"Mademoiselle of Armentières. Sure, ye know that one, Looey. Goes to the
+tune o' 'Parley-Voo.'"
+
+Wherewith he lifted up a foghorn voice and, much to the edification of
+"Joey" (whose name really was Joao) and the rest of Remate de Males,
+burst into song:
+
+ "Mademoiselle of Armenteers,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ She smoked our butts and bummed our beers,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ She had cockeyes and jackass ears
+ And she hadn't been kissed for forty years,
+ Rinkydinky-parley-voo!"
+
+As his musical effort ended, out from the dense jungle hemming in the
+town burst a hideous roaring howl. Again and again it sounded in a
+horrible crash of noise.
+
+"Holy Saint Pat!" gasped Tim, throwing his rifle to port and bracing his
+feet. "Now look what I went and done! Is that the echo, or a couple
+dozen jaggers all fightin' to oncet?"
+
+"Guariba, Senhor Ree-ann," snickered Joao. "Not jaguars--no. Only one
+little guariba monkey. The howler."
+
+"G'wan! Ye're kiddin'!"
+
+"But no, _amigo_. It is as I tell you. One monkey. It is sunset, and the
+jungle awakes."
+
+"My gosh! I'll say it does. Sounds like a Sat'day night row in a Second
+Av'noo saloon, except there ain't no shootin'. Guess you boys have some
+night life, too, even if ye are away back in the bush."
+
+"Time for us to move, Tim," laughed Knowlton. "It'll be dark in no time.
+Joao, will you have our baggage moved to the hotel?"
+
+"_Si_, senhor. _Immediatamente._ Antonio--Jorge--Rosario! And you, too,
+Meldo--_vem cà_! Carry the bundles of the gentlemen to the hotel,
+presto! Proceed, senhores. I, Joao d'Almeida Magalhaes Nabuco Pestana da
+Fonseca, will remain here on guard until all your possessions have been
+transported. Proceed without fear."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE VOICE OF THE WILDS
+
+
+McKay, eyes twinkling again, awaited them at the top of the hotel's
+street ladder.
+
+"Rooms any good, Rod?" hailed Knowlton.
+
+"Best in the house, Merry."
+
+"See any insects in the beds?"
+
+"Nary a bug--in the beds." The twinkle grew. "Didn't look in the bureaus
+or behind the mirrors. Come look 'em over."
+
+Entering a sizable room evidently used for dining--for its chief
+articles of furniture were two tables made from planed palm
+trunks--McKay waved a hand toward a row of four doorways on the right.
+
+"First three are ours," he explained. "Only vacancies here. Eight rooms
+in this hotel--the other four over there." He pointed across the room,
+on the other side of which opened four similar doors. "They're occupied
+by two sick men, one drunk--hear him snore?--and one she-goat which is
+kidding."
+
+"Huh?" Tim snorted, suspiciously. "I think ye're the one that's kiddin',
+Cap."
+
+"Not a bit. I looked. The last room on this side is the Dutchman's, and
+these are ours. Take your pick. They're all alike."
+
+Knowlton stepped to the nearest and looked in. For a moment he said no
+word. Then he softly muttered:
+
+"Well, I'll be spread-eagled!"
+
+"Me, too," seconded Tim, who had been craning his neck.
+
+The room was absolutely empty. No bed, no chair, no bureau, no
+rug--nothing at all was in it except two iron hooks. Its floor consisted
+of split palm logs, round side up, between which opened inch-wide
+spaces. Its walls were rusty corrugated iron, guiltless of mirrors or
+pictures, which did not reach to the roof.
+
+"Observe the excellent ventilation," grinned McKay. "Wind blows up
+through the floor--if there is any wind--and then loops over the
+partition into the next fellow's room."
+
+"Yeah. And I'll say any guy that drops his collar button is out o' luck.
+It goes plunk into the mud, seven foot down under the house. But say,
+Cap, how the heck do we sleep? Hang ourselves up on them hooks?"
+
+"Exactly."
+
+"Kind o' rough on a feller's shirt, ain't it? And the shirt would likely
+pull off over yer head before mornin'."
+
+"Yes, probably would. But the secret is this--you're supposed to hang
+your hammock on those hooks. You provide the hammock. The hotel provides
+the hooks. What more can you ask of a modern hotel?"
+
+"Huh! And if a guy wants a bath, there's the river, all full o' 'gators
+and cattawampuses and things. And if ye eat, I s'pose ye rustle yer own
+grub and pay for eatin' it off that slab table there. There's jest one
+thing ye can say for this dump--a feller can spit on the floor. But with
+all them cracks in it he might not hit it, at that. Mother of mine! To
+think Missus Ryan's li'l' boy should ever git caught stayin' in a hole
+like this, along o' drunks and skiddin' she-goats and--did ye say a
+Dutchman?"
+
+"German. Chap named Schwandorf."
+
+"Yeah?" Tim's tone was sinister. "Say, Cap, gimme the room next that
+guy. And if ye hear anybody yowlin' before mornin' don't git worried. It
+won't be me."
+
+"None of that, Tim," warned Knowlton. "The war's over--"
+
+"Since when? There wasn't no peace treaty signed when we left the
+States."
+
+"Er--ahum! Well, technically you're right. But this fellow may be useful
+to us. He knows the upper river, they say."
+
+"Aw, well, if ye can use him I'll lay off him. Where is he?"
+
+"Out somewhere," answered McKay. "I haven't seen him yet. Want this
+first room, Merry?"
+
+"Just to play safe, I'll take the one next the German. And if I hear any
+war in the night, Tim, I'm coming over the top with both hands going."
+
+"Grrrumph!" growled Tim.
+
+"That goes, Tim," warned McKay. "I'll take this room and you can have
+the one between us. Here comes the baggage train with our stuff. In
+here, men!"
+
+Puffing and grunting, Antonio and Jorge and Rosario and Meldo shuffled
+in with the boxes and bundles. Under the directions of McKay and
+Knowlton, these were stowed in the bare rooms. Then the four shuffled
+out again, grinning happily over a small roll of Brazilian paper reis
+which McKay had peeled from a much larger roll and handed to them.
+Immediately following their departure, in came a youth carrying three
+new hammocks.
+
+"Our beds," McKay explained. "I sent this lad to a trader's store for
+them. He's the proprietor's son. Thank you, Thomaz. Tell your father to
+put these on our bill, and take for yourself this small token of our
+appreciation."
+
+More reis changed hands. The young Brazilian, with a flash of teeth,
+informed them that the evening meal would soon be ready and disappeared
+through a rear door.
+
+"Do they really feed us at this here, now, hotel?" Tim demanded. "Then
+the goat's safe."
+
+"Meaning?" puzzled Knowlton.
+
+"Meanin' I didn't know but we had to kill our supper, and I was goin' to
+git the cap'n's goat. That is, the goat the cap'n's kiddin'--I mean the
+goat that's kiddin' the cap--the skiddin' she-goat--Aw, rats! ye know
+what I'm drivin' at. Me tongue so dry it don't work right."
+
+Wherewith Tim retreated in disorder to his room and began wrestling with
+his new hammock and the iron hooks.
+
+Swift darkness filled the rooms. The sun had slid down below the bulge
+of the fast-rolling world. Thomaz re-entered, lit candles stuck in empty
+bottles, and, with a bow, placed one of these crude illuminants at the
+door of each of the strangers. By the flickering lights McKay and
+Knowlton disposed their effects according to their individual desires,
+bearing in mind Tim's observation that any small article dropped on the
+floor would land in the mud under the house, whence sounded the grunts
+of pigs. Their work was soon completed, and they sauntered together to
+the small piazza.
+
+"Nice quiet little place," commented Knowlton. "Make a good sanitarium
+for nervous folks."
+
+The comment was made in a tone which, in the daytime, would carry half a
+mile. McKay nodded to save a similar effort. The outbreak of the howling
+monkey which so startled Tim had been only the first note of the night
+concert of the jungle. Now that the sun was gone the chorus was in full
+swing.
+
+Beasts of the village, the jungle, the river, all hurled their voices
+into the uproar. From the gloom around the houses rose the bellowing of
+cows and calves, the howls and yelps of dogs, the yowling of cats, the
+grunts and squeals of hogs. In the black river, flowing past within a
+stone's throw of the hotel door, sounded the loud snorts of dolphins and
+the hideous night call of the foul beast of the mud--the alligator. Out
+from the matted tangle of trees and brush and great snakelike vines
+behind the town rolled the appalling roars of guaribas, raucous bird
+calls, dismal hoots, sudden scattered screams. And over all, whelming
+all other sound by the sheer might of its penetrating power, throbbed
+the rapid-fire hammering of millions of frogs.
+
+"Frogs sound like a machine-gun barrage," the blond man added.
+
+"Or thousands of riveting hammers pounding steel."
+
+"Queer how much worse it is when you're right in it. We've heard it all
+the way up two thousand miles of Amazon, but--"
+
+"But you're right beside the orchestra now. Position is everything in
+life."
+
+The double-edged jest made Knowlton glance sidelong at his mate. Of the
+tall, eagle-faced Scot's past he knew little beyond what he had seen of
+him in war, where he had met him and learned to respect him
+whole-heartedly. From occasional remarks he had learned that McKay had
+been in all sorts of places between Buenos Aires and Nome; and from a
+few intangible hints he suspected that his "position in life" had once
+been much higher socially than at present. But he asked no questions.
+
+"Some orchestra, all right," he responded, casually. "Plenty of jazz.
+It'll quiet down after a while."
+
+For a time they stood leaning against the wall, staring abstractedly out
+at the dark. One by one the domestic animals ceased their clamor and
+settled themselves for the night. The jungle din, too, seemed to
+diminish, though perhaps this was because the ears of the men had become
+accustomed to it. At length through the discordant symphony boomed the
+voice of Tim.
+
+"By cripes! I know now what folks mean when they talk about a howlin'
+wilderness. Always thought 'twas one o' them figgers o' speech, but I'll
+tell the world it ain't no joke! Gosh! Think of all the things that's
+layin' out there and bellerin' and waitin' for us pore li'l' fellers to
+come in amongst 'em and git et up."
+
+"You'll find the same things in the cities up home," said Knowlton, a
+bit cynically. "Different bodies and different methods of attack, but
+the same merciless animals under the skin. Snakes in silk
+suits--foul-mouthed alligators in dinner jackets--hunting-cats and
+vampires, painted and powdered--and all the rest of it."
+
+"Yeah. Ye said a mouthful, Looey. But say, Tommy's shovin' some grub on
+the table. Mebbe we better hop to it before the flies git it all."
+
+After a glance at the vicious attack already begun by the aforesaid
+flies, the pair adopted Tim's suggestion and hopped to it. Manfully they
+assailed the rubbery jerked beef, black beans, rice, farinha, and thick,
+black, unsweetened coffee which comprised the meal. All three were
+wrestling with chunks of the meat when Tim, facing the door, stopped
+chewing long enough to mutter:
+
+"Dutchland overalls. Here's the goose stepper."
+
+The heads of the other two involuntarily moved a little. Then their
+necks stiffened and they continued eating. Tim alone stared straight at
+a burly, black-whiskered Teuton who had halted in the outer doorway. And
+Tim alone saw the ugly look crossing the newcomer's visage as he gazed
+at the khaki shirts, the broad shoulders under them, and the
+unmistakably Irish--and hostile--face of Tim himself.
+
+Catching the hard stare of the red-haired man, he of the black beard
+advanced at once, his eyes veering to the door of his own room. Straight
+to that room he marched with heavy tread. He opened the door with a
+kick, shut it behind him with a slam. The three at the table glanced at
+one another.
+
+"Say what ye like," grumbled Tim, "but me and that guy don't hold no
+mush party. I don't like his map. I don't like his manners. And he looks
+too much like the Fritz that shot me in the back with a kamerad gun
+after surrenderin'. I was in hospital three months. D'ye mind that time,
+Looey?"
+
+Knowlton nodded. He remembered also that Tim, shot down from behind and
+almost killed, had reeled up to his feet and bayoneted his man before
+falling the second time. Wherefore he replied:
+
+"He isn't the same one, Tim."
+
+"Nope," grimly. "That one won't never come back. All the same, if you
+gents want to chew the fat with this feller I'm goin' slummin' with me
+friend Joey Mouthgargle Nabisco Whoozis. Then I won't be round here to
+make no sour-caustic remarks and gum up yer party."
+
+"Might be a good idea," McKay conceded.
+
+"There he is now, the li'l' darlin'! Hullo, Joey, old sock! Stick around
+a minute while I scoop a few more beans. Be with ye toot
+sweet--vite--presto--P.D.Q."
+
+Wherewith he demolished the rest of his meal with military dispatch,
+proceeded doorward, smote the grinning army of Remate de Males a buffet
+on the shoulder, and vanished into the night. A moment later his
+stentorian voice rolled back through the nocturnal racket in an
+impromptu paraphrase of an old and highly improper army song:
+
+ "We're in the jungle now,
+ We ain't behind the plow;
+ We'll never git rich,
+ We'll die with the itch.
+ We're in the jungle now!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE GERMAN
+
+
+The door of the German's room opened. The German came out and marched to
+the table. Two paces away he halted and faced the Americans, ready to
+speak if spoken to, equally ready to sit and ignore them if not greeted.
+McKay and Knowlton rose.
+
+"Herr von Schwandorf?" inquired Knowlton.
+
+"Schwandorf. Neither Herr nor von. Plain Schwandorf."
+
+The reply came in excellent English, though with a slight throaty
+accent.
+
+"Knowlton is my name. Mr. McKay. The third member of our party, Mr.
+Ryan, has just left."
+
+Schwandorf bowed stiffly from the waist.
+
+"It is a pleasure to meet you. White men are all too few here."
+
+Seating himself at a place beyond that just vacated by Tim, he
+continued, "You stay here for a time?"
+
+"Not long." They reseated themselves. "We go up the river as soon as we
+can arrange transportation."
+
+The black brows lifted slightly.
+
+"It is a dangerous river. You would do well to travel elsewhere unless
+you have some pressing reason to explore this stream."
+
+With an accustomed sweep of the hand he shooed the flies from the bean
+dish and helped himself to a big portion. Over the legumes he poured
+farinha in the Brazilian fashion.
+
+"We have. We are seeking a tribe of people who paint their bones red."
+
+Schwandorf's hand, conveying the first mouthful of beans upward, stopped
+in air. His black eyes fixed the Americans with an astounded stare. He
+lowered the beans, stabbed absently at a chunk of beef, sawed it apart,
+popped a piece of it into his mouth, and sat for a time chewing. When
+the meat was down he spoke bluntly:
+
+"Are there not ways enough to kill yourselves at home instead of
+traveling to this place to do it?"
+
+McKay smiled. The directness of the man amused him.
+
+"As bad as that?" asked Knowlton.
+
+"As bad as that. Blow your head off if you like. Cut your throat. Take
+poison. Jump into the river among the alligators. Step on a snake. But
+keep away from the Red Bones."
+
+"Why?" shot McKay.
+
+"Cannibals--and worse."
+
+"Worse?"
+
+"Truly. Most of the Brazilian savages do not torture. The Red Bones do."
+
+"Pleasant prospect."
+
+"Very. Nothing to be gained among them, either. If you're hunting gold,
+try the hills over west of the Huallaga. None here."
+
+Knowlton filled and lit a pipe. McKay slowly drank the last of his
+syrupy coffee and rolled a cigarette. Schwandorf continued shoveling
+food into his capacious mouth.
+
+"Know anything about the Raposa?" Knowlton asked.
+
+The Teuton's eyelashes flickered. He ground another chunk of meat
+between his jaws before answering.
+
+"Of course," he said then. "Wild dog. Sharp snout, gray hair, bushy
+tail. I've shot a couple of them."
+
+"This one is a man. Green eyes, streak of white hair over the left ear.
+Paints himself like the Red Bones, as you call them, but is a white
+man."
+
+"Oh! That one? Heard of him, yes. Wild man of the jungle. Want to catch
+him and put him in a circus?"
+
+"Maybe. We'd like to see him, anyhow. Heard about him awhile ago. Any
+way to get him that you know of?"
+
+"Might try a steel trap," the German suggested, callously. "But I don't
+know where you'd set it. Best way to get a wild dog is to shoot him, and
+he isn't much good dead. Or would this one be worth something--dead?" A
+swift sidelong glance accompanied the question.
+
+"Not a cent!" snapped McKay.
+
+"And perhaps he'd be worth nothing alive," added Knowlton. "But we have
+a healthy curiosity to look him over. Guess the Red Bone country would
+be the likeliest place. How far is it from here?"
+
+"Keep out of it," was the stubborn reply.
+
+The Americans rose.
+
+"We are not going to keep out of it," Knowlton declared, coldly. "We are
+going straight into it. Thank you for your assistance."
+
+"Not so fast," Schwandorf protested. "If you are determined to go I will
+help you if I can. Shall we sit on the piazza with a small bottle to aid
+digestion? So! Thomaz! Bring from my stock the kümmel. Or would you
+prefer whisky, gentlemen?"
+
+"Ginger-ale highballs are my favorite fruit," admitted Knowlton. "Can
+ginger ale be bought here?"
+
+"Indeed yes. At one milrei a bottle."
+
+"Cheap enough. Thomaz, three bottles of ginger ale and one of North
+American whisky--the best. Cigars also. Out on the piazza."
+
+"Si, senhores."
+
+Schwandorf got up.
+
+"If you will pardon me, I will drink my kümmel. Frankly, I do not like
+whisky."
+
+"And frankly, we do not like kümmel. All a matter of taste."
+
+"Truly. So let each of us drink his own preference. I will join you in a
+moment."
+
+The Americans sauntered to the door, while the German strode into his
+room.
+
+"Blunt sort of cuss," Knowlton commented.
+
+"Ay, blunt. But not candid. Knows more than he's telling."
+
+Disposing themselves comfortably, they sat watching the lights of the
+town and the jungle--the first pouring from windows and open doors, the
+latter streaking across the darkness where the big fire beetles of the
+tropics winged their way. As Knowlton had predicted, the night noise of
+forest and stream had diminished; but now from the village itself rose a
+new discord--a babel of vocal and instrumental efforts at music
+emanating from the badly worn records of dozens of cheap phonographs
+grinding away in the stilt-poled huts.
+
+"Good Lord!" groaned McKay. "Even here at the end of the world one can't
+get away from those beastly instruments."
+
+A throaty chuckle from the doorway followed the words. Schwandorf
+emerged, carrying a big bottle.
+
+"Yet there is one thing to be thankful for, gentlemen," he said. "In all
+this town there is not one man who attempts to play a trombone."
+
+The others laughed. Thomaz appeared with bottles and thick cups. Corks
+were drawn, liquids gurgled, matches flared, cigars glowed. Without
+warning Schwandorf shot a question through the gloom:
+
+"Have you seen Cabral--the superintendent?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Ask him about the wild man?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Get any information?"
+
+"Nothing definite. He suggested that we see you."
+
+"So."
+
+A pause, while Schwandorf's cigar end glowed like a flaming eye.
+
+"The Red Bones live well up the river," he began, abruptly. "Twenty-four
+days by canoe, five days through the bush on the east shore. That would
+bring you to their main settlement--if you were not wiped out before
+then. They're a big tribe, as tribes go. Ever been here before?"
+
+"No. Not here," Knowlton told him. "I've been in Rio, and McKay here has
+knocked around in--"
+
+A stealthy kick from McKay halted him an instant. Then, deftly shifting
+the sentence, he concluded, "--in a number of places."
+
+"So." Another pause. "Then I should explain about tribes. Tribes here
+generally consist of from fifty to five hundred or more persons living
+in big houses called '_malocas_.' Unless the tribe is very big, one
+house holds them all. There may be any number of _malocas_, the
+inhabitants of which are all of the same racial stock; yet each _maloca_
+is, as far as government is concerned, a tribe to itself, controlled by
+a chief. No _maloca_ owes any duty to any other _maloca_. There is no
+supreme ruler over all, nor even a federation among them. They live
+merely as neighbors--distant neighbors. At times they fight like
+neighbors. You understand."
+
+"'When Greek meets Greek--'" quoted McKay.
+
+"Just so. When I say, then, that the Red Bones are a big tribe, I mean
+that there are about five hundred--maybe more--individuals in their main
+settlement. They live in huts, not in one big tribe-house like the
+Mayorunas. They are not Mayorunas, in fact; they paint differently, are
+darker of skin, and more cruel.
+
+"The Mayorunas, by the way, are not so debased as you might think.
+Though cannibals, they do not kill for the sake of eating 'long pig,'
+like the cannibals of the South Seas. Neither do they eat the whole
+body. Only the hands and feet of their dead enemies are devoured. These
+are carefully cooked and eaten as delicacies along with monkey meat,
+birds, fish, and other things prepared for a feast in honor of a
+victory. The eating of human flesh seems to be symbolism rather than
+savagery. Furthermore, they do not range the jungle hunting for victims.
+They eat only those who come against them as enemies.
+
+"So it is quite possible, you see, that strangers might go among them
+and escape death. It would depend largely on the ability of the
+strangers to convince the savages that they were friends. The difficulty
+is that the savages consider all strangers to be enemies until
+friendship is proved."
+
+"A sizable difficulty," McKay remarked.
+
+"Almost insurmountable. Yet it might be done. Mind, I speak now of the
+Mayorunas, not of the Red Bones. I tell you again that the Red Bone
+country is closed."
+
+"And where is the Mayoruna region?"
+
+"In the same general section. The Mayorunas are much more widely
+distributed. They are on both banks of the Javary and extend as far west
+as the Ucayali.
+
+"Now if I sought to enter the Red Bone region--and again I say I would
+not--this would be my way of going at it. I would go first among the
+Mayorunas near the Red Bones and seek to convince them that I was their
+friend. I would make the Mayoruna chief as friendly to me as possible. I
+might even take a Mayoruna woman for a time--some of them are handsome,
+and such a step would make me almost a Mayoruna myself in their eyes.
+Then I would persuade the chief to send messengers to the Red Bones with
+word of me and a request that I be allowed to visit their settlement.
+The request, coming from the Mayoruna chief, probably would be granted.
+I would then go in with a bodyguard of Mayorunas, do my business, and
+come out via the Mayoruna route."
+
+A thoughtful silence ensued. Bottle necks clinked against the cups.
+
+"Something in that idea," conceded Knowlton. "A good deal in it. Barring
+the woman part, of course."
+
+"Ay," spoke McKay, his tone casual as ever. "When you came out what
+would you do with your woman, _mein Herr_?"
+
+Schwandorf, tongue loosened a bit by his kümmel, chuckled.
+
+"Ho-ho! The woman? Leave her, of course, when she had served my purpose.
+Why bother about a woman here and there?"
+
+"I see." McKay's face, indistinct in the gloom, was unreadable, but his
+tone had a caustic edge.
+
+Schwandorf laughed again. "You are fresh from the woman-worshiping
+United States and you disapprove. But this is the jungle, and all is
+different. '_Cada terra com seu uso_,' as these Brazilians say--each
+land with its own ways. Perhaps when you have met the Mayoruna women,
+looked on their handsome faces and shapely forms--they wear no clothing,
+by the way--you will change your ideas. More than one man along this
+border has risked his life to win one of those women. But that rests
+with you. And now if you will excuse me, gentlemen, I have an engagement
+with a man at the other end of town."
+
+"Certainly. We are indebted to you for your interest."
+
+"It is nothing. Remember that I strongly advise you not to go. But if
+you will go, I shall gladly do whatever lies in my power to aid you in
+preparing for the trip. Do not hesitate to call on me."
+
+He passed into the house, returning almost at once.
+
+"By the way," he added, "one of you has the room next mine?"
+
+"I have it," said Knowlton.
+
+"Yes. Are you a good sleeper? I sometimes snore most atrociously, I am
+told. So perhaps--"
+
+"Don't worry. I can sleep in the middle of a bombardment."
+
+"You are fortunate. Good evening, gentlemen."
+
+When he was gone they sat for a time smoking, sipping now and then at
+their highballs. At length McKay said, "Humph!"
+
+"Amen. Pretty square sort of chap, though, don't you think?"
+
+"I'm not saying," was the Scot's cautious answer. "Seems to be trying to
+discourage us and egg us on at the same time. Something up his sleeve,
+perhaps."
+
+"Can't tell. But his line of talk rings true so far. Checks up all right
+with what we've heard about the Mayorunas and so on. And that scheme of
+working in through the Mayoruna country sounds about as sensible as
+anything. Desperate chance and all that, but it might work. Say, why did
+you kick me when I was going to tell him you'd been in British Guiana?"
+
+"Don't know exactly. Had a hunch. Seems to me I've seen that fellow
+before somewhere, but I can't place him. None of his business where I've
+been, anyhow. We're boobs from the States hunting for a wild man. That's
+all he needs to know."
+
+But it was not enough for Schwandorf to know. At that very moment he was
+on his way to the home of Superintendent Cabral, with whom he had no
+engagement whatever, to learn all he could concerning the business of
+these military-appearing strangers; also to impress on that official the
+fact that he had sought to dissuade them from starting on their mad
+quest.
+
+And much later that night, when Knowlton was making good his boast that
+he was a sound sleeper, a black-bearded face rose silently above the
+iron partition between his room and that of the German. A hand gripping
+a small electric flashlight followed. A white ray searched the room,
+halting on the khaki shirt lying over a box. A tough withe with a barb
+at one end came over like a slender tentacle, hooked the shirt neatly,
+drew it stealthily up to the top. Shirt, stick, lamp, hand, face all
+dissolved into darkness.
+
+After a time they reappeared. The shirt came down, swung slowly back and
+forth, was dropped deftly where it had previously lain. The breast
+pocket holding the grain-leather notebook and the photograph of David
+Dawson Rand was buttoned as it had been, and the notebook bulged the
+cloth slightly as before. But the contents of that book and the pictured
+face of Rand now were stamped on the brain of Schwandorf. A sneering,
+snarling smile curled the heavy mouth of Schwandorf. And softly, so
+softly that none could hear it but himself, sounded the ironical
+benediction of Schwandorf:
+
+"Sleep well, _offizier americanisch_! Dream on, poor fool! In time you
+will wake up. _Ja_, you will wake up!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+INTO THE BUSH
+
+
+Sleepy eyed and frowzy haired, with shirt unbuttoned and breeches and
+boots unlaced, Tim emerged from his iron-walled cell into the
+cool-shadowed main room, blinked at McKay and Knowlton lounging over
+their morning coffee and cigarettes, stretched his hairy arms, and
+advanced sluggishly to the table.
+
+"Yow-oo-hum!" he yawned. "Ain't they cute! All dressed and shaved like
+they was goin' to visit the C. O. And here's pore Timmy Ryan lookin'
+like a 'drunk and dirty' jest throwed into the guardhouse, and feelin'
+worse. Top o' the mornin' to ye, gents!"
+
+"Same to you, Tim," McKay nodded.
+
+"Who hit you?" asked Knowlton, squinting at bumps and scratches on Tim's
+forehead.
+
+"Nobody. Couple fellers tried to, but they was out o' luck. Oh, I see
+what ye mean! I done that meself while I was gittin' to bed."
+
+"Waves must have been running high on the ocean last night. Better drink
+some coffee. Thomaz, another cup--big and black."
+
+"Thanks, Looey. 'Twas kind of an active night, at that."
+
+"I heard you come in," vouchsafed McKay. "Were you trying some high
+diving in your room?"
+
+"Faith, I done some divin' without tryin', but 'twas ragged work--I
+pulled a belly smacker every time. I got to tame that hammick o' mine.
+It throwed me four times hand-running and the only way I could hold it
+down was to unhook it and lay it on the floor."
+
+"Sleep well then?"
+
+"I did not. Cap, I thought I knowed somethin' about cooties, but I take
+it back--I never knowed nothin' about them insecks till last night.
+Where they come from I dunno, but I'll tell the world they come, and if
+they wasn't half an inch long I'll eat 'em. They darn near dragged me
+off whole, and all the sleep I got ye could stick in a flea's eye.
+Lookit here."
+
+He extended an arm dotted with swollen red spots.
+
+"Ants!" said McKay, after one glance. "Ants, not cooties. They're
+everywhere. Especially under the floor. That's one reason why folks
+sleep in hammocks down here. Even then they're likely to come down the
+hammock cords and drive you out."
+
+"Ants, hey? Never thought o' that. And I'd sooner spend another night
+fightin' all the man-eatin' jaggers in the jungle than them bugs. It's
+the little things that count, as the feller said when his wife give him
+his fourteenth baby."
+
+He downed the thick coffee brought by Thomaz, demanded another cup,
+accepted cigarette and light from Knowlton, and sighed heavily.
+
+"Who tried to hit you?" Knowlton persisted.
+
+"Aw, I dunno. Two-three fellers took swipes at me with bottles and
+things. Me and Joey went to a place where they's card games and so
+on--only place in town where the village sports can git action. Joey
+offers to buy, and does. Stuff tastes kind o' moldy to me, so I asks
+have they got any American beer. They have. It's bottled and warm, but
+it's beer and tastes like home. It goes down so slick I buy another
+round, and then one more, lettin' in a thirsty-lookin' stranger on the
+third round. That makes seven bottles altogether. Then I think mebbe I
+better pay up now before I lose track. Looey, guess what them seven
+bottles o' suds come to in American money."
+
+"M-m-m! Well, say about three and a half or four dollars."
+
+"That's what I figgered," mourned Tim. "But them highbinders want
+thirty-two dollars and twenty cents, American gold."
+
+"What!"
+
+"Sad but true. Seems the stuff sells here for four bucks and sixty cents
+a bottle. Thinkin' I'm gittin' rooked because I'm a tenderfoot, I raise
+a row to oncet and start to climb the guy. Other folks mix in and things
+git lively right off. But after I've dropped a couple o' fellers Joey
+winds himself round me and begs me not to make him arrest me, and also
+tells me I'm all wrong--that's the regular price. So o'course that makes
+me out a cheap skate unless I come acrost, and I do the right thing."
+
+"Lucky you had the money on you," said McKay, eying him a bit oddly.
+
+"I didn't," chuckled Tim. "All the dough I had was one pore lonesome
+ten-spot--the one I got from ye yesterday, Cap. But I don't tell 'em
+that. I jest wave my hand like thirty-two plunks wasn't nothin' in my
+young life, and start to work meself out o' the hole. After the two guys
+on the floor are brought back to their senses I order up drinks for all
+hands and git popular again. Then I git out the bones."
+
+"Oh! I see!" McKay laughed silently.
+
+"Sure. Remember they told us on the boat that these guys will gamble on
+anything? And that a feller without shoes on may be some rubber worker
+packin' a roll that would choke a horse? Wal, I make a few passes with
+them dice o' mine and their eyes light up like somebody had switched on
+the current. Then I scrabble me hand around in me pants pocket, like I
+was peelin' a bill off a roll so big I didn't want to flash the whole
+wad, and haul out that pore li'l' ten and ask would anybody like to play
+a man's game.
+
+"They would. I'll say they would. And they got the coin to back up their
+play, too. Before I come home I was buyin' beer by the case instead o'
+the bottle. And it's all paid for, and I got more 'n a hundred dollars
+left, besides givin' Joey a fistful o' money jest for bein' a good
+feller. This ain't a bad town at all, gents. Outside o' that
+buckin'-broncho hammick and the man-eatin' ants I had a lovely evenin'."
+
+"How about Joao's lady friend?" quizzed Knowlton.
+
+"Huh? Oh, I didn't git to see her. When bones and beer are rollin' high
+and handsome I got no time for women. Besides, I found out she was
+mostly Injun and fat as a hog. Nothin' like that for li'l' Timmy Ryan.
+Oh, say, before I forgit it--I asked Joey about this Dutchman here, and
+he says--"
+
+McKay scowled, shook his head, pointed toward the closed door of
+Schwandorf. Tim lifted his brows, winked understanding, and went on with
+a break: "--that this guy Sworn-off is a reg'lar feller and knows this
+river like a book. Says he's one fine guy and a man from hair to heels."
+
+Following which he grimaced as if something smelled bad, adding in a
+barely audible whisper, "And that's the worst lie I ever told."
+
+"We met Mr. Schwandorf last night after you went," Knowlton said,
+easily, drawing down one eyelid. "Very likable sort of chap. He's going
+to help us get started upriver."
+
+"Uh-huh. When do we go? To-day?"
+
+"If possible."
+
+"Glad of it. This big-town sportin' life would be the ruination of a
+simple country kid like me. Yo-hum! Wonder how all our neighbors are
+this mornin'--the goat and the drunk and the two sick fellers. Kind o'
+quiet over that side o' the room."
+
+Thomaz entered just then with more coffee. Knowlton turned to him.
+
+"Are the sick men better to-day, Thomaz?"
+
+"Much better, senhor," the lad said, carelessly. "They are dead."
+
+"Huh?" Tim grunted, explosively.
+
+"Dead," the youth repeated. "They were taken out at dawn. Do not be
+alarmed. It was the swamp fever, which is not--what you say?--catching."
+
+"Humph! Sort of a reg'lar thing to die of fever here, hey?"
+
+Thomaz shrugged as if hearing a foolish question.
+
+"_Si._ Swamp fever, yellow fever, smallpox, beriberi--to-day we live,
+to-morrow we are dead."
+
+"True for ye. They's allays somethin' hidin' round the corner waitin' to
+jump ye, no matter where ye are. If 'tain't one thing, it's another."
+
+Despite his philosophical answer, however, Tim fell silent, his eyes
+going to the doors of the rooms where Death had stalked last night while
+he was gambling. Like most men in whose veins red blood runs bold and
+free, he had no fear of the sort of death befitting a fighter--sudden
+and violent--but a deep repugnance for those two assassins against which
+a victim could not fight back--disease and poison. The Brazilian youth's
+nonchalant fatalism aroused him to the fact that here both those forms
+of death were very near him; the one in the air, the other on the
+ground--fever and snakes.
+
+For the moment he was depressed. Then curiosity awoke.
+
+"If this here, now, Javary fever ain't catchin', how does a feller git
+it?"
+
+"Mosquitoes," McKay enlightened him. "The _anopheles_. It bites a man
+who has fever, then bites a well man and leaves the fever in him. Inside
+of ten days he's sick, unless he takes a huge dose of quinine right
+away. Mosquito attacks perpendicular to the skin. That is, it stands on
+its head. If you ever notice one of them biting that way get busy with
+the quinine."
+
+"Huh! Fat chance a feller's got o' seein' just how all these bugs bite
+him. And one muskeeter standin' on its head does all that, hey?"
+
+"So they say. Also they say it's only the female that bites."
+
+"Yeah. I believe it. I been stung more 'n once by females before now.
+How about the yeller fever? Git that the same way?"
+
+"Same way, only a different mosquito--the _stegomyia_. When you begin to
+vomit black you're gone. And if you get beriberi you're gone, too. First
+symptoms of that are numbness of the fingers and toes. Muscular
+paralysis goes on until your heart stops."
+
+"Uh-huh. Nice cheerful place to die in, this Ammyzon jungle. Aw well,
+what's the odds?"
+
+Wherewith he inhaled more coffee, flipped his cigarette butt at a small
+lizard on the floor not far away, yawned once more, and swaggered out to
+the piazza, bawling:
+
+ "And when I die
+ Don't bury me a-tall,
+ But pickle me bones
+ In alky-hawl--"
+
+When his roar had subsided and the two former officers had sat silent a
+moment, smiling over his nocturnal adventures, the door of Schwandorf's
+room opened abruptly and the German stepped out.
+
+"_Morgen_," he grunted, striding to the table. "Thomaz!"
+
+"_Si_, Senhor Sssondoff." The youth faded away into the kitchen
+quarters.
+
+"Always feel grumpy until I eat," grumbled the blackbeard. "None of this
+coffee-cigarette breakfast for me. A real meal, coffee with gin in it, a
+cigar--then I feel human. Sleep well?"
+
+His bold gaze never flickered as it encountered Knowlton's.
+
+"Fine. If you snored I didn't know it. Didn't hear the bodies taken out
+this morning, either."
+
+"Bodies! Oh! Those fellows dead?" He tilted his head toward the doors
+behind which the sick men had lain. "Glad of it. Best for them and
+everybody else. Hate to have sick people in the place."
+
+The Americans said nothing. They lit new cigarettes and waited for the
+other to become "human." And when his substantial breakfast was down,
+his gin-flavored coffee had disappeared, and his big cigar was aglow, he
+did.
+
+"Well, gentlemen, have you decided to take good advice and let your
+Raposa alone?" he asked, affably.
+
+"Who ever follows good advice?" Knowlton countered. Schwandorf chuckled.
+
+"_Niemand._ Nobody. So you will go." He shook his head solemnly. "I have
+said all I can without offense. But if you persist I can only help you
+to start. If possible I should like to go with you up the river to the
+place where you will take to the bush; but I must go to Iquitos, in
+Peru, on the monthly launch which is due in a day or two, so all my
+business is in the other direction. If now I can aid in the matter of a
+crew--"
+
+"That is what we were about to ask of you."
+
+"So. Then let us be about it. I have been thinking, since you showed
+your determination last night, and have made inquiries about men. There
+are now in Nazareth, the little Peruvian town across the river, several
+men from whom you can pick an excellent crew. Men of the river and the
+bush, not worthless loafers like these townsmen here. Men who are not
+afraid of hell or high water, as the saying is. Not remarkable for
+either beauty or brains, but good men for your work--by far the best you
+can obtain. I would suggest a large canoe and six or eight of those men
+as crew."
+
+The others smoked thoughtfully. Then McKay said, "We should prefer
+Brazilians."
+
+"Not if you knew the people hereabouts as well as I. It, of course,
+makes no personal difference to me what sort of crew you get, but I tell
+you that these men are best. What does it matter which side of the river
+they come from? Men are men."
+
+"True," McKay conceded.
+
+"Can't be too fussy here," Knowlton added. "Let's see the men."
+
+All rose. But then Schwandorf suggested:
+
+"No need of your going to Nazareth. Better stay here, unless you want to
+go through a great deal of ceremonious foolishness over there. It's
+Peruvian ground and the barefooted ignoramuses of officials may insist
+on showing their importance by demanding your papers and all that. I can
+go across, get the men, and be back here before you'd be half through
+the preliminaries. Saves time."
+
+"All right, if it's not too much trouble."
+
+"A good deal less trouble than if you went, to be frank. I'm known, and
+I can go straight about the business. So sit down and wait. Thomaz! My
+hat!"
+
+Out he tramped to the piazza, where he paused a moment to run a swift
+eye over the disheveled figure of Tim, who had fallen sound asleep in a
+chair. Then, without a further word or glance, he descended the ladder
+and swung away down the street. The Americans, watching him from the
+doorway, observed that children in his path hastened to get out of it,
+and that he spoke to nobody.
+
+"Prussian," rasped McKay.
+
+"M-hm! Done time in the Kaiser's army, too, even if he has been here
+since before the war. But he's treating us pretty white."
+
+The captain made no answer. Their eyes followed the big figure until
+they saw it go sliding away toward Peru in a canoe propelled by two
+languid townsmen. Then McKay dropped a hand on Tim's shoulder. The
+red-lashed eyes flew open instantly.
+
+Briefly, quietly, Knowlton told of what had passed while he napped, then
+asked what information he had gleaned from Joao.
+
+"He says," answered Tim, "this guy is a queer duck. Been around here
+quite a while, but Joey don't know what's his game. He goes off on trips
+upriver, stays quite a while, comes back unexpected, and nobody knows
+where he's been or why. He don't use Brazilian boatmen--gits his men on
+the other side. And the Peru boys themselves dunno where he goes, or,
+anyways, they say they don't.
+
+"Two of 'em come over here awhile back and got drunk, and Joey tried to
+pump 'em, but all the dope he got was that this here Fritz goes away
+upstream to a li'l' camp, and from there he goes off into the bush
+alone, and the Peru guys jest hang around the camp till he gits back.
+Sounds kind o' fishy to me, and Joey says it does to him, too, but he
+couldn't work nothin' more out o' the drunks because about that time
+Sworn-off himself comes buttin' in and asks these guys what they think
+they're doin' on this side the river, and they beat it back to Peru toot
+sweet. He's got their goat, all right, and I wouldn't wonder if he's got
+Joey's, too. Anyways, Joey tells me he's off this geezer and advises me
+to lay off him, too, though he can't name a thing against him."
+
+"Queer," said Knowlton, looking again at the canoe out on the water.
+
+"Gun running?" suggested McKay.
+
+"Nope," Tim contradicted. "I thought o' that, but Joey says they's
+nothin' to it; they watched this sourkrout close, and he don't never git
+no guns from nowheres. Besides, they's nobody up there to run guns to
+but Injuns, and them Injuns are so wild they don't want no guns; they
+stick to the bow and arrer and such stuff, which they sure know how to
+use. Whatever his game is, he plays a lone hand as far's this town
+knows. Got no pals here, and nobody wants to walk on his corns."
+
+"May be perfectly all right, too," mused Knowlton. "A little gold cache
+or something--though he said there was none in this region. Oh, well,
+what do we care? We have our hands full with our own business, and all
+assistance is appreciated."
+
+An hour drifted past. Men of the town lounged by, looking curiously at
+the strangers, some nodding and voicing a friendly, "_Boa dia._" Women,
+too, watched them from windows and doors, and children slyly peeped
+around corners until something more important--such as a cat, a goat, or
+a gorgeous butterfly--came their way. Tim went inside and slicked up a
+bit by buttoning and lacing his clothes and combing his rebellious hair.
+At length a long boat put out from the farther shore and came surging
+across the sun-gleaming river.
+
+"Handle themselves well," McKay approved, noting the easy grace of the
+crew. In the bow a tall, slender fellow stood with arms folded,
+balancing himself to the sway of the rather clumsy craft and watching
+the water ahead. In the stern, on a little platform whence he could look
+over the heads of the others and catch any signal from the lookout, a
+squat, dark-faced steersman lounged against his crude rudder. Between
+these two the paddlers stood, each with one foot on the bottom of the
+long dugout and the other on the gunwale, swinging in nonchalant unison
+as their blades moved fore and aft. Under the curving roof of a
+rough-and-ready cabin, open at the sides to allow free play of air,
+Schwandorf lolled like some old-time barbarian king.
+
+Down to the landing place trudged the three Americans, and there the
+employers and the prospective employees looked one another over with
+interest. Eight men had come with Schwandorf, and a hard gang they were.
+The bowman, hawk nosed, slant eyed, black mustached, with hairy chest
+showing under his unbuttoned cotton shirt, had the face and bearing of a
+buccaneer chieftain; and the effect was intensified by a flaring red
+handkerchief around his head and the haft of a knife protruding from his
+waistband. The rowers behind him, though of varying degrees of
+swarthiness and height, all had the same sinewy build, the same bold
+stare, the same devil-may-care insolence of manner; and though none but
+the lookout wore the piratical red around his brow, more than one knife
+hilt showed at their waists. The steersman, whose copper-brown skin and
+flat face betokened a heavy strain of Indian blood, gazed stolidly at
+the Americans with the unwinking, expressionless eyes of a snake. Back
+into the minds of McKay and Knowlton came Schwandorf's words, "Men not
+afraid of hell or high water." They looked it.
+
+"Here they are," announced the German, stepping ashore deliberately.
+"José, the _puntero_"--his hand indicated the lookout--"Francisco, the
+_popero_"--pointing to the steersman--"and six _bogas_. Good men."
+
+McKay ran a cold eye along the line of faces, his gaze plumbing each.
+Under that chill scrutiny the third man's stare wavered and dropped.
+That of the next also veered aside. The rest fronted him eye to eye.
+
+"Two of them will not do," he asserted, in the brusque tone of a captain
+inspecting his company. "Numbers Three and Four--fall out!"
+
+Literal obedience would have put Three and Four into the river,
+wherefore they stood fast. But, though they did not quite understand the
+meaning of the words, they grasped the fact that they were not wanted.
+One laughed impudently, the other slid a poisonous glance at the
+bleak-faced officer. The squat Francisco scowled. So did Schwandorf.
+
+"No man who cannot look me in the eye is needed on this trip," McKay
+declared. "Also, six men are enough. If necessary we will bear a hand at
+the paddles ourselves. José, you have been told by Senhor Schwandorf
+what we want?"
+
+"_Si._"
+
+"You can start at once?"
+
+"_Si._"
+
+"What pay?"
+
+"We leave that to you."
+
+"Um! A dollar a day for each man?"
+
+"Money or goods?"
+
+"American gold."
+
+"_Si. Bueno._"
+
+"Very well. Take those two men back to Nazareth, get what belongings you
+need, return here, and report to me at the hotel. I am captain.
+Understand?"
+
+"_Si_--Capitan."
+
+"All right. On your way!"
+
+As the boat drew out the two rejected men bade the Americans an ironical
+"_adios_," and one spat in the stream. In the faces of the others,
+however, showed something like respect for the crisp-spoken captain, and
+José snarled something at the ill-mannered Three and Four.
+
+"You might need those men," mumbled Schwandorf.
+
+"Guess not," McKay answered, serenely, turning toward the hotel. "Come
+on, boys. Let's get our stuff ready to ride."
+
+Less than two hours later their rooms were vacant, their duffle was
+stowed in the long dugout, the Peruvian crew stood arrogantly eying the
+Brazilians who had gathered to witness the departure, and the Americans
+were bidding good-by to Remate de Males in general and its German
+resident in particular.
+
+"Mr. Schwandorf, we thank you for your efficient aid," said Knowlton,
+extending a hearty hand. "You have helped us to get going with all
+dispatch, and we trust that we can repay the favor soon."
+
+"You owe me no thanks," was the curt reply. "I would expect you to do as
+much for me if our positions were reversed. I wish you luck."
+
+"Get aboard, Tim!" McKay ordered, setting the example himself. Tim
+obeyed, first giving the important Joao d'Almeida Magalhaes Nabuco
+Pestana da Fonseca a real American handgrip and getting in return a
+double embrace from that worthy official. Whereafter he winked and
+grinned expansively at several women garbed in violent hues of red,
+yellow, and green, frowned slightly at Schwandorf, lit the last cigar he
+was to smoke for many a long day, and, as the dugout began to move,
+erupted into a more or less musical farewell to the females of the
+species:
+
+ "The Yanks are goin' away,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ They're movin' on to-day,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ The Yanks are goin' away, they say,
+ Leavin' the girls in a heartless way,
+ Rinkydinky-parley-voo!"
+
+With one final wave of his cigar to the gesticulating Joao and the
+grinning women he turned his back on the town and faced the little-known
+river and the inscrutable jungle. But neither his eyes nor his thoughts
+traveled beyond the bow of the boat. Through narrowed lids he studied
+the swaying paddlers and the piratical José. And in his mind echoed the
+whispered warning of Joao, delivered during the effusive embrace at
+parting:
+
+"Comrade, watch those _bastardos Peruanos_."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+IN THE NIGHT WATCH
+
+
+Day by day the long canoe crawled into the vast unknown. Day by day the
+down-flowing jungle river pushed steadily, sullenly against its prow, as
+if striving to repel the invasion of its secret places by the
+fair-skinned men of another continent. Day by day it slid past in
+resentful impotence, conquered by the swinging blades of the Peruvian
+_bogas_. And day by day the close companionship of canoe and camp seemed
+to weld the voyagers into one compact unit.
+
+Through hours of blazing sun, when the mercury of the thermometer which
+Knowlton had hung inside the shady _toldo_ cabin fluctuated well above
+100 degrees, the hardy crew forged on. Through drenching rains they
+still hung doggedly to their work, suspending it only when the water
+fell in such drowning quantities that they were forced to tie up hastily
+to shore and seek cover in order to breathe. When sunset neared they
+picked with unerring eye a spot fit for camping, attacked the bush with
+whirling machetes, cleared a space, threw up pole frameworks, swiftly
+thatched them with great palm leaves, and thus created from the jungle
+two crude but efficient huts--one for themselves and one for their
+_patrones_. When night had shut down and all hands squatted around the
+fire in a nightly smoke talk they regaled their employers with wild
+tales of adventures in bush and town, some of which were not at all
+polite, but all of which were mightily interesting. And despite all
+discomforts, fatigue, and the minor incidents and accidents which often
+lead fellow travelers in the wilderness to bickering and bitterness, no
+friction developed between the men of the north and the men of the
+south.
+
+Not that the Peruvians were at all obsequious or servile. They were a
+reckless, lawless, Godless gang, perpetually bearing themselves with the
+careless insolence which had characterized them at first, blasphemous of
+speech toward one another--but never toward the North Americans.
+Disputes arose among them with volcanic suddenness, and more than once
+knives were half drawn, only to be slipped back under the tongue-lashing
+of the hawk-nosed _puntero_, José, who damned the disputants completely
+and promised to cut out the bowels of any man daring to lift his
+blade clear of its sheath. Five minutes afterward the fire eaters
+would be on as good terms as ever, shrugging and grinning at their
+passengers--particularly Tim, who, shaking his head disgustedly, would
+grumble:
+
+"Aw, pickles! Another frog fight gone bust!"
+
+Yet Tim, for all his disparagement of these abortive spats, knew full
+well that any one of them held the makings of a deadly duel and that
+José's lurid threats were no mere Latin hyperbole. He realized that the
+red-crowned bowman ruled his crew exactly as any of the old-time
+buccaneers whom he resembled had governed their free-booting gangs--by
+the iron hand; and that, though these men sailed no Spanish Main and
+flew no black flag, the iron-hand government was needed. He saw also
+that the rough-and-ready courtesy of this crowd toward their passengers
+was due largely to the attitude of Captain McKay, who had enforced their
+respect at the start by his soldierly bearing and retained it ever since
+by his military management.
+
+For the captain, experienced in directing men, conducted himself at all
+times as a commanding officer should: he saw all, said little, treated
+José as a subordinate officer, and left the handling of the crew
+entirely to him. His aloofness forestalled any of that familiarity
+which, with such a gang, would have led to contempt. On the other hand,
+his avoidance of any assumption of meddlesome authority prevented the
+irritation and dislike which free men inevitably feel for the
+self-important type of leader. Thus he cannily steered himself and his
+mates between the two rocks which might have wrecked the expedition
+before it was well started. And Knowlton, ex-lieutenant, and Tim,
+ex-sergeant, seeing and understanding, followed his example.
+
+So the days and nights rolled by, the miles of never-ending jungle shore
+fell away behind, and, save for the occasional outbreaks between members
+of the crew, all was serene. To all appearances the Peruvians were
+whole-heartedly interested in serving their employers faithfully, and
+the North Americans were gliding onward with no thought of insecurity.
+Yet appearances frequently are deceptive.
+
+In the heat of the day--in fact, before the broiling sun neared the
+zenith--Tim and Knowlton habitually fell asleep inside the _toldo_, not
+to awake until two hours before sunset, when, according to the routine
+agreed upon, the night's camping place would be sought and two or three
+of the Peruvians would go into the bush with rifles, seeking fresh meat.
+McKay never slept during the day's traverse. Nothing escaped his eye
+from the time when he emerged from his mosquito net in the misty morning
+until he entered it again by firelight. The men in the boat; the
+floating alligators and wading birds of the water; the flashing parrots,
+jacamars, toucans, trogons, and hummers of the air; the yard-long
+lizards and nervous spider monkeys of the tangled tree branches
+alongshore--all these he watched quietly as the boat forged on. And the
+sinister Francisco, watching him in turn, and the paddlers throwing
+occasional glances his way, came to regard him as the only alert member
+of the trio. Wherein they erred.
+
+The truth was that every one of the three adventurers was on his guard.
+Tim had not forgotten the last words of his boon companion, Joao, and at
+the first opportunity he had quietly passed on that warning. Moreover,
+McKay and Knowlton, without discussing the matter, had meditated on the
+unexpected assistance of Schwandorf, the speed with which the crew had
+been obtained, the promptness of José to accept the first payment
+offered, and other things. Wherefore it had come about that at no hour
+of the twenty-four was every eye and ear closed. And the real reason why
+red Tim and blond Knowlton slept by day was that they thus made up the
+slumber lost at night.
+
+Not that either of them patrolled the camp in sentry go. So far as the
+Peruvians knew, they slept as soundly as McKay. But, lying in their
+hammocks, they divided the night watches between them on a schedule as
+regular as that of a military camp, though the shifts necessarily were
+longer. As sunset came always at six o'clock and all hands sought their
+hanging beds two hours later, Tim's "tour of duty" lasted until one in
+the morning. When the phosphorescent hands of his watch pointed to that
+hour he stealthily reached out and jabbed Knowlton, sleeping beside him.
+When a barely audible "All right" reached his ears he was officially
+relieved.
+
+Night followed night, became a week, lengthened into a fortnight. Still,
+so far as the crew was concerned, nothing happened. A little rough
+banter among them as they smoked their last cigarettes, then sleep and
+snores; and that was all until morning. Men less experienced in night
+vigils than the ex-soldiers would have abandoned their watches long
+before this--if, indeed, they had ever adopted them. But these three
+were schooled in patience. Moreover, neither Tim nor Knowlton had ever
+before penetrated the jungle, and at times the light of the waxing moon
+revealed to their eyes strange things which they never would have seen
+by day. So the tedium of the long hours of wakefulness might be broken
+at any moment.
+
+Once they camped close to a conical hillock of compact earth, some four
+feet high and almost stone hard, from which radiated narrow covered
+galleries--the citadel and viaducts of a community of termites. Tim,
+still harboring vivid recollections of his ant battle at Remate de
+Males--though by this time he had trained himself to sleep in his
+hammock, where he was comparatively safe--looked askance at it when told
+what it was, and was only partly reassured by the information that
+termites were eaters of wood rather than of flesh. After sleep had
+embraced the rest of the camp he still was uneasy, lifting his net at
+long intervals and squinting at the moonlit mound as if expecting a
+horde of pincer-jawed insects to erupt from it and charge him. And
+during one of these inspections he saw something totally unexpected.
+
+From the black shadows of the forest had emerged another shadow, so
+grotesque and misshapen that it seemed a figment of indigestion and
+weird dreams--a thing from whose shaggy body protruded what appeared to
+be only a long tubular snout where a head should be, and which looked to
+be overbalanced at the other end by a great mass of hair. It stood stone
+still, and for the moment Tim could not decide which end of it was head
+and which was tail, or even whether it were not double-tailed and
+headless. Then, slowly, the apparition moved.
+
+Into that hard-packed earth it dug huge hooked claws, and from its
+tapering muzzle a wormlike tongue licked about, gathering the outrushing
+white ants into its gullet. For minutes Tim lay blinking at it,
+wondering if he really saw it.
+
+Then, picking up his rifle, he slipped outside his net and advanced on
+the creature.
+
+The animal turned, sat back on its great tail, lifted its terrible
+claws, and waited. Six feet away, just out of its reach, Tim stopped and
+stared anew. Then he grinned.
+
+"You win, feller," he informed the beast. "What ye are I dunno, but any
+critter that's got the guts to ramble right into camp and offer to gimme
+a battle is too good a sport for me to shoot. Help yourself to all the
+ants in the world, for all o' me. I'm goin' back to bed. Bon sewer,
+monseer."
+
+Wherewith, still grinning, but warily watching, he backed until sure the
+big invader would not spring at him. Knowing nothing of ant bears, he
+did not know it was hardly a springing animal.
+
+Its claws looked sufficiently formidable to disembowel a man--as,
+indeed, they were, if the man came near enough. But when Tim had
+withdrawn and the sluggish brute had decided that it would not need to
+defend itself, it sank to all-fours and passed stiffly away into the
+shades whence it had come.
+
+On another night, when Tim slept, Knowlton detected a creeping,
+slithering sound which made him slip off the safety catch of his
+heavy-bulleted pistol and peer at the hut where slept the crew. No man
+was moving there. Still the sound persisted. Lifting his net, he spied
+beyond the hut of the Peruvians a moving mass on the ground--a
+cylindrical bulk which looked to be two feet thick, and which glided
+past like a solid stream of dark water flowing along above the dirt. Its
+beginning and end were hidden in the bush, and not until it tapered into
+nothing and was gone did he realize fully that he had been gazing at an
+enormous anaconda. Then he kicked himself for not shooting it. But
+before long he congratulated himself for letting it go.
+
+Perhaps an hour later the startled forest resounded with an agonized
+scream, so piercing and so appallingly human that all the camp sprang
+awake. The outcry came but once, sounding from some place not far off,
+near the water's edge, and in the direction toward which the huge
+serpent had disappeared. Before the watcher had time to tell the others
+of what he had seen, one of the boatmen discovered the rut left in the
+soft ground by the reptile. Thereafter Knowlton kept his own counsel,
+listening to the excited curses of the men and observing their pallor
+and their nervous scanning of the shadows. José said the screech
+undoubtedly was the death shriek of some animal caught and crushed in
+the snake's tremendous coil. McKay concurred with a nod. And when
+Knowlton casually said it was tough that nobody had been awake to shoot
+the thing as it passed the camp, José emphatically disagreed.
+
+A bullet fired into that fiendish giant, he averred, would have meant
+death to one or more men; for the serpent's writhing coils and lashing
+tail would have knocked down the sleeping-hut and shattered the spines
+of any men they struck. No, let Señor Knowlton thank the saints that the
+awful master of the swamps had gone its way unmolested. For the rest of
+that night Knowlton kept his watch openly, accompanied by José and three
+of the paddlers, who refused to sleep again until they should be miles
+away from the vicinity of that dread monster.
+
+Two nights afterward the camp was aroused again. Tim alone saw the start
+of the disturbance, and he kept mum about it because he did not choose
+to let the Peruvians know he had been on the alert. Out from the gloom
+and straight past the huts a thick-bodied, curve-snouted animal came
+charging madly for the river, carrying on its back a ferocious cat
+creature whose fangs were buried deep in its steed's neck--a tapir
+attacked by a jaguar. With a resounding plunge the elephantine quarry
+struck the water and was gone. The tiger cat, forced to relinquish its
+hold or drown, swam hurriedly back to the bank below the encampment,
+where it roared and spat and squalled in a blood-chilling paroxysm of
+baffled fury. And though every man was awakened, not one left the flimsy
+shelter of his net. Nor did anyone so much as speak until Tim, wearying
+of the noise, announced his intention to "go bust that critter in the
+nose and give him somethin' to yowl about."
+
+The proposal met with instant and peremptory veto.
+
+"As you were!" snapped McKay. "Let him alone! You wouldn't have a
+Chinaman's chance in that black bush. A jaguar is bad all the time, and
+when he's mad he's deadly. Never fool with one of those beasts, Tim.
+I've met them before and I know what they can do."
+
+To which José agreed with many picturesque oaths, declaring that a
+jaguar was no mere beast--it was a devil. Tim, grumbling, obeyed orders.
+The jaguar, hearing their voices, stopped its noise and probably
+reconnoitered the camp. But no man saw the brute, and its next roar
+sounded from some spot far off in the jungle.
+
+Other things, too, passed within Tim's range of vision from time to time
+in the moonlit hours: a queer bony creature which he took for some new
+kind of turtle, but which really was an armadillo; a monstrous hairy
+spider which slid like a streak up his net, hung there for a time,
+decided to go elsewhere, and departed with such speed that the man
+inside rubbed his eyes and wondered if he was "seein' things that
+ain't"; a couple of vampires which flitted in from nowhere like ghoulish
+ghosts, wheeled and floated silently on wide wings, seeking an exposed
+foot protruding from the hammocks, found none, rested a moment on the
+roof poles, chirping hoarsely, and veered out again into the night.
+
+To Knowlton's watch came a strange owl-faced little monkey with great
+staring eyes and face ringed with pale fur--one of those night apes
+seldom seen by man; a small troop of kinkajous, slender, long-tailed
+animals which looked to be monkeys, but were not, and which leaped
+deftly among the branches like frolicsome little devils let loose to
+play under the jungle moon; a big scaly iguana, its back ridged with saw
+teeth and its pendulous throat pouch dangling grotesquely under its jaw;
+and more than one deadly snake and huge alligator, the first gliding
+past with venomous head raised and cold eye glinting, the second lying
+quiescent except for occasional openings of horrific jaws.
+
+To the ears of both the hammock sentinels came the mournful sounds of
+living things unseen. From the depths beyond drifted the weird plaint of
+the sloth, crying in the night, "Oh me, poor sloth, oh-oh-oh-oh!" Goat
+suckers repeated by the hour their monotonous refrains, "Quao quao," or
+"Cho-co-co-cao," while a third earnestly exhorted, "Joao corta pao!"
+("John, cut wood!"). Tree frogs and crickets clacked and drummed and
+hoo-hooed, guaribas poured their awful discord into the air, and on one
+bright breathless night there sounded over and over a call freighted
+with wretchedness and despair--the wail of that lonely owl known to the
+bushmen as "the mother of the moon," whose dreadful cry portends evil to
+those who hear it.
+
+Sometimes the air shook with the thunderous concussion of some great
+falling tree which, long since bled to death by parasitical plant
+growths, now at last toppled crashing back into the dank soil whence it
+had forced its way up into a place in the sun. Other noises, infrequent
+and unexplainable, also drifted at long intervals from the mysterious
+blackness. And in all the medley of night sounds not one was cheerful.
+The burden of the jungle's cacophonic cantanta ever was the
+same--despair, disaster, death.
+
+Then came the fifteenth day. It dawned red, the sun fighting an
+ensanguined battle with the heavy morning mists and throwing on the
+faces of the early-rising travelers a sinister crimson hue. Before that
+sun should rise again some of those faces were to be stained a deeper
+red.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+COLD STEEL
+
+
+Some two hours after the start, while Knowlton and Tim loafed at the
+fore end of the cabin, enjoying the comparative coolness of the early
+day, another boat hove in sight up ahead--a longish craft manned by
+eight paddlers and without a cabin.
+
+As it came into view its bowman tossed his paddle in greeting. The
+Peruvians ignored the salutation. The bowman, after shading his eyes and
+peering at the flamboyant figure of José, resumed paddling without
+further ceremony, evidently intending to pass in silence. But then McKay
+arose, waved a hand, and told José to steer for the newcomers. José,
+with a slightly sour look, gave the signal to Francisco, and the course
+changed.
+
+The other canoe slowed and waited. Its men watched the tall figure of
+McKay. Tim and Knowlton scanned the bronzed faces of those men and liked
+them at once. The paddlers evidently were Brazilians, but of a different
+type from the sluggish townsmen of Remate de Males--alert,
+active-looking fellows, steady of eye, honest of face, muscular of
+arm--in all, a more clean-cut set of men than the Peruvians. All three
+of the Americans noticed that no word was exchanged between the two
+crews.
+
+"_Boa dia, amigos!_" spoke McKay. "Who are you and whence do you come?"
+
+"We are rubber workers of Coronel Nunes, senhor," the bowman answered,
+civilly. "We go to make a new camp. This land is a part of the
+_seringel_ of the coronel, and we left his headquarters yesterday."
+
+"Ah! Then the headquarters is above here?"
+
+"One more day's journey," the man nodded.
+
+"I thank you. Good fortune go with you."
+
+"And with you, senhor. May God protect you."
+
+With the words the Brazilian glanced along the line of Peruvian faces
+and his eyes narrowed. Though his words were only a respectful farewell,
+his expressive face indicated that McKay might be badly in need of
+divine protection at no distant date. As his paddle dipped and his men
+nodded their leave-taking, Francisco, the _popero_; sneered raucously:
+
+"Hah! Mere _caucheros_! Workers! Slaves!"
+
+And he spat at the Brazilian boat.
+
+Fire shot into the eyes of the bowman and his comrades. Their muscles
+tensed.
+
+"Better be slaves--better be dogs--than Peruvian cutthroats!" one
+retorted. "Go your way, and keep to your own side of the river."
+
+"We go where we will, and no misborn Brazilians can stop us," snarled
+Francisco. To which he added obscene epithets directed against
+Brazilians in general and the men of Coronel Nunes in particular.
+
+The unprovoked insults angered the Americans as well as the Brazilians.
+Knowlton leaped through the _toldo_ and confronted Francisco.
+
+"Shut your dirty mouth!" he blazed.
+
+For reply, the evil-eyed steersman spat at him the vilest name known to
+man.
+
+An instant later, his lips split, he sprawled dazedly on his platform,
+perilously close to the edge. Knowlton, the knuckles of his left fist
+bleeding from impact with the other's teeth, stood over him in white
+fury. Francisco's right hand fumbled for his knife. Knowlton promptly
+stamped on that hand with a heavy boot heel.
+
+"Good eye, Looey!" rumbled Tim's voice at his back. "Boot him some more
+for luck. Hey, you! Back up or I'll drill ye for keeps!" This to a pair
+of the Peruvian paddlers who had come scrambling through the cabin.
+
+After one searching stare into Tim's hard blue eyes and a glance at his
+fist curled around the butt of his belt gun, the _bogas_ backed up. A
+moment later they were thrown boldly into their own part of the boat by
+José, who blistered them with the profanity of three languages at once.
+Then McKay came through and took charge.
+
+"That'll do, Tim! Same goes for you, Merry! José, I'll handle this. You,
+Francisco! Get up!"
+
+The curt commands struck like blows. Every man obeyed. And when the
+squat steersman again stood up McKay went after him roughshod. In the
+colloquial Spanish of Mexico and the Argentine, in the man talk of
+American army camps, he flayed that offender alive. José himself,
+efficient man handler though he was, stared at his captain in awe. And
+Francisco, though not given to cringing, skulked like a beaten dog when
+the verbal flagellation was finished.
+
+Turning then to the Brazilians, McKay formally apologized for the
+insults to them.
+
+"It is nothing, senhor," coolly answered the bowman--though his glance
+at the Peruvians said plainly that it would have been something but for
+the swift punishment by the Americans. "Again I say--may God protect
+you! Adeos!"
+
+The Brazilian boat glided away. The Peruvian craft crawled on upstream
+in silence.
+
+When the next camp was made all apparently had forgotten the affair. The
+men badgered one another as usual, though none mentioned Francisco's
+split mouth; and Francisco, himself, albeit sulky, betrayed no sign of
+enmity. After nightfall the regular camp-fire meeting was held and at
+the usual time all turned in. One more night of listening to the sounds
+of the tropical wilderness seemed all that lay ahead of the secret
+sentinels.
+
+Sleep enveloped the huts. Snores and gurgles rose and fell. Tim himself,
+for the sake of effect, snored heartily at intervals, though his eyes
+never closed. Through his mosquito bar he could see only vaguely, but he
+knew any man walking from the crew's quarters must cast a very visible
+shadow across that net, and to him the shadow would be as good a warning
+as a clear view of the substance. But the hours crept on and no shadow
+came.
+
+At length, however, a small sound reached his alert ear--a sound
+different from the regular noises of the bush--a stealthy, creeping
+noise like that of a big snake or a huge lizard. It came from the ground
+a few feet away, and it seemed to be gradually advancing toward his own
+hammock. Whatever the creature was that made it, its method of progress
+was not human, but reptilian. Puzzled, suspicious, yet doubtful, Tim
+lifted the rear side of his net, on which no moonlight fell. Head out,
+he watched for the crawling thing to come close.
+
+It came, and for an instant he was in doubt as to its character, for
+around it lay the deep shadow of some treetops which at that point
+blocked off the moon. It inched along on its stomach, its black head
+seeming round and minus a face, its body broad but flat--a thing that
+looked to be a man but not a man. Then, pausing, it raised its head and
+peered toward the hammock of Knowlton. With that movement Tim's doubts
+vanished. The lifting of the head showed the face--the face of
+Francisco, the face of murder. In its teeth was clamped a bare knife.
+
+Forthwith Tim applied General Order Number Thirteen.
+
+In one bound he was outside his net, colliding with Knowlton, who awoke
+instantly. In another he was beside the assassin, who, with a lightning
+grab at the knife in his mouth, had started to spring up. Tim wasted no
+time in grappling or clinching. He kicked.
+
+His heavy boot, backed by the power of a hundred and ninety pounds of
+brawn, thudded into the Indian's chest. Francisco was hurled over
+sidewise on his back. Another kick crashed against his head above the
+ear. He went limp.
+
+"Ye lousy snake!" grated Tim. "Crawlin' on yer belly to knife a sleepin'
+man, hey? Blast yer rotten heart--"
+
+"What's up?" barked McKay from his hammock.
+
+"Night attack, Cap. If ye're comin' out bring along yer gat. Hey, Looey,
+got yer gun on? Some o' these other guys might git gay. They're comin'
+now."
+
+True enough, the Peruvian gang was jumping from its hut. With another
+glance at the prostrate Francisco to make sure he was unconscious, Tim
+whirled to meet them, fist on gun.
+
+"Halt!" he roared. "First guy passin' this corner post gits shot. Back
+up!"
+
+The impact of his voice, the menace of his ready gun hand, the sight of
+Knowlton and McKay leaping out with pistols drawn, stopped the rush at
+the designated post. But swift hands dropped, and when they rose again
+the moonlight glinted on cold steel.
+
+"Capitan, what happens here?" demanded José, ominously quiet.
+
+"Knife work," McKay replied, curtly. "Your man Francisco attempted to
+creep in and murder Señor Knowlton. If you and the rest have similar
+intentions, now's your time to try. If not, put away those knives."
+
+"Knives! _Por Dios_, what do you mean?"
+
+"Look behind you."
+
+José looked. At once he snarled curses and commands. Slowly the knives
+slipped out of sight. The paddlers edged backward to their own shack,
+leaving their _puntero_ alone.
+
+"The capitan has it wrong," asserted José. "We awake to find our
+_popero_ being kicked in the head. We want to know why. If Francisco has
+done what you say I will deal with him. That I may be sure, allow me to
+look."
+
+"Very well. Look."
+
+José advanced, stooped, studied the ground, the position of Francisco's
+body, the knife still clutched in the nerveless hand. Tim growlingly
+vouchsafed a brief explanation of the incident. When José straightened
+up, his mouth was a hard line and his eyes hot coals.
+
+"_Si. Es verdad._ To-morrow we shall have a new _popero_."
+
+With which he stooped again, grasped the prone man by the hair, dragged
+him into the moonlit space between the huts, and flung him down. "Juan,
+bring water!" he ordered.
+
+One of the paddlers, looking queerly at him, did so. José deluged the
+senseless man. Francisco, reviving, sat up and scowled about him. His
+eyes rested on the three Americans standing grimly ready, shoulder to
+shoulder, before their hut; veered to his mates bunched in sinister
+silence beside their own quarters; shifted again to meet the baleful
+glare of José. His hand stole to his empty sheath.
+
+"Your knife, Francisco _mio_?" queried José, a menacing purr in his
+tone. "I have it. It seems that you are in haste to use it. Too much
+haste, Francisco. But if you will stand instead of crawling as before,
+you may have your knife again--and use it, too."
+
+Francisco, staring sullenly up, seemed to read in the words more than
+was evident to the Americans. He lurched to his feet, staggered, caught
+his balance, braced himself, stood waiting.
+
+"You know who commands here," José went on. "You disobey. You seek to
+stab in the night--"
+
+"Now or later--what is the difference?"
+
+"--and now the boat is too small for both of us." José ignored the
+interruption. "Here is your knife. Now use it!"
+
+He flipped the weapon at the other, who caught it deftly. José dropped
+his right hand to his waist. An instant later naked steel licked out at
+Francisco's throat.
+
+The steersman's knife flashed up, caught the reaching blade, knocked it
+with a scraping clink. For a few seconds the two weapons seemed welded
+together, their owners each striving to bear down the other's wrist.
+Then they parted as the combatants sprang back.
+
+José side-stepped twice to his right. Francisco, turning to preserve his
+guard, now had the light full in his face. But the moon rode so high
+that the steersman's disadvantage was negligible, and the next assault
+of the _puntero_ was blocked as before. And this time the wrist of the
+_popero_ proved a bit the better; he threw the attacking steel aside and
+struck in a slashing sweep at his antagonist's stomach.
+
+A convulsive inward movement of the bowman's middle, coupled with a
+swift back-step, made the slash miss by a hair's breadth. With the
+quickness of light José was in again. His knife hand, still outstretched
+sidewise, stopped with a light smack of flesh on flesh. Then it jerked
+outward. His steel now was red to the hilt.
+
+One more rapid step back, a keen glance at his opponent, and José stood
+at ease. From Francisco burst a bubbling groan. He staggered. His knife
+dropped. His hands rose fumblingly toward his neck. Suddenly his knees
+gave way and he toppled backward to the ground. The silvery moonlight
+disclosed a dark flood welling from his severed jugular.
+
+With the utmost coolness José ran two fingers down his wet blade,
+snapped the fingers in air, and spoke to his crew:
+
+"As I said, we shall have a new _popero_. To-morrow, Julio, you will
+take the platform."
+
+A rumble ran among the men. Their eyes lifted from Francisco to the
+Americans, and in them shone a wolfish gleam. The bowman turned sharply
+and faced them.
+
+"Who growls?" he rasped. "You, Julio?"
+
+"_Si, yo soy_," Julio answered, harshly, fingering his knife. "I will be
+steersman, but I steer downstream, not up. Francisco spoke the truth.
+Now or later--what is the difference? Let it be now!"
+
+A louder growl from the others followed his words. One stepped back into
+the shadow of the hut.
+
+"_Perros amarillos!_ Yellow dogs! You go upstream, fools! The Americans
+must be taken--"
+
+A raucous sneer from Julio interrupted him. Simultaneously the paddler's
+hand leaped upward, poising a knife.
+
+"The gringos stay here--and you, too, you Yanqui cur!"
+
+The poised knife hissed through the air at José.
+
+Out from the crew house shot a streak of fire and a smashing rifle
+report.
+
+José dodged, staggered, screeched in feline fury, the knife buried in
+his left arm.
+
+McKay grunted suddenly, fell, lay still.
+
+"God!" yelled Tim. "Cap's gone! Clean 'em, Looey!"
+
+With the words he leaped aside and pulled his pistol, just as another
+rifle flare stabbed out from the other hut and a bullet whisked through
+the space where he had stood. An instant later he was pouring a stream
+of lead at the spot whence the burning powder had leaped.
+
+Knives flashing, teeth gleaming, the other paddlers charged across the
+ten-foot space between the huts.
+
+José, his left arm helpless, but his deadly right hand still gripping
+his knife, hurled himself on Julio, who had seized a machete from
+somewhere.
+
+Knowlton slammed a bullet between the eyes of the foremost _boga_, who
+pitched headlong. He swung the muzzle to the other man's chest--yanked
+at the trigger--got no response. The gun was jammed.
+
+With a triumphant snarl the blood-crazed Peruvian closed in, slashing
+for the throat. Knowlton slipped aside, evaded the thrust, swung the
+pistol down hard on his assailant's head. The man reeled, thrust again
+blindly, missed. Knowlton crashed his dumb gun down again. It struck
+fair on the temple. The man collapsed.
+
+Tim was charging across the open at the crew house. José and Julio were
+locked in a death grapple. No other living man, except Knowlton, still
+stood upright. Stooping, he peered into the red-dyed face of McKay. Then
+he laid a hand on the captain's chest. Faint but regular, he felt the
+heart beating.
+
+"Thank God!" he breathed. With a wary eye on the battling Peruvians he
+swiftly raised the captain and put him into Tim's hammock. As he turned
+back to the fight Tim emerged from the other hut, carrying a body, which
+he dropped and swiftly inspected. At the same moment the fight of José
+and Julio ended.
+
+With a choked scream Julio dropped, writhed, doubled up. Then he lay
+still. José, his face ghastly, stared around him. His mouth stretched in
+a terrible smile.
+
+"So this ends it," he croaked, his gaze dropping to Julio. "_Adios_,
+Julio! The machete is not--so good as the knife--unless one has--room
+to--swing it--"
+
+He chuckled hoarsely and sank down.
+
+For an instant Knowlton hesitated, his glance going back and forth
+between McKay and José. Swiftly then he ran his finger tips over McKay's
+head. With a murmur of satisfaction he turned from his comrade and
+hurried to the motionless bowman, over whom Tim now bent.
+
+"Bleedin' to death, Looey," informed Tim. "Ain't cut bad excep' that
+arm. That flyin' knife must have got an artery. Can we pull him through?
+He's a good skate."
+
+"I'll try. You look after Cap. He's only knocked out--bullet creased
+him--"
+
+"Glory be! He's all right, huh? Sure I'll fix him up. Everybody else
+dead? I got that guy in the bunk house--drilled him three times."
+
+"Look out for that fellow over there. Maybe I brained him, but I'm not
+sure."
+
+Knowlton was already down on his knees beside José, working fast to loop
+a tourniquet and stop the flow from the pierced arm. With a handkerchief
+and his pistol barrel he shut off the pulsating stream.
+
+"Yeah, he's done," judged Tim, rising from the man whom Knowlton had
+downed at last. "Skull's caved in. What 'd ye paste him with?"
+
+"Gun. Cursed thing stuck."
+
+"Uh-huh. Them automats are cranky. Say, lookit the mess Hozy made o'
+that guy Hooley-o."
+
+Knowlton glanced at Julio and whistled. José's oft-repeated threat to
+disembowel a refractory member of the crew had at last been literally
+fulfilled.
+
+But the lieutenant had seen worse sights in the shell-torn trenches of
+France, and now he kept his mind on his work. Wedging the gun to hold
+the tourniquet tight, he lifted his patient from the red-smeared mud and
+bore him to the nearest hammock in the crew quarters. Striding back, he
+found Tim alternately bathing McKay's head and giving him brandy. In a
+moment the captain's eyes opened.
+
+"Some bean ye got, Cap," congratulated Tim, vastly relieved at sight of
+McKay's gray stare. "Bullet bounced right off. Here, take another
+swaller. Attaboy! Hey, Looey, we better pack this crease o' Cap's, huh?
+She keeps leakin'."
+
+"Yep. Dip up the surgical kit. And give José a drink. I'll have to tie
+his artery, too. How do you feel, old chap?"
+
+"Dizzy," McKay confessed. "What's happened?"
+
+"Lost our crew," was the laconic answer. "All gone west but José, and
+he's bled white. We'll have to paddle our own canoe now."
+
+For a time after his head was bandaged McKay lay quiet, staring out at
+the tiny battlefield and at his two mates working silently on the
+wounded arm of José. When they came back he spoke one word.
+
+"Schwandorf."
+
+"Yeah! He's the nigger in the woodpile, I bet my shirt. But why? What's
+his lay, d'ye s'pose?"
+
+"Perhaps José knows," suggested Knowlton. "But he's in no shape to talk
+now. Let's see. Schwandorf said he was going to Iquitos?"
+
+"Yes, but that doesn't mean anything."
+
+"Probably not. Well, maybe José can explain."
+
+There were some things, however, which José could not have told if he
+would, for he himself did not know them. One was that Schwandorf really
+had gone to Iquitos, where was a radio station. Another was that from
+that radio station to Puerto Bermudez, thence over the Andes to the
+coast, and northward to a New York address memorized from Knowlton's
+notebook, already had gone this message:
+
+ McKay expedition killed by Indians. Rand search most dangerous, but
+ if empowered I attempt locate him for fifty thousand gold payable
+ on safe delivery Rand at Manaos. Reply soon a possible.
+
+ KARL SCHWANDORF.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE DOUBLE-CROSS
+
+
+Noon, sweltering hot. A blazing sun pouring vertical rays down on a
+blinding river. A long canoe wearily creeping up the glaring waters,
+minus a lookout, heedless of the ever-present danger of sunken tree
+trunks; propelled by three sun-blistered white men, one of whom wore a
+bandage around his head; steered perfunctorily by a pallid pirate whose
+left arm hung in a sling. Atop the right bank an unbroken, endless
+tangle of jungle growth. Ahead, on the left shore, a gap gouged out of
+the forest and a number of boats at the water's edge.
+
+"Guess that's it," panted Knowlton, shielding his eyes and squinting at
+the clearing. "One more day's journey, the Brazilian chap said. We've
+been two and a half."
+
+"One day's journey for six hardened rivermen, señor," corrected José.
+"Not for three men doing six men's work and hampered by a cripple."
+
+"Aw, ye're no crip, Hozy," dissented Tim. "Any guy that can steer a tub
+like this here one-handed after losin' a couple gallons o' juice is in
+good shape yet, I'll say. If ye had both legs shot off and yer arms
+broke and yer head stove in, now, ye might call yourself sort o'
+helpless. Ease her over to the left a li'l' more, so's we'll hit the
+bank right at the corner o' that gap. Me, I don't want to take one
+stroke more 'n I have to. Every muscle in me is so sore it squeaks."
+
+"Same here," admitted Knowlton. "I'm one solid ache."
+
+José nodded. The clumsy craft veered a bit. The three put a little more
+punch into their lagging strokes, noting, as they neared the steep bank,
+that a couple of men had appeared at its top and were staring at them.
+Gradually the long dugout worked in to the muddy shore, where the
+paddlers stabbed their blades into the clay and held it firm.
+
+"Ahoy, up there! This the Nunes _seringal_?"
+
+From the edge, some thirty feet above, the taller of the two watchers
+answered:
+
+"_Si_, senhor. The headquarters of the coronel. Do you come to visit
+him?"
+
+"Right."
+
+"Then permit me to help you. The path is a little ahead. Pull up and tie
+to this stake."
+
+The tall fellow came dropping swiftly downward. At the same time the
+other Brazilian stepped back and was gone.
+
+With a dexterous twist the man of Nunes moored the boat to the
+designated stake. Then he reached a hand toward Tim to help him out.
+
+"I ain't no old woman, feller," Tim refused, and hopped aground
+unassisted. McKay and Knowlton followed. But José, after moving
+languidly forward and contemplating the sharp slope, hesitated and then
+shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"I am tired, señores," he said. "And perhaps it would be well for one to
+stay here and watch."
+
+The tall Brazilian's eyes narrowed.
+
+"There is no danger of loss," he asserted, with dignity. "We men of the
+coronel are not thieves."
+
+The slight emphasis of his last sentence might have been taken as an
+intimation that some one else not far away would bear watching. José's
+mouth tightened. For a moment Brazilian and Peruvian eyed each other in
+obvious dislike. Then, with a glance at his crippled arm, José shrugged
+again.
+
+"Better come along, José," McKay said. "Stuff's safe enough."
+
+"As you will, Capitan."
+
+He lounged to the edge, hesitated, wavered slightly. At once the
+Brazilian darted out a hand and gave him support. And while the four
+clambered up the slope he retained a grip on the Peruvian's arm, aiding
+him to the top. When they emerged on the level, however, he dropped his
+hand immediately. José gave him a half-mocking bow of thanks, to which
+he replied with a short nod. Then he stepped back and let the Peruvian
+precede him toward a number of substantial pole-supported houses a
+hundred yards away.
+
+"No love lost between them two," thought Tim, who had watched it all.
+"Good skate, though, this new feller. Ready to help a guy that needs it,
+whether he likes him or not; ready to knock his block off, too, if he
+needs that. Bet he'd be a hellion in a scrap. Dang good-lookin' lad,
+too."
+
+Wherewith he introduced himself.
+
+"Don't git sore because I growled at ye down below," he said, with a
+friendly grin. "Sounded rough, mebbe, but that's my style. I'm Tim Ryan,
+from the States. I bark more 'n I bite."
+
+The overture met with instant response--a quick smile and a twinkle in
+the warm eyes.
+
+"It is not words that give offense, senhor, but the way they are
+spoken--and the man who speaks them. One man may growl, but you like
+him. Another may speak smoothly, but you itch to strike him. Is it not
+so? I am Pedro Andrada, a _seringueiro_ who should be tapping trees
+instead of loafing here. But my partner and I have just come in from a
+long trip into the _sertao_--wilderness--and are resting."
+
+"Yeah? Was that yer buddy I seen with ye?"
+
+"My--ah--buddee? Partner? Yes, that was he--Lourenço Moraes, the best
+comrade one ever had. He has gone to tell the coronel of your arrival.
+Have you met with an accident downriver?"
+
+He moved a thumb meaningly toward the only remaining member of the crew.
+
+"Yeah," grimly. "Bad accident."
+
+Tim tapped his pistol significently, raised five fingers, winked, and
+twitched his head toward the Peruvian. Pedro lifted his brows, nodded
+quick understanding, pointed to the bad arm of José, and made motions as
+if pulling a trigger. Tim shook his head and enacted the pantomime of
+drawing and throwing a knife. Whereat the Brazilian, aware that José was
+not a prisoner and probably knowing that North Americans were not knife
+throwers, looked much puzzled. But their sign manual went no farther,
+for they now approached the house which evidently formed the dwelling
+and office of Coronel Nunes.
+
+At the foot of the ladder stood a broad-shouldered, square-jawed,
+thick-muscled, deeply tanned man, who, without speaking, pointed a thumb
+upward. Above, in the doorway, waited an elderly Brazilian of medium
+height and spare figure, standing with soldierly erectness and garbed in
+white duck of semimilitary cut. He beamed down at McKay and Knowlton,
+but as his black eyes encountered those of José they seemed suddenly to
+become very sharp. Then his gaze rested on Tim's broad face and he
+smiled again.
+
+"Enter, gentlemen," he invited. "_Esta casa e a suas ordenes_--this
+house is at your disposal."
+
+McKay, with a bow, climbed the ladder, followed by Knowlton. José, with
+a swaggering stare at the wide-shouldered man, who stared straight back
+without facial change, also went up. Tim came fourth and last, for Pedro
+stopped beside his countryman, who evidently was Lourenço.
+
+The travelers found themselves in a room which, in view of its distance
+from civilization, seemed palatial. Its floor was tight, its furniture
+modern, its walls decorated with a few excellent pictures, of which the
+largest was a superb view of the rugged harbor of Rio de Janeiro.
+Comfortable chairs were ranged along the walls, and the middle of the
+room was occupied by a massive square-cornered table on which lay a
+jumble of hand-written business papers, a number of books, a high-grade
+violin and bow. Beyond the table stood a swivel chair, evidently the
+usual seat of the coronel. Table and chair were so arranged that the
+master of this house sat always with his back to a wall and his face
+toward the door. And on a couple of hooks on that wall, ready for
+instant service, hung a high-power rifle.
+
+On their way up the river the Americans had passed, at long intervals, a
+few small rubber estates, whose headquarters consisted mainly of a crude
+shack or two, hardly better than the dingy houses of Remate de Males.
+This place was more imposing. They had observed, while crossing the
+cleared space, that it was at least half a mile square; that its
+warehouse for supplies was big and solid; that a goodly number of
+_barracaos_, or rubber workers' huts, surrounded the house of the master
+at a respectful distance; and that the owner's home was no one-room
+cabin, but big enough to contain six or eight rooms. This well-appointed
+reception room and the formal yet sincere courtesy of its owner showed
+that Coronel Nunes was no mere native of the frontier. Later they were
+to learn that he was a gentleman of Rio who, exiling himself from the
+capital after the death of his wife, had carved from this forbidding
+jungle a fortune in the rubber trade.
+
+With the correct touch of Latin punctilio McKay spoke the introductions
+and stated that they were on their way upriver to explore the
+hinterland. With equal politeness the coronel bowed and begged his
+illustrious guests to be seated. Then he touched a small bell. A door at
+one side opened and a white-suited negro appeared.
+
+"Café," the coronel ordered. As speedily as if these visitors had been
+long expected, the servant brought in a tray bearing cups of syrupy
+coffee. Each of the guests accepted one. Whereafter the decorum of the
+occasion was shattered by Tim, who, at the imminent risk of scalding
+himself, gulped his refreshment and vociferated his satisfaction.
+
+"O-o-oh boy! That hits right where I live! Gimme another one, feller,
+and make it man's size!"
+
+The black fellow struggled with his quick mirth and then laughed
+outright--the throaty, infectious laugh of his race. The coronel's eyes
+twinkled. And when Tim fished a damp cigarette from his shirt,
+nonchalantly scraped a match on his host's table, blew a cloud of smoke,
+and sprawled back with one leg dangling over a chair arm, formality went
+a-glimmering.
+
+"_A quem madruga Deus ajuda_," laughed the coronel. "Or, as you North
+Americans put it, 'God helps those who help themselves.' Let us not be
+ceremonious, gentlemen. 'Tonio, bring more coffee. And cigars. And--"
+
+Down behind his table, where only the servant saw the motion, he
+twitched a finger as if pulling a cork. 'Tonio, his ebony countenance
+split by a grin, ducked his head and vanished into the other room.
+
+"How is the rubber market, sir?" asked Knowlton, seeking to divert
+attention from Tim.
+
+"Not so good," the old gentleman replied, with a deprecatory gesture.
+"In truth, it is very poor since the war--so poor that soon I shall
+abandon this _seringal_ and go out to spend the rest of my life on the
+coast. With rubber selling at a mere five hundred dollars a ton in New
+York and the artificial plantations of the Far East growing greater
+yearly, there is no longer much profit in bleeding the wild trees of our
+jungle. I really do not know why I stay here now, unless it is because I
+have become so much accustomed to this life."
+
+"Why, I understood that there was much money in rubber!"
+
+"You speak truth--there was. Now there is not. The world moves and times
+change. Years ago foreigners came into Brazil, helped themselves to the
+seed of our wild trees, and planted it in Ceylon and the Malay region.
+That seed now bears such fruit that the world is flooded with rubber.
+Ten years ago, senhores, a ton sold for six thousand five hundred
+dollars. Now, in this year nineteen-twenty, the price is only
+one-thirteenth of what it was in those days. It scarcely pays for the
+gathering. I hope you have not come expecting to make fortunes in
+rubber."
+
+"No. We are here to find a race of men known as Red Bones."
+
+The coronel's brows lifted. They kept on lifting, and he opened his lips
+twice without speaking. After a long stare at Knowlton he looked at
+McKay, at Tim, and finally at José. A frown grew on his face. And the
+Americans, following his look at the Peruvian, were surprised to see
+that José himself was staring blankly at the speaker.
+
+"José Martinez!" snapped the coronel, leveling a finger pistollike at
+the _puntero_. "What devil's game are you working now?"
+
+José recovered himself and lifted his coffee cup.
+
+"I do not understand you, Nunes," he replied, languidly. "I am but the
+humble _puntero_ of the crew engaged by these señores. My only work has
+been to earn my pay. And you may ask _el capitan_ whether I have earned
+it."
+
+"Ay, he has," corroborated McKay. "Killed two of his own crew in our
+defense."
+
+The coronel's jaw dropped. He blinked as if disbelieving his ears.
+
+"He--José? Not possible!" he stuttered. "José--this man--defended you
+against his companions?"
+
+"Exactly."
+
+The Brazilian slowly shook his head. Then suddenly he nodded as if an
+illuminating thought had crossed his mind.
+
+"I see. José is very well paid."
+
+"One dollar a day," was McKay's dry retort.
+
+At that moment 'Tonio re-entered with a larger tray than before, bearing
+more coffee, long cigars, and squat glasses in which glowed a golden
+liquid. Tim sat up with a grunt and helped himself with both hands. When
+the coronel's turn came he disregarded the drinks, but lit the cigar as
+if he needed it.
+
+"_De noite todos os gatos sao pardos_," he said. "At night all cats are
+gray. I am much in the dark, gentlemen. If you would be so good as to
+enlighten me--"
+
+He paused, looking sidewise again at José as if the _puntero_ had
+suddenly grown wings or horns.
+
+"All right," nodded Knowlton, biting and lighting his cigar. "We are
+somewhat in the dark ourselves as to why José has been so zealous, for
+he has been very taciturn since the recent fight at our camp. Perhaps
+José also is a bit hazy about our expedition--he looked rather surprised
+just now. So here is the situation."
+
+Briefly then he outlined the object of the search, stating that the
+identity of the mysterious Raposa was a matter of some concern to
+certain persons in the United States and that the expedition had been
+formed with the view of settling the question. From the time of the
+landing at Remate de Males, however, he narrated events more fully,
+giving complete details of Schwandorf's activities, Francisco's offense,
+and the final attack by the crew. While he talked the coronel's frown
+deepened. Also, José gradually assumed the expression of a thundercloud.
+And when the tale was done the _puntero_ exploded.
+
+"_Sangre de Cristo!_" he yelled. "_El Aleman_--the German--he told you
+we would go among the cannibals? We? Peruvians? _Madre de Dios!_ If ever
+I get within knife length of him! Nunes, you see, do you not?"
+
+The coronel nodded grimly.
+
+"I see that he planned to have all of you destroyed. Senhor Knowlton,
+that black-bearded and black-hearted man suggested that you take
+Mayoruna women? He told you they were shapely of body and tried to put
+into your minds the thought of making them your paramours? The snake!
+
+"He did not tell you, then, that the Mayoruna men allow no trifling with
+their women; that any alien man attempting to embrace one of them would
+be killed. But it is true. If you should succeed in establishing
+friendly relations with the men--which is not at all likely--you would
+forfeit all friendship, and your lives as well, by the slightest
+dalliance with any of the women.
+
+"He told you that more than one man has risked his life to win a
+Mayoruna woman? That is true. But he gave you a false impression as to
+the way in which the risk was incurred. He did not tell you that
+Peruvian _caucheros_ have sometimes raided small isolated _melocas_ of
+the Mayorunas, shooting down the men and carrying off the girls to be
+victims of their bestial lust. He did not tell you that for this reason
+any Peruvian is considered their enemy and is killed without mercy
+wherever found. Yet he tried to send you with Peruvian guides into their
+country. He knew the Peruvians would be killed on sight--and you with
+them."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+FIDDLERS THREE
+
+
+Black looks passed among the men as the duplicity of Schwandorf lay
+plain before their eyes. Tim growled. José hissed curses. The coronel
+whirled to him.
+
+"José! What was his object in trying to destroy you and your crew? You
+have been his man. You know much about him. He wanted to stop your
+mouth, yes? Dead men tell no tales."
+
+The _puntero's_ eyes glittered. For a moment the others thought he was
+about to reveal important secrets. Then his face changed.
+
+"I know no reason why we should be killed," he declared.
+
+"I do not believe you," the coronel declared, bluntly.
+
+José shrugged, calmly drank the coronel's wine, lighted the coronel's
+cigar, leaned back in the coronel's chair, and eyed the coronel with
+imperturbable insolence.
+
+"See here, José," demanded McKay, "you've had something up your sleeve
+all along. Now come clean! What is it?"
+
+José puffed airily at the cigar, saying nothing.
+
+"What orders did Schwandorf give you?"
+
+This time the reply came readily enough.
+
+"To take you twenty-four days up the river and put you ashore. To
+prevent any trouble before that time."
+
+"Ah! And after that?"
+
+"Nothing. At least, nothing to me. What may have been said to the other
+men I do not know. Schwandorf came to me last, after he had picked all
+the others."
+
+"And what do you know about Schwandorf?"
+
+"What is between me and Schwandorf will be settled between me and
+Schwandorf. My duty to you señores lies only in handling the crew. Now
+that there is no crew my duty ends. Also, Capitan, I would like my pay
+now."
+
+"You quit?"
+
+"Why not? I have done my best. I can do no more. I am crippled. I am of
+no further use to you. Give me my pay, a little food, a small canoe, and
+I go."
+
+"It is possible, Senhor José," spoke the coronel, with ironic
+politeness, "that you may not go so soon. You have killed two men
+recently. You refuse to reveal some things which should be known about
+the German. Perhaps the law--"
+
+José burst into a jeering laugh.
+
+"Law? You speak of law? There is no law up the river but the law of the
+gun and the knife. And if there were, señor, what then? I killed in a
+fair fight. I killed men who would do murder. I killed on the west bank
+of the river--Peru. Neither you nor any other Brazilian can lay hand on
+me. And though I now have only one good arm, it will not be well for
+anyone to try to hold me. My knife and my right hand still are ready."
+
+"By cripes! the lad's right!" Tim blurted, impulsively. "And I'll tell
+the world I'm for him. He's got a right to keep his mouth shut if he
+wants to. He don't owe us nothin'. Mebbe he's got somethin' up his
+sleeve, at that; but he stuck with us in the pinch, and--"
+
+"And we'll give him a square deal, of course," Knowlton cut in. "José,
+your own wages to this point, at a dollar a day, are eighteen dollars.
+The wages of the five other men to the place where they--quit--would
+aggregate seventy-five dollars. Grand total, ninety-three. The others
+chose to take their pay in lead instead of gold, so their account is
+closed. Therefore I suggest that their pay go to you as _puntero_,
+_popero_, and good sport. What say, Rod?"
+
+"Make it a hundred flat," McKay agreed.
+
+"Right. A hundred in gold. Satisfy you, José?"
+
+"Indeed yes, señor. I did not expect such generosity."
+
+"That's all right, then. We'll fix you up before we move on, and--Say!
+Are you in Schwandorf's pay, too?"
+
+José hesitated. Then he replied:
+
+"Since you mention it, I will admit that _el Aleman_ offered me certain
+inducements to make this journey. I now see that he had no intention of
+meeting his promises. But you can leave it to me to collect from him
+whatever may be due."
+
+Even the coronel nodded at this. The gleam in the Peruvian's eyes
+presaged unpleasantness for Schwandorf.
+
+"You gentlemen, of course, will not attempt to continue your journey for
+the present," the coronel suggested. "You are fatigued and I shall
+greatly appreciate the pleasure of your companionship. New arrangements
+also will be necessary in the matter of a boat and men."
+
+"We've been wondering about getting another boat and a new crew,"
+Knowlton said, frankly. "The canoe we have is too big for three men to
+handle, and I'll admit we're tired. José, too, is in no shape to travel
+yet--"
+
+"José, of course, is my guest also," the old gentleman interrupted. "The
+question of new men can be solved. But there is time for everything, and
+now is the time for all of you to rest. As our proverb has it, '_Devagar
+se vae ao longe_'--he goes far who goes slowly."
+
+McKay arose, glass in hand.
+
+"To our host," he bowed. The toast was drunk standing. Whereafter the
+host tapped the bell twice and 'Tonio reappeared with a tray of fresh
+glasses. A toast to the United States by the coronel followed, and as
+soon as the black man arrived with a third round the Republic of Brazil
+was pledged. Then the coronel directed the servant:
+
+"'Tonio, if Pedro and Lourenço are outside, ask them to move the
+belongings of the gentlemen from the canoe. And make ready rooms for the
+guests."
+
+'Tonio disappeared down the ladder. The coronel raised the violin,
+tendered it to the others, accepted their pleas to play it himself, and
+for the next half hour acquitted himself with no mean ability. Snatches
+of long-forgotten operas and improvisations of his own flowed from the
+strings in smooth harmony, hinting at bygone years amid far different
+surroundings for which his soul now hungered and to which he would
+return. Pedro and Lourenço, transporting the equipment, passed in and
+out soft-footed and almost unnoticed. At length the player, with a
+deprecatory smile and a half apology for "boring his guests," extended
+the instrument again toward the visitors. And McKay, silent McKay, took
+it.
+
+Sweet and low, out welled the haunting melody of "Annie Laurie." Tim,
+who had listened with casual interest to the coronel's music, now
+grinned happily. And when the plaintive Scotch song became "Kathleen
+Mavourneen" he closed his eyes and lay back in pure enjoyment. "The
+River Shannon" flowed into "The Suwanee River," and this in turn blended
+into other heart-tugging airs of Dixieland. When the last strain died
+and the captain reached for his half-smoked cigar the room was silent
+for minutes.
+
+Then, to the astonishment of all, José spoke:
+
+"Señores, there was a time when I, too, could draw music from the
+violin. If I may--" His eyes rested longingly on the instrument.
+
+"_Certamente_, if you can use the arm," the coronel acquiesced. With a
+little difficulty José drew his arm from the sling, balanced his left
+elbow on the chair arm, and poised the violin. A half smile showed in
+the eyes of the coronel as he glanced at his guests. He, and they as
+well, expected a discordant, uncouth attempt to scrape out some obscene
+ditty of the frontier.
+
+But as José, after jockeying a bit, began drifting the bow across the
+strings, the suppressed smiles faded and eyes opened. Here was a man
+who, as he said, once could play. And he wasted no time on airs composed
+by others and known to half the world. Under his touch the mellow wood
+began to talk, and in the minds of the listeners grew pictures.
+
+City streets, blank-walled houses, patios, the rattle of the hoofs of
+burros over cobbles, the shuffle of human feet, the toll of bells from a
+convent tower. Gay little bits of music, laughter, flashing eyes, a
+voluptuous love song repeated over and over. A sudden wild outbreak,
+fighting men, shots, the clash of steel--again a tolling bell and a
+requiem for the dead. A horse galloping in the night. Mountain winds
+crooning mournfully, rising to the scream of tempest and the crash of
+thunder. Dreary uplands, the hiss of rain, the sough of drifting snow,
+the patient plod of a mule along a perilous trail. And then the jungle:
+its discordant uproar, its hammering of frogs, its hoots and howls, the
+dismal swash of flood waters. A monotonous ebb and flow of life,
+punctuated by sudden flares of fight. Then a long, mournful wail--and
+silence.
+
+His bow still on the strings, José sat for a minute like a stone image,
+his eyes straight ahead, his pale face drawn, his red kerchief glowing
+dully in the semishadow like a cap of blood. For once his face was empty
+of all insolence, changed by a pathetic wistfulness that made it tragic.
+Then, wordless, he lowered the violin, held it out to the coronel,
+fumbled absently at his sling, and slowly incased his wounded arm. When
+he looked up his old mocking expression had come back and he once more
+looked the reckless buccaneer.
+
+For a time no one spoke. Each felt that he had glimpsed something of
+this man's past; felt, too, that he who now was a bloody-handed borderer
+had once been a _caballero_, moving in a much higher circle. Certainly
+he could not play like this unless he had been of the upper class in his
+youth. The coronel's face was thoughtful as he took back the violin.
+When at length he began to talk, however, it was on a topic as remote as
+possible from music and present personalities--the reconstruction of
+Europe as the result of the World War.
+
+With this and kindred subjects, aided by the attentive ministrations of
+'Tonio, the afternoon passed swiftly. Dinner proved a feast, the _pièce
+de résistance_ being tender, well-cooked meat which the Americans took
+for roast beef, but which really was roast tapir. More cigars, coupled
+with the fatigue of the past two days of paddling, eventually caused the
+visitors to seek their rooms, where McKay and Knowlton paired off and
+Tim took José as his "bunkie."
+
+When Tim awoke the next morning he found himself deserted.
+
+To Knowlton, who drew from the small gold-chest the hundred dollars
+allotted to José and handed it to him before redressing his wound, the
+_puntero_ quietly revealed his intention to go before sunrise.
+
+"Say nothing, señor," he requested. "You need know nothing of it, if you
+like. I am here to-night--I am gone to-morrow--that is all. I am of no
+further use to you, I am unwelcome in this house of Nunes, and I go. Oh,
+have no fear for me! I have my gun, my knife, and my good right arm, and
+I can take care of myself very well. No doubt the coronel will be
+astonished to find that on leaving to-night I have neither cut anyone's
+throat nor stolen anything--ha! I have a black name on this river, and
+it is well earned, perhaps. Yet few men are as bad as those who dislike
+them think they are. I may borrow a small canoe, but any Indian would do
+the same. An unoccupied canoe is any man's property.
+
+"Before our ways part, señor, let me say that as José Martinez never
+forgets his enemies, so he never forgets friends. Where some men would
+have turned me loose like a sick dog with my eighteen dollars, you and
+Señor McKay give me a hundred. And far more than that, you saved my life
+at a time when many men would have said, 'Bah! let the bloody one die!
+He is nothing but scum of the border and leader of that murdering crew.'
+You had only to let me lie a few minutes longer and you would be rid of
+me. No, José does not forget.
+
+"That is all, except--if you will, in parting, take the hand of a man
+known as a killer and other things--"
+
+Knowlton gripped that hand with swift heartiness. He would have
+protested against such a departure, but the other's steady gaze
+betokened inflexible purpose. So he merely said:
+
+"Then good luck, old chap! And if you meet Schwandorf give him our
+affectionate regards."
+
+"_Si_, señor," was the sardonic answer. "I will do that thing. And here
+is something that may be of interest to you. I happen to know that
+before we left Remate de Males a swift one-man canoe left Nazareth, and
+that the man in it was an Indian who is in the German's control. It went
+upstream while we were loading your supplies, and it has not returned.
+By this time it must be many hours above this place. I do not know what
+message that Indian carries, nor where he goes. But he is a short man,
+and his left leg is crooked. If you meet such a one make him talk.
+Good-by, señor."
+
+Just how and when the _puntero_ cat-footed his way out that night none
+ever knew but himself. But before the next dawn he had vanished from the
+Brazilian shore.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+BY THE LIGHT OF STORM
+
+
+"One thing I can't understand," Knowlton said, toying with his coffee
+cup the next morning, "is why Schwandorf should double-cross us. We
+never did anything to him. Another thing I don't quite get is how he
+expected to have the Peruvians wiped out when he knew blamed well they
+were aware of the enmity of the cannibals. They'd hardly be likely to go
+into the bush with us under those circumstances."
+
+"My guess is this," McKay replied. "He set a trap. He is on a friendly
+footing with some of the savages above here, no doubt. He dispatched
+that Indian messenger to stir them up with some false tale and bring
+them to some place where they'd be pretty sure to get us. He primed the
+crew to jump us at the same place, perhaps. Then the crew would kill us
+or we'd kill them, and whichever side won would be smeared by the
+Indians. Sort of a trap within a trap. Why he did it doesn't matter
+much. He double-crossed us, he double-crossed the crew, he
+double-crossed José. First thing he knows he'll find he's double-crossed
+himself."
+
+"Yeah," Tim grunted. "He better beat it before we git back!"
+
+"He wanted no killing before we reached the cannibal country," McKay
+went on, "because then it would all be blamed on the savages and he
+could show clean hands. Francisco's vengefulness tipped over his cart."
+
+"Still, he might have known we'd stop here for a call on the coronel,
+and that there was a big chance for us to be warned here about the feud
+between Mayorunas and Peruvians."
+
+"That probably was provided for. Crew doubtless had orders to prevent
+any such visit, by lying to us or in other ways. We probably would have
+gone surging past here at top speed."
+
+"Wal, it don't git us nothin' to talk about things that 'ain't
+happened," interposed the practical Tim. "Question is, where do we go
+from here? And how?"
+
+All eyes went to the coronel, who sat languidly smoking his morning
+cigar.
+
+"Coronel, we are in your hands," McKay said, bluntly. "Your men, I
+presume, are all out at work in various parts of the bush. We want a
+crew and, if possible, guides. Can you help us?"
+
+The coronel flicked off an ash and spoke slowly:
+
+"I have two men, senhores, who have no peers as bushmen. They are the
+two whom you saw yesterday. Frankly, they are most valuable to me, and I
+hesitate about sending them on so dangerous a mission as yours. Yet they
+might succeed where most men would fail, for they have repeatedly gone
+into the bush on risky journeys and returned unharmed. Their adventures
+would fill books.
+
+"The older of these two, Lourenço Moraes, has been more than once among
+the cannibals of this region, and so he knows something of them.
+Naturally he did not live long among them; he left them as soon as he
+could. But he has the faculty of extricating himself from hopeless
+positions--or perhaps it would be better to say that his cool head and
+good fortune together have preserved him thus far. '_Tanta vez vae o
+cantaro a fonte ate gue um dia la fica_'--the pitcher may go often to
+the spring, but some day it remains there.
+
+"Pedro Andrada, the younger, is not so steady and cool-headed as
+Lourenço. Yet he is a most capable man, and the two together--they are
+always together--make a very efficient team."
+
+"I bet they do," Tim concurred, heartily. "I like that Pedro lad fine."
+
+"So do I," the coronel smiled. "Now, gentlemen, I will not order these
+men to go with you. If they go it must be of their own choice. They have
+only recently returned from a hazardous mission and they are entitled to
+rest. Yet I have little doubt that they will jump at the chance to risk
+their lives in a new venture. If they choose to go, I suggest that you
+place yourselves entirely in their hands and give them free rein. You
+would look far for better men."
+
+"And we're lucky to get them," Knowlton acquiesced. "To them and to you
+we shall be greatly indebted."
+
+"Not to me, senhor," the coronel demurred "I do nothing but bring you
+men together. Theirs is the risk. 'Tonio! Find Pedro and Lourenço. Shall
+we go into the office, gentlemen?"
+
+Chairs scraped back and an exodus from the dining room ensued. Outside,
+the lusty voice of the negro bawled. Soon he was back, and at his heels
+strode the lithe Pedro and the quiet Lourenço. They ran their eyes over
+the group, then stood looking inquiringly at their employer.
+
+"Be seated, men. Roll cigarettes if you like," said the coronel. Coolly
+they did both. Pedro, catching Tim's friendly grin, flashed a quick
+smile in return. Lourenço, unsmiling, looked squarely into each man's
+face in turn and seemed satisfied with what he saw. Both then glanced
+around as if missing some one.
+
+"Your friend José has left us," the coronel informed them, dryly,
+interpreting the look. "He disappeared in the night."
+
+"Ah! That is why one of our canoes is gone," said Pedro. "We are ready
+to start."
+
+"You mistake," the old gentleman laughed. "We do not want him back.
+Nothing else is missing."
+
+Whereat Pedro looked slightly surprised. Lourenço's lips curved in a
+faint grin. Neither made any further comment.
+
+The coronel plunged at once into the business for which they had been
+summoned. Succinctly he stated the purpose of the North Americans in
+coming here, pointed out their need of guides--and stopped there. He
+said nothing of the dangers ahead, mentioned no reward, did not even ask
+the men whether they would go. He merely lit a fresh cigar and leaned
+back in his chair.
+
+A silence followed. Again Lourenço looked searchingly into the face of
+each American. Pedro contemplated the opposite wall, taking occasional
+puffs from his cigarette. At length Knowlton suggested, tentatively:
+
+"We will pay well--"
+
+Both the bushmen frowned. The coronel spoke in a tone of mild reproof:
+
+"Senhor, it is not a matter of pay. These men can make plenty of money
+as _seringueiros_."
+
+"Pardon," said Knowlton, and thereafter held his tongue.
+
+Deliberately Lourenço finished his smoke, pinched the coal between a
+hard thumb and forefinger, and spoke for the first time.
+
+"May I ask, senhor, if you are the commander?" His gaze rested on McKay.
+
+"I am."
+
+"And do I understand that we shall at all times be subject to your
+orders?"
+
+"In case any orders are necessary--yes. But I assume that you will not
+need commands."
+
+A quiet smile showed in the bushman's eyes. He glanced at Pedro. The
+latter met the look from the corner of his eye, without wink, nod, or
+other sign. But when Lourenço turned again to McKay he spoke as if all
+were arranged.
+
+"When do we start, Capitao?"
+
+Tim slapped his leg and cackled.
+
+"By cripes! there ain't no lost motion with these guys. Hey, Cap?"
+
+McKay smiled approvingly.
+
+"We shall get on together" he said. "Lourenço and Pedro, this is not a
+one-man party. We are three comrades, who now become five. If at any
+time one man needs to command, I, as senior officer, will take that
+command. Otherwise we are all on an equal footing."
+
+"Just so," Lourenço agreed. "If it were otherwise you would still be
+three men--not five. Since that is plain, let me say frankly that your
+big canoe had best stay here, also everything you do not need in the
+bush. Two light canoes are faster, easier to handle and to hide. Pedro
+and I have our own canoe and will provide our own supplies. We will pick
+out a three-man boat for you and load it with what you select from your
+equipment. After that every man swings his own paddle."
+
+"_Cada qual por si e Deus por todos._ Each for himself and God for us
+all," Pedro summarized.
+
+"That's the dope," applauded Tim. "Now say, Renzo, old feller, what d'ye
+know about these here, now, Red Bones up above here? And have ye got
+anything on that Raposy guy?"
+
+Lourenço shook his head.
+
+"I know little of the Red Bone people, for I have never met them. That
+is one reason why I now should like to meet them. I have heard of them,
+yes; and the things I have heard are not pleasant. Yet it may be that
+the tales are worse than the people. I have also heard terrible stories
+of the light-skinned cannibals, the Mayorunas; yet I have been among the
+cannibals and found them not so bad--though it is true that they eat the
+flesh of their enemies; I have seen it done. But it makes a very great
+difference how they are approached and who the men are who approach
+them. It is possible that we may go unharmed among even _los Ossos
+Vermelhos_--the Red Bones. We shall see.
+
+"Of the Raposa I think I do know something. I have seen him."
+
+Everyone except Pedro sat up with a start.
+
+"You have seen him?" exclaimed the coronel. "When? Where? How? Why have
+you not spoken of it?"
+
+"Because, Coronel, I forgot it until now. It meant nothing to us--yes,
+Pedro was with me--except that it was one more queer thing in the bush.
+In time I might have remembered it and told you. But you know we have
+been busy."
+
+"True. But go on."
+
+"It was only a little time ago. We were returning from the scouting trip
+on which you sent us to locate new rubber trees. We were
+seven--eight--seven--"
+
+"Eight days' journey from here," prompted Pedro.
+
+"_Si._ We were in our canoe when a sudden storm broke and we got
+ashore to wait until it was over. The place was on an _ygarapé_--a
+creek--about two days away from the river. The trees were large and the
+ground free from bush. In a flash of lightning we saw a man peering out
+at us from a hollow tree.
+
+"He was naked and streaked with paint--that was all we saw in the
+flashes that came and went. The rain was heavy, and we stayed where we
+were until it ended. Then we ordered that man to come out.
+
+"He came, and he held bow and arrow ready to shoot. We, too, were ready
+to shoot, but we held back our bullets and he held back his arrow. We
+saw that his paint was red and that it traced his bones; that his skin
+was that of a tanned white man and his hair was dark with a white streak
+over one ear. No, we did not notice the color of his eyes--the light was
+not good and he stood well away from us.
+
+"We looked around for other men, but saw none. We asked him who he was
+and what he wanted, but he gave no answer. He looked at us for a long
+time, and we at him. Then he began walking away sidewise, watching us
+steadily, holding his arrow always ready. Finally he disappeared among
+the trees and we saw him no more. But we heard him, senhores; twice
+before we lost sight of him he spoke out in a queer voice like that of a
+parrot. And the thing he said was, 'Poor Davey!'"
+
+McKay thumped a fist on his chair.
+
+"Davey! David Rand!"
+
+"Perhaps so, Capitao. I do not know. But he spoke English."
+
+"By thunder! David Rand! Merry, where's that picture?"
+
+Knowlton was already unbuttoning his pocket flap. Quickly he produced
+the photograph.
+
+"That the fellow?"
+
+Lourenço studied the face. The eagerly anticipated affirmative did not
+come.
+
+"I cannot say surely. This is a full-faced, clean-shaven man with hair
+close trimmed. That one's face was gaunt, covered partly with beard and
+partly by long hair, and we were not close to him, as I have said. I
+would not say the two were the same until I could have a better look at
+the wild man."
+
+"You didn't follow him?"
+
+"No. Why should we? He had done nothing to us and we let him go his way.
+We did look at his hollow tree, though. But it was only an empty tree,
+not his home; a place where he had stepped in out of the storm. We had
+other things to do, so we got into our canoe again and paddled off."
+
+"You can find the place again?"
+
+"Yes. But I much doubt if we shall find him there."
+
+"Never mind. We've something to start with now, and that's worth a lot.
+Get busy with your boats and supplies, boys, right away. Tim and Merry,
+let's dig out our essentials and start. We're on a hot trail at last.
+Let's go!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+OUT OF THE AIR
+
+
+Again the sun fought the mists of a new day, casting a pallid, watery
+light on the livid green roof of the limitless jungle. High up under
+that roof, more than a hundred feet above the ground, the morning alarm
+clock went off with a scream, the sudden chorus of monkeys and macaws
+awaking after a few hours of silence. Down on the eastern shore of the
+river, in a little natural port where the shadows still lay thick, men
+stirred under their black mosquito nets, yawned, and waited for more
+light before starting another day's journey.
+
+To three of the five men housed under those flimsy coverings the somber
+hue of their nets was new. On leaving Remate de Males the insect bars
+had been clean white; and though they had grown somewhat soiled from
+daily handling, they never had approached the drab dinginess of the
+barriers draping the hammocks of the Peruvian rivermen. In fact, their
+owners had been at some pains to keep them as clean as possible, folding
+them each morning with military precision and stowing them carefully.
+Wherefore they were somewhat taken aback when informed that nice white
+nets were decidedly not the thing in this part of the world.
+
+"Up to this place, senhores, they have done no harm," Pedro said, before
+leaving the coronel's grounds. "But from here on they will not do at
+all. The weakest moonlight--yes, even starlight--would make them stand
+out in the darkness like tombstones. A few days more and we shall be in
+the cannibal country. And it is an old trick of those eaters of men to
+skulk along the shore by night, watching a camp until all are asleep,
+and then sneak up with spears ready. A rush and a swift stab of the
+spears into those white nets, and you are dead or dying from the
+poisoned points. I would no more sleep under a white net than I would
+lie in my hammock and blow a horn to show where I was. Your light nets
+must stay here. We will find dark ones for you."
+
+Thus the voyagers learned another of those little things on which
+sometimes hinges life or death. Even McKay, with his experience of other
+jungles, had never thought it necessary to drape himself in invisibility
+at night. But when his attention was called to it he recognized its
+value at once, and the white nets were forthwith abandoned.
+
+Now, on the first morning out from the Nunes place, the three Americans
+stretched themselves in lazy enjoyment after a night passed without a
+sentinel. The stretching evoked sundry grunts due to the discovery that
+their muscles still were lame. The long steamer journey from their own
+land, followed by the daily confinement of the Peruvian canoe, had
+afforded scant opportunity for keeping themselves fit, and the sudden
+necessity for doing their own paddling had found every man soft. But
+they now were hardening fast, and the steady swing of the paddles was
+proving a physical joy. These were men ill accustomed to sitting in
+enforced idleness for weeks on end.
+
+Matches flared under the nets and cigarette smoke drifted into the air,
+rousing to fresh activity the mosquitoes humming hungrily outside.
+Gradually the shadows paled and the weak light reflecting from the
+fog-shrouded water beyond grew into day. The nets lifted and the
+bloodthirsty insects swooped in vicious triumph on the emerging men. But
+again matches blazed, flame licked up among kindlings, a fire grew, and
+in its smoke screen the voyagers found some surcease from the bug
+hordes. Soon the fragrance of coffee floated into the air.
+
+Tim yawned, coughed explosively, and swore.
+
+"Fellers can't even take a gape for himself without gittin' these cussed
+bugs down his throat," he complained, and coughed again. "Gimme some
+coffee! I got one skeeter the size of a devil's darnin' needle stuck in
+me windpipe."
+
+"A devil's darning needle? What is that, Senhor Tim?" inquired Pedro,
+passing him a cup of hot coffee. When the liquid--and the "skeeter"--had
+passed into Tim's stomach he enlightened the inquirer.
+
+"Ye dunno what's a devil's darnin' needle? Gosh! I'm s'prised at ye. I
+seen lots of 'em right on this here river. He's a bug about so long"--he
+stuck out a finger--"and he's got jaws like a crab and a long limber
+tail a with reg'lar needle in the end, and inside him is a roll o' tough
+silk--tough as spider web. And he's death on liars. Any time a feller
+tells a lie he's got to look out, or all to oncet one o' them bugs'll
+come scootin' at him and grab him by the nose with them jaws. Then he'll
+curl up his tail--the bug, I mean--and run his needle and thread right
+through the feller's lips and sew his mouth up tight. Then he flies off
+lookin' for another liar."
+
+"_Por Deus!_ And the liar starves to death?"
+
+"Wal, no. O' course he can git somebody to cut the stitches. But the
+needle is a good thick one and it leaves a row o' holes all along the
+feller's lips. Any time ye see a guy with li'l' round scars around his
+mouth, Pedro, ye'll know he's such an awful liar the devil bug got him."
+
+McKay coughed. Knowlton blew his nose into a big handkerchief. Lourenço
+squinted sidewise at Tim, who was solemn as an owl. Pedro, his eyes
+twinkling, bent forward and scrutinized Tim's mouth.
+
+"You have been fortunate, senhor," he said, simply--and stepped around
+to the other side of the fire.
+
+"Huh? Say, lookit here, ye long-legged gorilla--"
+
+Knowlton exploded. McKay and Lourenço snickered.
+
+"It's on you, Tim!" vociferated Knowlton. "You dug the hole yourself.
+Now crawl in and pull it in after you."
+
+Tim snorted wrathfully, but his eyes laughed.
+
+"Aw, what's the use o' trying to educate you guys?"
+
+"You swallowed a mosquito just now, but I cannot swallow that devil
+bug," Pedro grinned.
+
+Tim rumbled something, solaced himself with a cigarette, then squatted
+and joined the others in their frugal breakfast of coffee and
+_chibeh_--a handful of farinha mixed with water in a gourd. When it was
+finished McKay, who never smoked in the morning until he had eaten,
+filled a pipe and suggested:
+
+"Guess we'd better plan our campaign. We didn't take time yesterday. In
+case we find no trace of the Raposa at the place where you fellows saw
+him, what's your idea?"
+
+Lourenço, puffing thoughtfully, stared into the fire.
+
+"There will be time enough to decide that, Capitao, after we have
+visited that place," he said, slowly. "Still, perhaps it is best to make
+some plan; it can be changed at any time."
+
+For a moment longer he looked at the dying flame. Then, dropping his
+cigarette stub into it, he continued:
+
+"If I were going alone to find a man among the Red Bones, I should go
+first to the Mayorunas and work through them to make sure of a friendly
+reception by the other people. I would--"
+
+"Why, that's the very thing Schwandorf suggested!"
+
+"Yes? I have not heard what he said. Tell me."
+
+McKay did so. Lourenço smiled.
+
+"Sometimes, Capitao, the devil puts into the hands of men a weapon which
+is turned against himself. So it is now. That _Allemao_, Schwandorf,
+never expected you to reach the people you seek, but the plan is good.
+It would not be good if you followed it exactly as he laid it out, but
+things have changed; and what you could not do with Peruvian companions,
+or alone, you perhaps can do with us. I will show you.
+
+"It happens that I have been twice among the cannibals living in a
+certain _maloca_ which I can find again. Perhaps you know that those
+people live in scattered _malocas_, each ruled by its own chief--"
+
+"Yes, we know about that."
+
+"Good. Now if we went to any _maloca_ where we were not known we might
+be killed at once. But at that _maloca_ of which I speak I am known to
+the chief and all his fighting men, for I once led them on a raid into
+Peru. So they will remember me--"
+
+"What's that?" Knowlton interrupted, in amazement. "You led a cannibal
+tribe on the warpath?"
+
+"Just so, senhor. It is a long story, but these are the facts:
+
+"There was in Peru a gang of killers, robbers--and worse--who called
+themselves the Peccaries. They raided one of the coronel's camps where I
+was in charge, killed all my gang except myself and one other, and used
+us two as slaves and beasts of burden.
+
+"The other man died from poison. I lived only to revenge myself on those
+foul outlaws. There was much rubber of the coronel's, worth much money
+at that time, in the camp they had raided. So, after driving me like a
+beast to their stronghold in the hills of Peru, they came back with
+boats and Indian porters to get out that rubber.
+
+"On that return journey I tried to kill the leader, who was called El
+Amarillo--yellow-skinned. I failed, and he had me nailed with long
+thorns to a tree where I might hang in torment for days, dying slowly.
+See. Here are the marks."
+
+All three of the Americans had noticed on the previous day that each of
+Lourenço's hands was disfigured by a scar which looked as if a spike had
+been driven through. Now he held those hands forward for their
+inspection. Then he pulled off his loose shirt and rolled up his
+trousers. They saw other scars in the big muscles before the armpits, in
+the soft flesh under the ribs, in the thighs and calves.
+
+"The dirty Hun!" Tim grated.
+
+"That was not all, Senhor Tim. They also put fire ants on me, which bit
+so cruelly that I nearly lost my mind from pain. Then they went on,
+intending to have more sport with me when they came back with the
+rubber. But after they left me two hunters of the cannibal tribe who had
+been following a tapir's track found me and took me down from the tree.
+
+"Now the Peccaries before this had stolen some women from a Mayoruna
+_maloca_ and were treating them like dogs--I saw one of those women
+brutally murdered while I was captive in the outlaw camp. I managed to
+tell the two hunters I could lead them to the Peccary stronghold and
+give them revenge. They carried me to their _maloca_--I could not
+walk--and told their chief what I had said. The chief caused my hurts to
+be cured, and then I kept my promise.
+
+"I guided the savages to the outlaw camp; they surrounded it, and in the
+fight that followed every Peccary was killed except their leader. Now
+that cannibal chief has not forgotten me--"
+
+"Wait a minute," protested Knowlton. "Did that Peccary leader escape?"
+
+"No. He was kept alive until a big herd of peccaries was met. Then,
+because he called himself 'King of the Peccaries,' he was nailed to a
+tree, as I had been, and told to make the peccaries take out the thorns.
+The wild pigs tore him into ribbons with their tusks."
+
+Calmly he donned his shirt again. Tim, staring at him, twitched his
+shoulders as if a chill had gone down his back.
+
+"Ugh!" muttered Knowlton.
+
+"So now," Lourenço resumed, "if I can find that chief again--he may have
+been killed in some tribal fight before now--he may be friendly to all
+of us. Or he may not. Savages cannot be relied on with much certainty.
+But if any of the Mayorunas will help us, he will. It is worth trying."
+
+"And if he is not friendly--" Knowlton paused.
+
+"We do not come back," Pedro finished. "Have you a better plan?"
+
+All shook their heads.
+
+"Laurenco's idea is excellent," said McKay. "I was thinking along the
+same line, though I did not know he had any such friendly relations with
+a chief. That makes it all the more advisable to try it, unless we find
+the Raposa first. We, of course, will not land at the place where
+Schwandorf told us to go ashore, seven days from here."
+
+"By no means," Lourenço concurred. "In five days we leave the river and
+travel along the _ygarapé_. If we go to the _maloca_ it will be from
+another direction than the river."
+
+He began preparing to travel. The others also went about the work of
+breaking camp. By the time the canoes were loaded the mists had lifted
+and the river lay open and empty before them. In the bush around and
+beyond, gloom still lay thick and the forest life yelped, howled,
+clattered, and wailed. But out on the water it was broad day, and far
+overhead sounded the harsh cries of unseen parrots flying two by two in
+the sunlight above the matted branches. The world of the pathless tropic
+wilderness, ever dying, ever living, was about its daily business. The
+five invaders were about theirs.
+
+As the paddlers dipped, however, Knowlton held back.
+
+"Say, Rod, we didn't tell these fellows about Schwandorf's Indian. Hold
+up a second, men."
+
+While all rested on their paddles he spoke of the mysterious messenger
+dispatched from Nazareth. Pedro and Lourenço contemplated the river,
+then frowned.
+
+"That may be of importance, senhores," said Lourenço. "It may change
+everything for us. We saw a lone Indian go past the coronel's place,
+traveling fast, three days before you came. I would give much to know
+where he is now and what word he carries. A short man with a bad left
+leg, you say. We shall keep watch for such a man. Perhaps we may meet
+him."
+
+Wherein he predicted more accurately than he knew.
+
+The canoes swung out and the paddlers settled into the steady stroke to
+which they were growing accustomed. Hour after hour they forged on, the
+Brazilians adjusting their speed to that of the Americans, who had not
+yet attained the muscular ease of habitual canoemen. The miles flowed
+slowly but surely behind them, the sun rolled higher and hotter, the
+silence of approaching noon crept over the jungle on either side. Then,
+as the time drew near when they would land for a more hearty meal than
+that of the morning, Pedro pointed ahead.
+
+Up out of the bush on the Peruvian shore rose a vulture. It flapped
+sullenly away as if disappointed. The bushmen, quick to note anything
+that might be a sign, paid no attention to the bird's flight, but marked
+with unerring eye the spot whence it had taken wing.
+
+"Let us cross, comrades, and see what we may see," Pedro called. "If
+nothing is there, we can eat."
+
+But something was there. All saw it before they landed--the stern of a
+small, speedy canoe almost concealed in a narrow rift at the bottom of
+the bank. In the soil of the rising slope were the prints of bare feet.
+And Pedro, scanning the tracks narrowly after he and the others reached
+shore, asserted, "These were not made to-day."
+
+Up the bank they climbed, silent and watchful. At the top Lourenço took
+the lead. In under big trees the five passed in file. A short distance
+from the edge Lourenço stopped, looking at the ground. The others spread
+out and stared at the thing he had found.
+
+Between the buttress roots of a tall tree was a crude shelter of palm
+leaves. Before this lay the scattered bones of a man. The skull had been
+crushed by a mighty blow.
+
+The bones were picked clean--had been stripped and torn asunder days
+before, and the vulture which had just left had gotten nothing for its
+belated visit. Among them were remnants of cloth, a belt and a machete,
+and strands of coarse black hair. A few feet away lay a cheap "trade"
+gun. Lourenço inspected the weapon and laid it back.
+
+"Did he shoot before he was downed?" asked Knowlton.
+
+"No. The gun is loaded. His death came from above." The bushman ran his
+eye up the towering tree, then pointed to a large dark object on the
+ground near by.
+
+"Castanha--Brazil-nut tree," he explained. "That heavy nut fell and
+smashed the Indian's skull like an egg. Indian, yes. His gun, his
+shelter, and his hair show that. And"--stooping and pointing at one of
+the bones--"that bone shows who he was. See, Capitao."
+
+McKay looked down on a leg bone. At some time the leg had been broken
+and badly set, if set at all. The bone was crooked.
+
+"A short Indian with a crooked leg. Schwandorf's messenger!"
+
+"_Si._ No man will ever receive the message he bore. He camped here days
+ago. Now he camps here forever."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE ARROW
+
+
+Slowly, silently, two canoes glided along the still, dark water of a
+gloomy creek over-arched by the interlaced limbs of lofty trees.
+
+The first, propelled by the slow-dipping blades of two Brazilian
+bushmen, seemed to be seeking something; for it nosed along with
+frequent pauses of the paddles, during which it drifted almost to a stop
+while its crew searched the solemn jungle depths reaching away from the
+right-hand shore. The second, carrying three bronzed and bearded men of
+another continent, was only trailing the leader. It moved and paused
+like the first, but the recurrent scrutiny of the farther gloom by its
+paddlers was that of men who saw only a meaningless, monotonous bulk of
+buttresses and trunks and tangle of looping lianas. In this dimness and
+bewildering chaos the trio might as well have been blind. The eyes of
+the tiny fleet were in the first boat.
+
+The progress of the dugouts was almost stealthy. Not a paddle thumped or
+splashed, not a voice spoke. They moved with the alert caution born not
+of fear, but of wary readiness for any sudden event--like prowling
+jungle creatures which, themselves seeking quarry, must be ever on guard
+lest they become the hunted instead of the hunters.
+
+For the past two days they had moved thus. The last fresh meat had been
+shot miles down the river, where a well-placed bullet from the rifle of
+McKay had downed a fat swamp deer. Since that day not a gun had been
+fired. The rations now were tough jerked beef and monkey meat, slabs of
+salt pirarucu fish, and farinha, varied by tinned delicacies from the
+stores of the Americans. Henceforth gunfire was taboo unless it should
+become necessary in self-defense.
+
+At length the fore canoe halted with an abruptness that told of back
+strokes of the blades hidden under water. McKay, bowman of the trailing
+craft, also backed water, while his mates held their paddles rigid. The
+two boats drifted together.
+
+"This is the place," Lourenço said, speaking low.
+
+The Americans, scanning the shore, saw nothing to differentiate the spot
+from the rest of the wilderness growth. Yet Lourenço's tone was sure.
+Pedro's face also showed recognition of his surroundings. With no
+apparent motion of the paddles--though the wrists of the paddlers moved
+almost imperceptibly--the canoe of the bushmen floated to the bank. They
+picked up their rifles, twitched their bow up on land, and turned their
+faces to the forest.
+
+"Stay here," was Pedro's subdued command, "until you hear the bird-call
+which we taught you down the river."
+
+He and Lourenço faded into the dimness and were gone.
+
+"Beats me how them guys find their way 'round," muttered Tim. "I could
+land here twenty times hand-runnin', but if I went away and then come
+back I'd never know the place."
+
+"It's all in the feel of it," was McKay's low-toned explanation. "They
+find places and travel the bush as an Indian does--by a sixth sense.
+Take them to New York City, guide them around, then turn them loose--and
+they'd be hopelessly lost in ten minutes."
+
+The others nodded agreement and sat watching. In the shadows no creature
+moved. Afar off some bird cried mournfully like a lost soul condemned to
+wander forever alone in the grim green solitudes. No other sound came to
+the listeners save the ever-present hum of the big forest mosquitoes, to
+which they now had become indifferent. For all they could see or hear of
+their two guides, they might as well have been alone. Yet they knew the
+Brazilians were not far away, threading the maze with sure step and
+scouting hawk-eyed for any sign of danger.
+
+At length a long soft whistle sounded in the bush ahead. Any Indian
+hunter hearing that sound would straightway have begun scanning the high
+branches, for the liquid call was that of the mutum, or curassow turkey.
+But the waiting trio knew it for Pedro's signal that all was clear. At
+once they slid their canoe to shore, lifted its bow to a firm grip on
+the clay, and, after plumbing the shadows, quietly advanced in squad
+column.
+
+A few steps, and they halted suddenly and whirled. A voice had spoken
+just behind them. There, squatting leisurely between the root buttresses
+of a huge tree, Lourenço looked up at them in amusement. They had passed
+within rifle length of him without seeing him.
+
+"Of what use are your eyes, comrades?" he chaffed. "In the bush one
+should see in all directions at once. You were looking at that patch of
+sunlight just ahead, yes? But danger lurks in the shadows, not in the
+glaring light."
+
+Without awaiting an answer, he arose and took the lead. At the edge of
+the small sunlit space beyond he halted.
+
+"You were heading for the right place," he added then. "Look around. Do
+you see anything?"
+
+Swiftly they scrutinized the gap left by the fall of a great tree whose
+gigantic trunk had bludgeoned weaker trees away in its crushing descent.
+Seeing nothing unusual, they then peered around them. Tim suddenly
+snapped up his rifle.
+
+"Holler tree there--and a man in it! Hey! come out o' there!"
+
+"Your eyes improve," Lourenço complimented. "But the man is Pedro."
+
+Tim lowered the gun as Pedro, grinning, came out of his concealment.
+
+"That is the tree of the Raposa," Lourenço went on. "The lightning
+flashing in from above showed us the man. But now, senhores, I think we
+must tramp the bush for some time before we find that Raposa again.
+There is no trace of him here."
+
+"Hm!" said Knowlton. Striding to the hollow tree, he peered about inside
+it. The cavity was almost big enough to sling a hammock in, but it was
+empty of any indication of habitation, human or otherwise. A temporary
+refuge--that was all.
+
+"No sign anywhere around here, eh?" queried McKay.
+
+"We have found none. We shall look farther, but I have small hope. If
+you senhores will make the camp this time we shall start at once and
+stay out until dark. Build no fire until we return. And if you hear the
+call of the mutum, pay no attention to it; we may use it to locate each
+other if we separate, and also perhaps as a decoy. Any wild man, red or
+white, hearing that call would seek the bird making it, for a fine fat
+mutum is well worth killing. Keep quiet and be on guard."
+
+"Right. Go ahead."
+
+The bushmen turned at once and stole away. The others returned to the
+canoes, transported the necessary duffle to the base of the hollow tree,
+made camp with a few poles, and squatted against the trunk to smoke,
+watch, and wait. Several times they heard mutum calls receding in the
+distance. Then came silence.
+
+The sun-thrown shadows in the gap crawled steadily eastward. Knowlton
+tested the feed of his automatic, which, since its balkiness in the
+fight with the Peruvians, he had kept carefully oiled and free from the
+slightest speck of rust. Tim arose at intervals and paced up and down in
+sentry go, eyes and ears alert--a useless activity, but one which
+provided an outlet for his restless energy. McKay let his gaze rove over
+the small area visible from their post, studying the contours of the
+towering trunks, the prone giant whose fall had opened the hole in the
+leafy roof, the parasitical vines twined about other trees, the thin,
+outflung buttresses supporting the mighty columns--all familiar sights
+to him, but the only things to occupy his vision. So limned on his brain
+did the scene become that after a time he could close his eyes and see
+it in every important detail.
+
+It might have been two hours after Pedro and Lourenço had departed--the
+shadows had grown much longer--when over McKay stole the feeling that he
+was being watched. He glanced at his companions and found that neither
+of them was looking at him. Knowlton, sitting with hands clasped around
+updrawn knees, was dozing. Tim, though wide awake, was staring absently
+at a fungus. The captain's eyes searched the short vistas all about,
+spying nothing new. Still the feeling persisted. Then all at once his
+roaming gaze stopped, became fixed on a point some forty feet away.
+
+There rose a rough-barked red-brown tree, and from it, near the ground,
+projected a blackish bole. McKay was very sure the protuberance had not
+been there before. He had stared steadily at that tree more than once,
+and its shape was quite clear in his mind. Was that bump an insensate
+wood growth now revealed for the first time by the changing sun slant,
+or--
+
+For minutes he watched it. It did not move. Then Tim, restless again,
+rose directly in McKay's line of sight, yawned silently, swung his gun
+to his shoulder, and began another slow parade of his self-appointed
+post. When he had stepped aside McKay looked again for the puzzling
+bole.
+
+It was gone.
+
+With a bound the captain was up and dashing toward the tree, drawing his
+pistol as he ran. But within three strides he went down. A tough vine,
+unnoticed on the ground, looped snakily around one ankle and threw him
+hard. His gun flew from his hand. As he fell a tiny whispering sound
+flitted past, followed by a small blow somewhere behind him. Ensued a
+gruff grunt from Tim and the swift clatter of a breech bolt.
+
+Raging, McKay kicked his foot loose and heaved himself up. Empty handed,
+he continued his rush for the tree. But when he reached it he found
+nothing behind it. If anything had been there it now was gone, and the
+vacant shadows beyond were as inscrutable as ever.
+
+Feet padded behind him and Tim and Knowlton halted on either side. A
+moment of silent searching, and Tim broke into reproach.
+
+"Cap, don't never do that again! If ye take a tumble in my line o' fire,
+for the love o' Mike stay down till I shoot! I come so near drillin' ye
+when ye hopped up that I'm sweatin' blood right now."
+
+In truth, the veteran was pale around the mouth and his broad face was
+beaded with cold drops.
+
+"I seen more 'n one time in France when I felt like shootin' my s'perior
+officer, but I never come so near doin' it as jest now. I had finger to
+trigger and had took up the slack, and a hair's weight more pull would
+have spattered yer head all around. And besides givin' me heart failure
+ye let that guy git away. We'll never find him--"
+
+"You saw him?" McKay cut in.
+
+"I seen somethin' beyond ye--couldn't make out what 'twas, but from the
+way ye was goin' over the top I knowed it must be a man. And then when
+the arrer come--"
+
+"Arrow?"
+
+"Sure. Missed ye when ye took that flop, and stuck in the tree over
+yonder. What'd ye rush the guy for, anyways? Whyn't ye drill him from
+where ye was?"
+
+In the reaction from his sudden fright Tim was as wrathfully ready to
+"bawl out" his captain as if he were some raw rookie. McKay, with a cool
+smile, explained his abrupt action, meanwhile reconnoitering the dimness
+for any further sign of the vanished assailant. None showed.
+
+While Tim stood vigilant guard the other two stooped and moved around
+the base of the tree, narrowly examining the ground. Beyond it they
+paused at one spot, fingered the soil lightly, and lit a match or two.
+
+"No ghost," said Knowlton. "Barefoot man. Didn't leave much trace, but
+enough to show he was here. Let's look at that arrow."
+
+Back to the hollow tree they went, retrieving McKay's pistol on the way.
+About a yard above the earth a long shaft projected from the bark.
+Knowlton reached for it, but McKay held him back and drew it out.
+
+"M-hm! Thought so!" he muttered. "Poisoned."
+
+"Oof! Nice, gentle sort of a cuss," rumbled Tim. "That smear on the
+point--is that poison?"
+
+"Poison. Quickest and deadliest kind of poison. Mixes instantly with
+blood. Paralysis--convulsions--death. The least scratch and you're gone.
+Wicked head on this thing, too: looks like a piece of serrated bone. See
+all those little barbs along the edges? War arrow, all right."
+
+"Meanin' that we'll be jumped pretty soon by more Injuns. If that guy's
+on the warpath he ain't alone."
+
+"Wouldn't be a bad idea to take cover," nodded McKay. Turning the
+five-foot shaft downward, he plunged its head into the soft ground and
+left it sticking there, harmless.
+
+"Tim, go down and guard the canoes. Merry, lie in between these roots
+and keep watch off that way. I'll go over to that tree where the spy
+hid."
+
+For another hour the camp was silent. Each in his covert, finger on
+trigger, the trio watched with ceaseless vigilance, expecting each
+instant to detect dusky forms crawling up from tree to tree. Yet nothing
+of the sort came. Nor did any hostile sound reach them. Somewhere
+parrots squawked, somewhere else the puppylike yapping of toucans
+disturbed the solitude; nothing else.
+
+The wan light faded. The sun crawled up the trees, leaving all the
+ground in shadow. Then, not far off, sounded the soft whistle of the
+mutum. Suspicious, the watchers held their places until, with another
+whistle, Pedro came into view, followed by Lourenço.
+
+McKay arose, met them, and briefly explained the situation. They nodded,
+but seemed undisturbed.
+
+"We can start a fire now, Capitao," Lourenço said. "Night comes and we
+are hungry. There will be no danger before another dawn."
+
+With which he leaned his rifle against a tree and started immediate
+preparations for a meal. Pedro continued on to the canoes, made sure
+they were drawn up high enough to remain in place in case of any sudden
+rain, and returned with Tim. Around them now resounded the swiftly
+rising roar of the nightly outbreak of animal life. The sun vanished. At
+once blackness whelmed all except the little fire.
+
+"See anything while you were out?" asked McKay.
+
+"We found no trace of the Raposa," Lourenço evaded.
+
+"What do you plan to do now?"
+
+"Eat--smoke--talk--sleep."
+
+McKay eyed the bushman keenly, feeling that he was holding something
+back. But, feeling also that this pair knew what they were about, he
+bided his time. When all had eaten and tobacco smoke was blending with
+that of the burning wood, Lourenço drew the arrow from the ground and
+studied it. Then he passed it to Pedro, who, after a critical
+examination, held it in the blaze until the deadly head was burned away.
+
+"A big-game arrow of the cannibal Mayorunas," said Lourenço. "The point,
+with its sawtooth barbs, is made from the tail bone of the araya, the
+flat devilfish of the swamp lakes. That fish, as you perhaps know, has a
+whiplike tail armed with that bone; and if he strikes the bone into your
+flesh it breaks off and stays in the wound, and you are likely to die."
+
+"But in that case death comes from gangrene," McKay remarked. "This
+point has been dipped in wurali poison."
+
+"You have seen such arrows before, Capitao?"
+
+"Seen the poison before, yes. Over in British Guiana. The Macusi Indians
+make it from the wurali vine, some bitter root or other, a couple of
+bulbous plants, two kinds of ants--one big and black with a venomous
+bite, the other small and red--a lot of pepper, and the pounded fangs of
+labarri and couanacouchi snakes. They boil all this stuff down to a
+thick syrup, and that's the poison. The man who makes it is sick for
+days afterward."
+
+"Our cannibals make that poison in much the same way. Yet Guiana is many
+hundreds of miles from here, and our Indians know nothing of those
+Macusi people. Queer, is it not, that the same plan should be used by
+savages thousands of miles apart?"
+
+"Rather odd. Must have started from some common source hundreds of years
+ago and spread around. Queerest thing is, though, that a poison so
+deadly doesn't spoil meat for eating."
+
+"Huh?" exclaimed Tim. "Mean to say them cannibals can kill us by
+scratchin' us with a poison arrer and then stummick us afterwards?"
+
+"Exactly. You'd taste just as sweet as ever, Tim--maybe more so. Cheer
+up! They say it doesn't hurt much to die that way; you're paralyzed so
+quick you just sort of fade out."
+
+Tim shook his head, his abhorrence of poison strong as ever. Knowlton
+spoke.
+
+"I've heard that this wurali poison is much overrated, that it will kill
+only birds and monkeys, not men."
+
+"_Por Deus!_ Whoever said that was a fool trying to appear wise!" Pedro
+snorted. "We have seen the poison death, and we know."
+
+McKay also shook his head.
+
+"Experiments have been made with the wurali of the Macusis," he stated.
+"It was tried on a hog, a sloth--and a sloth is mighty hard to
+kill--also on mules, and on a full-grown ox weighing almost half a ton.
+It killed every one of them."
+
+A momentary silence followed. Tim gazed sourly at the arrow, now
+harmless but still sinister.
+
+"Urrrgh!" he growled. "Cap, ye had a narrer squeak--come near gittin' it
+from in front, and behind, too. Wisht I could have drilled that guy."
+
+The bushmen grinned. And Lourenço's next speech was amazing.
+
+"Be thankful you did not. That bullet might have killed us all."
+
+After enjoying their puzzled expressions a moment he continued.
+
+"We are nearer to a Mayoruna _maloca_ than I thought. Not the one I
+intended to seek, but a smaller one. It is about three days' journey
+from here, and to reach it we must go through the bush. The man who left
+this arrow here to-day is from that _maloca_.
+
+"A week ago his brother went hunting, and he has not returned. So this
+young savage and three of his comrades now are searching the bush for
+some sign of him. To-day they separated, each going in a different
+direction, agreeing to meet again to-night at a place less than half a
+day's journey from here. This man circled around and worked along this
+creek, knowing his brother would hardly go beyond the water. He spied
+our canoes, then sought the men who had come in them and found you.
+
+"He watched you for some time, and if you had not rushed at him he would
+have slipped away without attacking you, for he was alone and he saw
+your guns. But when you, Capitao, suddenly leaped at him he darted away,
+then stopped long enough to send an arrow at you. After that he dodged
+out of sight and ran to the camp of his three friends. He is there now,
+telling about you."
+
+"Great guns! You chaps are wizards!" cried Knowlton. "How do you know
+all this?"
+
+"Because we met him while on our way back here. He was running hard, and
+we heard him, so we blocked him. After we convinced him that we were
+friendly we talked for some time--I can speak their tongue--and he told
+us about you. He was sure you were enemies to him and his people, and
+believed also you had killed his missing brother, and he was going first
+to rejoin his companions and then hasten to the _maloca_ to bring all
+their fighters against you. It was well that we met him in time. It was
+well, too, that you did not shoot him--or even shoot at him. His
+companions would have learned of it, and then--death for us all."
+
+"And now what?"
+
+"Now, comrades, we all go to the _maloca_ of that man. We meet him and
+the other three to-morrow at the place where we talked to him to-day. I
+told him we were going to visit that other chief whom I knew, and,
+though he was at first suspicious of a trap, he finally agreed to lead
+us to his own chief. So in the morning we march. Now let us sleep."
+
+Knowlton and McKay glanced at each other and nodded.
+
+"Luck's with us so far," said the captain.
+
+"Right. We just march right into Jungle Town with bodyguard and
+everything. Pretty soft! Wonder if they'll turn out the tomtom band to
+drum us in."
+
+Tim said nothing. He squinted again at the headless arrow, then
+inspected the breech bolt of his rifle.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE WAY OF THE JUNGLE
+
+
+Dawn came, dismal, damp, and chill. Moisture dripped drearily from the
+upper reaches, and under the dense canopy of leaves and limbs the gloom
+and the fog together made a murk wherein the early-rising bushmen were
+scarcely visible to the North Americans ten feet away. Yet day had come,
+or was coming; the noise of the animal world left little doubt of that.
+
+By the light of a sullen smoky fire and oil-smeared torches Pedro and
+Lourenço made up their packs, cording them roughly with bark-cloth
+strips brought from headquarters. The Americans, after eating a more
+solid meal than the Brazilians seemed to require, also rolled their
+blankets, hammocks, nets, and other paraphernalia; strapped the outfits
+into the army pack harnesses which they had transported for thousands of
+miles and never yet used; crammed their web belts with cartridges; slung
+their sheathed machetes down their left thighs; looked to their guns;
+and announced themselves ready to go.
+
+While the northerners made these final preparations their guides slipped
+away for a time. Pedro, on his return, announced that the canoes had
+been concealed. Lourenço, bringing back the freshly filled canteens of
+the ex-army men, delivered with them the marching orders of the day.
+
+"If you thirst, comrades, drink only from your canteens. If the canteens
+fail, never fill them from flowing water unless the Indians also drink
+from the stream. There are always small pools to be found, and, though
+their water may be warm and stale, it is not likely to be poisoned, as
+the streams may be.
+
+"To-day, and every day after we meet the cannibals, make no suspicious
+moves. Do not speak harshly. Do not laugh or sneer at them. They are
+unreasoning and easily insulted, and lifelong foes when angered. Let me
+do the talking.
+
+"Do not hold a gun in a threatening manner or draw pistols unless you
+must fight. Then kill.
+
+"Above all, pay no attention to their women.
+
+"Now we go. I lead."
+
+He turned and strode away into the fog as easily and surely as if
+cat-eyed and cat-footed. Pedro swung nonchalantly after him. The others
+followed in order, hitching at their backstraps.
+
+The ghostly haze about them now was paler, but through the interstices
+overhead came no glint of sunshine, nor even the glow of a clear dawn.
+The whole sky evidently was overcast, and around the marching men the
+gloom still lay thick. Yet Lourenço's eyes seemed to bore through the
+shades and the dark shroud blurring the trunks, for his steady gait did
+not falter. The little file hung close together, for all knew that any
+man straggling would be instantly lost.
+
+Worming around gigantic columns, crawling over rotting trunks long laid
+low, changing direction abruptly when blocked by some great butt too
+high to be scaled, sinking ankle-deep in clinging mud, the venturesome
+band wound along through the wilderness. Repeated glances at his compass
+showed McKay that the general trend of the march was southeast; but the
+impassable obstacles encountered at frequent intervals necessitated not
+only detours, but sometimes actual back-tracking.
+
+"Walk four miles to advance one," was his thought. And for some time it
+seemed that such was the case. But then the ground changed, the light
+improved, the trees thinned, and the undergrowth became more dense--and,
+paradoxically, the rate of progress improved.
+
+This was because the smaller growth gave the two leaders a chance to cut
+their way straight onward instead of dodging about; and cut they did.
+Their machetes swung with untiring energy, opening a path through what
+seemed an impenetrable tangle. Now every yard of movement was a yard
+gained. But the ground was rising and the struggle up some of the sharp
+slopes winded more than one man.
+
+Then the slope dipped the other way, and they slipped down into a ravine
+where water gleamed darkly. Here a halt was called while the leaders
+sought for a fallen tree. Tim squatted and mopped his face for the
+hundredth time.
+
+"Gosh! This is what I call travelin'!" he panted. "Flounderin' round in
+mud soup, bit to death by skeeters and them what-ye-call-'em
+flies--piums--sweatin' yerself bone dry and totin' forty thousand
+pounds, on yer back, not to mention hardware slung all over ye--this
+ain't no place for a minister's son or a fat guy, I'll tell the world.
+And this is only the start!"
+
+A call from Pedro forestalled any answer. The trio struggled along to
+the spot where the guides waited at the butt of a slanting tree trunk
+spanning the gulf. As they reached it Pedro walked carefully up the
+trunk, carrying a long slender sapling, which he lowered and fixed in
+the bottom of the stream. Then, steadying himself with the upper end of
+this pole, he continued his journey to the other side, where he flipped
+the sapling back to Lourenço. One by one the others crossed, slipping,
+almost losing balance, but managing to evade a fall. Tim, walking the
+precarious bridge and looking down, saw that the surface of the water
+was dotted with the heads of venomous snakes.
+
+"Are you following your trail of yesterday?" demanded McKay.
+
+"No, Capitao. Yesterday we circled. To-day we go as nearly straight as
+possible."
+
+"And you can find the appointed place by this new route?" The captain's
+tone was dubious.
+
+"Certainly. Else I should go the other way. Come."
+
+Up another bank they toiled, and on through rugged country which seemed
+momentarily to become higher and harder to traverse. In the minds of the
+Americans grew suspicion that, for the first time, the Brazilians were
+bluffing; it seemed impossible for any man to keep his sense of
+direction in such a maze. But they said no word and followed on.
+
+At length the leader paused and sent the long call of the mutum floating
+through the trees. No answer came. After a moment the line moved on,
+each man peering ahead with sharper gaze, each holding a little tighter.
+To the Americans, at least, the thought of possible ambush loomed large.
+
+Four man-eating savages, hidden in this labyrinthine tangle and armed
+with arrows whose slightest scratch meant death, could strike down every
+man of this expedition without even a wound in return; for of what avail
+were high-power guns, automatic pistols, and machetes against invisible
+enemies? Yet there was assurance in Lourenço's confident air, and
+reassurance in the thought that these tribemen would be unlikely to
+assail a band avowedly on its way to visit their chief.
+Besides--Knowlton smiled grimly--even if the Mayorunas hungered for
+human flesh it would be more economical of labor to let the meat travel
+to the slaughterhouse on its own legs than to kill it here and carry it
+home.
+
+Again the mutum whistle drifted away. Again no answer came. For a short
+distance farther the file continued its march. Then, in a small opening
+where the uptorn roots of a tree rose like a wall at one side, it
+halted.
+
+"The place of meeting," Pedro said. All peered around. None saw anything
+but the upstanding roots, the forest jumble, the misty serpentine
+lianas. None heard any sound but their own hoarse breathing, the solemn
+drip of water, the insect hum, and the occasional melancholy notes of
+birds. The place seemed bare of life. Yet upon McKay came again that
+feeling of being watched.
+
+Slowly, deeply, Lourenço spoke. The words meant nothing to his mates.
+They were like no words they knew. His eyes roved about as he talked,
+and it was evident that he saw no more than did the silent men behind
+him. But they guessed that he said he and they were there as agreed,
+with peace in their hearts, and that he was telling the men of the
+wilderness to come forward without fear. And they guessed rightly.
+
+As quietly as a phantom of the mist a man took shape at the edge of the
+tree roots. Tall, straight, slender, symmetrically proportioned, with
+unblemished skin of light-bronze hue, straight black hair, and deep dark
+eyes, he was a splendid type of savage. Face and body were adorned with
+glossy paint--scarlet and black rings around the eyes, two red stripes
+from temple to chin, wavy lines on arms and chest. He held a bow longer
+than himself, with a five-foot arrow fitted loosely to the string and
+pointed downward, but ready for instant use. Diagonally across his body
+ran a cord supporting a quiver, from which the feathered shafts of
+several arrows projected above his left shoulder. Around his waist
+looped another cord from which dangled a small loin mat. Otherwise he
+was totally nude--a bronze statue of freedom.
+
+Lourenço spoke again in the same quiet tone. The savage stepped warily
+forward. At the same moment three other naked men appeared with equal
+stealth from tree trunks which had seemed barren of all life. Like the
+first, each of these held an arrow ready, but pointing downward; and
+each moved with the slow, velvety step of a hunting jaguar. Their eyes
+searched those of these strange men of another world who, wearing
+useless clothing, carrying heavy weapons of steel, burdening themselves
+with queer weights on their backs, now invaded the wilderness which they
+and their fathers had roamed untrammeled for centuries. The invaders in
+turn studied the faces of the Mayorunas, of whom so many gruesome tales
+were told. For long silent minutes primitive and civilized man probed
+each other for signs of treachery--and found none.
+
+Tim, forgetting the orders of the day, spoke out abruptly. At the gruff
+jar of his voice the wild men started and raised their weapons.
+
+"Say, are those guys cannibals? I was lookin' to see some ugly mutts
+with underslung jaws and mops o' frizzy hair, like them Feejee Islanders
+ye see pitchers of. Barrin' the paint, I've seen worse-lookin' fellers
+than these back home."
+
+With which he gave the savages a wide, unmistakably approving grin.
+
+"Shut up!" muttered McKay.
+
+Lourenço, unruffled, made instant capital of Tim's remarks.
+
+"My comrade of the red hair," he said in the Indian tongue, "has never
+before seen the mighty warriors of the Mayorunas, and is astonished to
+find them such handsome men. He says his own countrymen are not so good
+to look upon."
+
+Slowly the menacing arrows sank. As the savages studied Tim's wholesome
+grin and absorbed the broad flattery of Lourenço a slight smile passed
+over their faces. They stood more at ease. The whites sensed at once
+that, for a moment, at least, a friendly footing had been established,
+and relaxed from their own tension.
+
+Once more Lourenço spoke, motioning toward the farther distances. The
+Indian who had first appeared now replied briefly. Two of the others
+stepped back to their trees and lifted long, hollow tubes.
+
+"What's them?" demanded Tim.
+
+"Blowguns," Pedro answered. "They use them for small or thin-skinned
+game. See, the two blowgun men carry also short darts in their quivers,
+and small pouches of poison."
+
+"Uh-huh. They like their poison a dang sight better 'n I do. Say, are
+them guys goin' to march behind us? I don't want no poison needles
+slipped into my back, accidental or other ways."
+
+Two of the savages were walking toward the rear of the line. Knowlton,
+exasperated, snapped out:
+
+"They'll walk where they like, and you'll do well to give us more
+marching and less mouth. You nearly spilled the beans just now, and if
+Lourenço hadn't said something that pleased these fellows we all might
+be in the soup this minute. Pipe down!"
+
+"Aw, Looey, I only said these guys were good-lookin'. Ain't no fight in
+words like that."
+
+"You heard the orders this morning. Let Lourenço do the talking. That
+goes! We're skating on thin ice--so thin that if it breaks we drop plump
+into hell. Less noise!"
+
+"Right, sir," was the sulky answer. "I'm deaf and dumb."
+
+"March," added McKay. The head of the column already was on the move,
+led by the tallest Indian and a blowgun man, behind whom walked the two
+Brazilians. The whole line took up the step in turn and passed on into
+the unknown.
+
+Again McKay consulted his compass at intervals, finding that now the
+route led more to the south, though there still was an easterly trend.
+After a time, however, the telltale needle informed him that they were
+proceeding almost due east, and glances at the surroundings showed that
+on their right was a densely matted mass of undergrowth. Not long
+afterward another interwoven brush wall blocked the way, and this time
+the leader veered to the west. Not until an opening appeared did he
+resume his southward course. It dawned on McKay that the savages, having
+no bush knives, were accustomed to follow the line of least resistance.
+This obviously increased the distance traveled.
+
+The men of Coronel Nunes, too, perceived this. A halt was called, during
+which Lourenço talked with the guide, tapped his machete, and evidently
+protested against needless detours. The leader, with a few words,
+pointed south. Lourenço nodded and replied. The march was resumed, and
+when the next impenetrable tangle was encountered the Indians in the van
+stepped aside, the machetes of the Brazilians flashed out, and a way was
+cut straight through. From that time on the long knives came into
+frequent play and a direct course was maintained.
+
+Suddenly, with a grunt of warning, the tall tribesman stopped. The plan
+of chopping through instead of going around had brought the Indians into
+a part of the forest which they had not heretofore traversed in their
+search for the missing hunter. Now they stood in a small trough between
+the knolls, under good-sized trees around which grew little brush. The
+ground was soft, almost watery. In the damp air, faint but unmistakable,
+hung the odor of death.
+
+The savages at the rear came forward at once. All four of them spread
+out and, sniffing the air, advanced up the trough. A cry broke from one
+of them. The others, and the white men, too, hastened to the spot whence
+the call had come.
+
+Scattered about in the soft muck were bones, two skulls, bits of tawny
+fur, a long bow, several big-game arrows. Around them the ground was
+marked with many tracks. Most of the imprints were of the vultures which
+had stripped the bones, but there were others--those of a barefoot man,
+of a great cat, and of a couple of wild hogs. The peccary tracks went
+straight on, but those of the man and the cat showed that a fierce
+struggle had occurred. And one of the two grinning skulls was that of a
+jaguar.
+
+The story was plain. The hunter, following fast on the trail of the
+hogs, had suddenly met the jaguar. He had shot it; one arrow, blood
+stained for more than a foot above the barb, proved that. But in the few
+seconds of life left to it the animal had sprung and fatally torn the
+man. Then, as usual, had dropped the black scavengers of the sky to rend
+them both.
+
+Silently the men of the bush and the men of the north looked down at the
+brief history written in the mud--a story only a week old, yet ancient
+as human life itself--primitive man and ferocious brute destroying each
+other as in the prehistoric days when saber-toothed tiger and troglodyte
+hunted and slew for the right to live. And as it had been then, so it
+was now. The living read the tale of tragedy and passed on, leaving the
+bones behind them. Only, before they went, the Mayorunas threw the
+remnants of the jaguar aside and piled the bones of their dead comrade
+together in one place. Then, bearing with them his bow and arrows, they
+resumed their way without a word.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+A DUEL WITH DEATH
+
+
+Rain came and went.
+
+The first night's camp of the strangely assorted company was a wet one,
+for well on in the day the skies poured down the watery weight which had
+been troubling them once morning. Yet even in such miserable weather the
+four tribesmen of the Mayorunas declined to sleep in the same camp with
+the whites. They accepted the food tendered them, but when it was eaten
+they withdrew to some covert of their own to spend the night. Whereby
+the whites knew that, though their guides now could no longer suspect
+them of killing the lone hunter, they still were not accepted as
+friends.
+
+"Did ye say them guys had a trick of jabbin' men in their hammicks at
+night, Renzo?" was Tim's significant question after the Indians had
+departed.
+
+"Have no fear," Lourenço assured him. "They have promised to take us
+safely to their chief."
+
+"How much is the word of a cannibal worth?" asked Knowlton.
+
+"Worth everything, so long as you do nothing to make them forget it,
+senhor. Being uncivilized, they are not liars."
+
+The lieutenant eyed him sharply, half minded to regard the answer as
+insolent. But there was no insolence in the Brazilian's straightforward
+gaze, and McKay laughed approvingly.
+
+"Well spoken!" was the captain's comment.
+
+"Among those people there are but two great crimes," Lourenço added.
+"They are, to speak falsely or to be a coward."
+
+"Wherein a goodly portion of the so-called civilized world would fail to
+measure up to the standards of these cannibals," McKay said. "By the
+way, have you asked them about the Raposa?"
+
+"No, Capitao. It is as well not to put into their heads the idea that we
+are hunting anyone here. I shall say nothing of that matter until we
+reach the chief who knows me."
+
+"Good idea."
+
+With that the talk ended and all sought their hammocks, dog tired from
+the day's travel. No watch was kept, for, as Pedro quaintly phrased it,
+"We now are in the hands of God and the cannibals." Nor was any watch
+needed.
+
+Daybreak brought sunlight. While the breakfast coffee was being boiled
+the four wild men appeared silently and simultaneously, one bringing a
+red howling monkey and another a large green parrot as their
+contributions to the morning meal. Neither bird nor animal showed any
+wound except a slightly discolored spot surrounding a skin puncture no
+larger than if made by a woman's hatpin--the marks left by poisoned
+darts from the ten-foot blowguns. When the meat was cooked they offered
+portions to the whites, of whom Tim alone refused.
+
+"I'd as quick eat a rat killed with Paris green," he growled. "No
+poisoned meat gits into my stummick if I know it."
+
+"Bosh!" scoffed McKay. "It's perfectly wholesome--though it's tough as a
+rubber boot."
+
+"And I might tell you, senhores, that among these people it is an insult
+to refuse any food offered you," added Lourenço. "I advise you to forget
+about the poison hereafter and eat what is put before you, even if it
+stinks."
+
+His advice was emphasized by the evident displeasure of the tribesmen,
+who, though saying nothing, looked rather grimly at the man who had
+despised their provisions. But Lourenço then smoothed over the matter by
+telling them that the red-haired man was sick at the stomach that
+morning--which, at that particular moment, was not far from the truth.
+
+Soon the triglot column was once more on its way across the hill
+country, which hourly grew higher and rougher--a constant succession of
+ridges and ravines. Lourenço, pointing out the absence of water marks on
+the trees of the uplands, said that now the land of the great annual
+floods had been left behind; for even the sixty-foot rise of waters in
+the rainy season could not reach to these hilltops. With the entry into
+this terra firma the travelers had also found the sun again, the dank
+mist of yesterday having vanished. Nevertheless, the going was fully as
+hard as on the previous day, because of the density of the bush and of
+the labor of crossing the narrow but deep streams flowing at the bottom
+of nearly every clove. Few words were exchanged, every man needing his
+breath for the work of walking.
+
+As before, the keen machetes of the Brazilians opened a direct route
+through all opposing undergrowth. When a brief halt was called at noon
+the Mayorunas, who seemed to know exactly where they were despite the
+fact that they had never before followed this straight course, informed
+Lourenço that much circuitous traveling had already been saved, and that
+by tramping hard until sundown they might succeed in reaching the tribal
+_maloca_ that night. But McKay vetoed the idea of a forced march.
+
+"This gait is fast enough and hard enough," he declared. "No sense in
+exhausting ourselves to save a few hours' time. Also, we don't want to
+go staggering into the Mayoruna village with our tongues hanging out and
+our knees wabbling. First impressions are lasting with such people, and
+they might get an idea we were weaklings."
+
+To which all except the savages, who did not understand the language of
+the white man, assented approvingly.
+
+Yet it was the Mayorunas themselves who delayed arrival at their
+_maloca_--the Mayorunas and a monkey. When the sinking sun was still two
+hours high, and while the leader was forcing the pace as if determined
+to reach home that night whether the rest liked it or not, the monkey
+upset any such plan.
+
+He was a big gray monkey, and he was high up in the branches of a tall
+matamata tree, where he deemed himself safe from the many creatures
+laboring along the ground below. Wherefore he chattered impudently down
+at them and, as the tall Indian guide halted, showed his teeth
+derisively. The savage grunted. The man behind him also grunted and
+lifted his blowgun. But the leader growled at him and the blowgun sank.
+
+With a swift sweep of the hand the guide drew from his quiver one of
+those long, poisoned arrows and fitted it to the bow cord, which he had
+laid on the ground. With two toes of each foot he held the cord firmly
+on the soil. His right hand lightly grasped the arrow and aimed it up at
+the insolent primate. His left drew the bow up, up, into an arc.
+
+_Twang!_ the cord thrummed as his lifted toes released it. The arrow
+whirred aloft. Then a snarl of chagrin from the marksman blended with
+the grunts of his mates. The arrow had failed to reach the quarry.
+
+It had missed, however, by a mere hand's breadth--missed only because it
+struck the limb directly under the monkey, where it hung by the tip from
+the bark. Muttering something which may have been a Mayoruna
+malediction, the savage moved aside a step or two, drew another arrow,
+and set it to the cord with more care than before. But while he did this
+the monkey was not idle.
+
+Chattering in rage, the animal leaned down, worked the arrow loose from
+the bark, and threw it aside. The deadly shaft turned in air, then
+plunged aimlessly earthward. At that instant all below were watching the
+guide, who in turn was looking at his toes and placing the new arrow in
+position. Unseen, the other missile hurtled down--and ripped across the
+back of the marksman's left hand.
+
+For an instant the tall cannibal stood as if petrified, staring at his
+cut hand and the shaft now sticking upright in the ground beside him.
+Then, in simple symbolism, he reversed the new arrow and stabbed it also
+into the dirt. Dropping his bow, he lay down on his back.
+
+"Yuara will draw bow no more. Yuara goes to join the spirits of the
+dead," he said, calmly.
+
+Mechanically Lourenço translated the words. McKay sprang forward.
+
+"No!" he disputed. "Not without a try for life, anyhow! Merry, sling a
+tourniquet! Quick!"
+
+Knowlton jumped to the side of Yuara, tied a handkerchief above the
+elbow, twisted it tight. McKay whipped from a pocket a keen-bladed
+knife. In one swift ruthless slash he laid open the arm from elbow to
+knuckles.
+
+"Keep that tourniquet tight!" he snapped. "If the blood once gets past
+it he's gone. Tim, get out the salt bag! Lourenço, tell this fellow to
+breathe deep and keep it up!"
+
+While Tim burrowed into his pack for the salt, Lourenço spoke, as much
+for the benefit of the other tribesmen as for that of Yuara; for the
+three Mayorunas stood in ominous silence, watching the outrush of blood
+caused by the knife of the white man.
+
+"The white man of the black beard, who is very wise, will save Yuara to
+draw many a good bow if Yuara will do as he says. Let Yuara breathe
+deeply, that the spirit of life remain in him to fight against the demon
+of death. Even now the poison rushes out of the arm of Yuara."
+
+"Yuara cannot live," was Yuara's cool reply. "Where once the poison has
+entered, there follows death."
+
+"Is Yuara then a coward, that he will die without a fight? Then he is no
+Mayoruna, for no Mayoruna is a coward. Let Yuara die if he will. His
+comrades shall carry to their _maloca_ the tale that, although the white
+man would have saved him, he died like an old woman, because he had not
+the will to live!"
+
+Fire shot into the eyes of the prostrate man. He ground his teeth and
+struggled to rise and throttle the insulting Brazilian.
+
+"No, not that way," Lourenço went on at once. "Yuara can fight the death
+demon only by drawing into himself the air in which is the spirit of
+life. The wise white man has stopped the poison at the place where the
+cloth is tied, and he knows the air spirits will help Yuara if Yuara
+will breathe deep and long. If he will not, then the white man's
+medicine cannot save him. Yuara's life or death is in his own hands."
+
+In his heart Lourenço had faint hope that the injured man would live.
+But he knew the rest of the cannibal tribe must soon hear the tale of
+this incident from the three now present, and he was preparing an
+excellent excuse for the failure of McKay to save him. Whether Yuara
+lived or not, the Mayorunas now would know that the whites had done
+their utmost for him, and that very fact might make a vast difference.
+
+Yuara, though his eyes still flamed, sank back under McKay's restraining
+weight and obeyed orders. After the first couple of breaths he settled
+into his task and his chest rose and fell rhythmically.
+
+"Here's yer salt, Cap. What'll I do with it?"
+
+"You come here and hold this tourniquet. Don't let it slip! Merry, fill
+this chap's mouth with salt. Lourenço, tell him to hold it as long as
+possible, then swallow it. Now, Merry, fix up a good strong salt
+poultice. The rest of you make camp. We've got a stiff fight on our
+hands, and we can't go farther until we've either won or lost."
+
+The Brazilians glanced at the sun shadows and remained where they were.
+According to their experience, Yuara should be dead within ten minutes
+at most. Time enough to make camp when they knew how this venture would
+result. The Mayorunas also stood fast and watched for the shadow of
+death to blanch the face of their stricken mate.
+
+But the minutes dragged past and Yuara's eyes did not grow dim. His
+first resignation over and his fighting blood aroused, he was battling
+grimly against fate. At times his deep respirations were broken by
+sudden gasps, and spasmodic quivers shook his whole body. But he
+breathed on, paying no heed to the burning pain of his ripped and salted
+arm.
+
+"By cripes! he's puttin' up a man's scrap!" blurted Tim. "Stay with it,
+old feller. Ye'll win out yet!"
+
+And as more minutes passed and the wounded man still breathed, a murmur
+of wonderment passed among the cannibals and the men of Nunes. Yuara
+should be dead, yet he was not even paralyzed. Such a thing had never
+before been known in this bush.
+
+Lourenço touched Pedro's arm.
+
+"Find a spot where we can make camp," he said. "I must stay here to
+speak to the wild men if words are needed."
+
+Reluctantly Pedro went away. Soon he was back with news of a suitable
+place. He found all bending closer over Yuara, whose breathing had
+become stertorous and whose eyes seemed fixed.
+
+"Going!" was the bushman's thought. But the others would not have it so.
+
+"How 'bout a shot o' booze to jolt his heart, Cap?" suggested Tim, whose
+whole soul was in the fight.
+
+McKay nodded. Knowlton quickly produced brandy and poured a stiff dose
+down Yuara's throat. It took hold at once, and light came back into the
+Indian's eyes.
+
+"Got a good chance yet," McKay asserted. "Don't loosen that tourniquet.
+Let the arm mortify, if necessary, but hold that blood away from the
+heart at all costs. I'll chop his arm off at the shoulder before I'll
+give in."
+
+His hard-set face showed he meant it.
+
+Lourenço spoke to the Mayorunas, urging that camp be made at once. He
+and Pedro strode away, and all three of the Indians followed.
+
+"Really think he'll pull through, Rod?" Knowlton asked, then. "If he
+does you're a miracle worker."
+
+"It's an experiment," McKay confessed, watching Yuara with unswerving
+intentness. "Never saw this done, but it's worth a try--and I honestly
+believe it will work. I saved an Indian over in Guiana once by cutting
+off his arm as soon as he was hit, but I want to keep this fellow's arm
+for him if possible. Feed him some more salt."
+
+Time passed unheeded. Sounds of labor not far off told that camp was
+being built. Presently the absent five returned, two of the Mayorunas
+carrying a crude but strong litter constructed from saplings and
+giant-fern leaves. McKay rose stiffly on cramped legs.
+
+"All right. You can move him," he consented.
+
+Carefully Yuara was lifted to the litter and transported to the new
+camp. There the Americans found not only the open shed, or _tambo_,
+usually constructed by the Brazilians, but also a somewhat similar
+shelter erected by the Indians. In the latter stood two stout crotched
+stakes, firmly braced--the handiwork of Pedro and Lourenço. And to
+these, with tough bush rope, the Indians fastened the litter of Yuara,
+thus forming a rude but effective hammock.
+
+While McKay and Knowlton continued their ministrations to the stricken
+man the rest of the camp work was completed, the Mayorunas making
+hanging beds for themselves from withes, leaves, and bush cord, and the
+Brazilians slinging the hammocks of their own party and opening packs.
+
+Night fell and the wounded man lived on. Supper was eaten, pipes smoked,
+the regular activities of the early hours of darkness gone through--and
+Yuara lived on. His deep breathing had become automatic, and his eyes
+stared straight up in concentration on his battle with the death demon.
+
+At length he was seized with violent nausea which convulsed him for a
+time. But when the spasms passed he lay back more easily, and a faint
+smile flitted over his face as he looked at the white men.
+
+"Been expecting that," said McKay. "Might loosen that ligature now--just
+a few seconds.... Tighten it! All right." Alter watching the sick man a
+little longer he added: "Now I'm going to eat and smoke. Feel like
+taking a drink, too, but guess I won't. The Indian will pull through
+now, I think."
+
+When he had returned to the Indian hut with pipe aglow, Knowlton asked
+him, "Now tell us how you doped out this cure."
+
+"Combination of various things. Salt is a partial antidote to venom in
+the blood, and I got it into him in three ways--by mouth absorption, by
+the stomach, and by the salt poultice, which drew out some of the poison
+from the forearm and helped neutralize what remained. Ripping his arm of
+course let out a lot of bad blood. Ligature above the elbow stopped most
+of the rest--though some sneaked past that point, I'm pretty sure.
+
+"Big thing, though, was the deep breathing. Remember I told you about
+the experiments that killed mules and an ox? Another experiment was
+this--opening the windpipe of a poisoned mule after the heart stopped,
+inserting a pair of bellows, and starting artificial respiration. After
+four hours of this the mule came to life and stayed alive--though he was
+a wreck for a year afterward.
+
+"I just put all these together, made the Indian do his own
+breathing--and here he is. I'm going to sit up awhile longer and watch
+him, but the critical period is over. You chaps can turn in."
+
+But none turned in until midnight, when no doubt remained that
+Lourenço's prophecy would come true--that Yuara would live to draw bow
+again. Then, when the slashed arm had been thoroughly cleansed and
+bound, Lourenço spoke once more to the savages.
+
+"The medicine of the wise white man and the air spirits have saved Yuara
+from the death demon. Yuara has fought as a man of his tribe should
+fight, and so has lived when he would have died. To-morrow Yuara shall
+once more see his people, the first man of the Mayorunas to come back
+from the death of poison. And he and his comrades shall tell of the
+white man's wisdom, without which he now would lie cold on the ground."
+
+"So shall it be," Yuara himself faintly answered. "Yuara, son of Rana,
+second chief of the men of Suba, will not forget."
+
+"_Por Deus!_" exclaimed Lourenço. "Comrades, this man is no common
+hunter, but son of a subchief. Capitao, you have done good work to-day."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE CANNIBALS
+
+
+Through the long, dim shadows of early morning the little column passed
+on the last leg of its journey to the _maloca_ of Suba, chief of this
+outlying tribe of the Mayorunas. At its head marched Yuara, his left arm
+incased in bandages, his face drawn and pallid, his stride stiff and
+springless, but still carrying his weapons and stoically setting the
+pace as befitted the son of a subchief. He had had no sleep; he had lain
+in the gates of death; his arm ached cruelly; yet a warm glow shone in
+his hollow eyes as he reflected on the fact that in all the unwritten
+history of his people he was the first man to survive the inexorable
+power of the wurali. As long as he lived this fact would lift him above
+the level of all his fellows. Even the chief could not boast of such a
+superhuman feat.
+
+The undergrowth this morning was not so thick as it had been, and the
+machetes of Lourenço and Pedro stayed in their sheaths. The ground, too,
+was more level and the footing more firm. After some three hours of
+walking the Americans found that they had come into a faint path.
+
+Somewhat to the bewilderment of the white men, who expected the Indians
+to increase their speed now that the way home lay under their feet, the
+leading pair slowed their gait. Moreover, they scanned the trail with
+intent care and watched the trees along the way. At length, with a
+warning grunt, Yuara stepped out of the path and began a detour. His
+comrade and the Brazilians followed. The Americans stopped.
+
+"What's the idea?" demanded McKay, looking along the innocent-appearing
+path.
+
+"Probably a man trap, Capitao," answered Pedro. "Follow us."
+
+"Let's see the trap first."
+
+Lourenço called to Yuara, who stopped and grunted two words.
+
+"_Si_, it is a trap. A pit, Yuara says."
+
+Yuara spoke again, and Lourenço added: "He says we must not touch it. It
+is there just before you, covered so cunningly that it looks exactly
+like the rest of the ground. The cover is a framework of sticks balanced
+on a pole, and the instant a man steps on it it gives way. He falls into
+a nine-foot hole whose sides are dug inward, so that they overhang above
+him. There the cannibals find him and kill him. I fell into one of those
+holes when I first came into this Mayoruna country, so I know just how
+they are made."
+
+"So? How did you get out?"
+
+"There were two of us, and I stood on the other man's shoulders while he
+lifted me high enough to jump out. Then I tied bush rope to a tree and
+he climbed up the rope. Come. Yuara waits."
+
+After a short circuit around the danger point the party returned to the
+path, and as they went on Lourenço explained further concerning the pit:
+
+"Every approach to the _malocas_ has this kind of trap hidden in it, and
+others also. The Indians recognize the places by some secret signal
+known only to themselves--a certain kind of stick or vine or something
+of the kind, placed where it can be seen by those who understand. The
+traps are made to stop any enemies who try to sneak up on the _malocas_
+and catch these people unawares. Another kind of trap is a spring bow or
+a blowgun shot by a vine stretched across the path. Still another is a
+piece of ground studded with poisoned araya bones which pierce the bare
+feet of anyone walking on them. It is well for us that we now have
+friendly guides."
+
+"Quite so," McKay agreed, dryly.
+
+Some distance farther on the leader again left the path, and this time
+all filed after him without comment. Pedro pointed significantly at a
+thin, tight-drawn bush cord stretched across the path at the height of a
+man's ankle--the trigger which would discharge hidden death at anything
+touching it. At another point, perhaps a hundred feet farther along, a
+third and last detour was made, and this time the nature of the trap was
+not revealed by anything on the ground. No questions were asked.
+
+With the passing of these three menaces Yuara resumed his former pace
+and abandoned his circumspection. Before long came sounds of communal
+life--the barking of a dog and shouts of children. Then suddenly the
+forest thinned, and after a few more strides the marchers found
+themselves in a clearing.
+
+Before them rose a big round house, about forty feet high and a hundred
+feet in diameter, its sides composed of palm logs, and its roof a thick
+thatch of palm leaves, whence smoke oozed lazily through an opening at
+the peak. A single low door, not more than four feet high, opened toward
+a creek a few rods away at the right. Near this doorway a couple of
+naked children, boy and girl, were playing with the dog, while beyond
+them a number of women, also nude, were busy at some kind of work.
+
+As Yuara and his fellow-tribesmen entered the open space the boy shouted
+a greeting and started running toward them. Then, seeing the white men
+filing from the bush behind the warriors, the youngster stood as if
+shocked motionless. After one long stare he screamed and bolted for the
+shelter of the _maloca_. Other screams echoed his as the women also saw
+the bearded outlanders. They, too, dived through the doorway.
+
+Out from behind the house leaped three warriors, two of whom already had
+fitted arrows to their bows, while the third--a powerful
+fellow--clutched a four-foot war club. Weapons raised, faces contracted
+into fighting masks, they stared speechless at the spectacle of the
+subchief's son calmly leading gun-bearing whites among them.
+
+Knowlton, though his attention was riveted on the astonished warriors,
+caught the quiet snick of Tim's safe-lock being turned off.
+
+"None of that, Tim!" he warned. "Put that safety on again. And don't
+hold your gun as if you intended to use it."
+
+"Aw, I was jest tryin' her to make sure she was all right."
+
+"Put it on!" snapped the lieutenant. Another tiny click told him the
+order was obeyed.
+
+Out from the doorway darted another warrior, stooping low to avoid
+hitting his head. Others followed instantly, all armed and ready for
+action. The opening was still vomiting tribesmen when Yuara and the rest
+reached it. But none made a hostile move when it was seen that the son
+of the subchief was in command and that the strangers seemed friendly.
+Yuara spoke, briefly but authoritatively, and the weapons sank. Then,
+with a word to his three companions, he ducked through the doorway. The
+other three remained where they were.
+
+"We shall have to wait now, comrades, until Yuara tells his father and
+the chief about us," Lourenço said. "So let us take off our packs and
+rest."
+
+He set the example by laying his rifle on the ground, unslinging his
+pack, squatting beside it, and coolly rolling a cigarette. Apparently he
+was paying no attention whatever to the savages, who watched his every
+move. But McKay, glancing at him as he followed suit, saw that, for all
+his seeming unconcern, the Brazilian bush rover was keenly watchful and
+that his gun lay within reach of his hand.
+
+From within the tribal house sounded the monotonous voice of Yuara.
+After listening a moment Lourenço quietly addressed the nearest warrior.
+A slightly surprised looked passed over the cannibal's face. He replied,
+and a slow conversation ensued.
+
+Meanwhile the others looked over the array of savage fighting men.
+Except for difference of stature, build, and expression, they were as
+like as brothers. All were light skinned--hardly darker than the
+river-tanned whites themselves; all had straight-set eyes, with no hint
+of the slant often found among the Indians of the Amazon headwaters; and
+the cheek bones of all were fairly low. Their average stature was a
+little under six feet, and most of them had an athletic symmetry of
+physique. Their feet, McKay noticed, were small and shapely.
+
+All wore tall feather headdresses of parrot and mutum plumes. All had
+the scarlet and black rings around the eyes, the streaks from temple to
+chin, the wavy design on their bodies. And each wore in the cartilage of
+his nose a pair of small feathers slanting outward. At another time and
+under other circumstances the white men might have smiled at those nose
+feathers, which resembled odd mustaches; but as they studied the austere
+faces around them they found no occasion for merriment. Nor was the
+tension lessened by the sight of the weapons grasped in the strong hands
+of the warriors.
+
+Great bows and arrows, such as the hunters had borne, were supplemented
+here by the long clubs of heavy wood and by ugly spears. The clubs
+terminated in balls studded with jaguar teeth. The spears were triple
+pronged, each prong ending in a saw-toothed araya bone and each bone
+darkened by the fatal wurali. Frightful weapons they were--the one
+designed to smash skulls and tear out brains, the other to stab and
+poison at the same thrust.
+
+Lourenço stopped talking, and the others observed that now the wild men
+stood more easily, their holds on their weapons loosened.
+
+"I have shown them, Capitao, that I can speak their tongue, and told
+them we go to visit the chief Monitaya as friend," he explained. "They
+tell me Monitaya has grown great since last I saw him. Another tribe
+which lost its chief and subchiefs by a swift sickness has joined his
+own, and he now rules two big _malocas_ together. He is a powerful
+fighter, and if he is friendly to us we have a good chance of success.
+Ah! here is Yuara."
+
+The son of the subchief came through the doorway as he spoke, followed
+by an older man whose facial resemblance and ornaments indicated that he
+was the subchief himself. His headgear was more elaborate than that of
+his men, and around his shoulders and down his chest hung a brilliant
+feather dress, while a wide belt of green, blue, and black plumes
+encircled his hips. Yuara himself had inserted feathers in his nose and
+donned a headband of tall parrot plumes a trifle more ornate than those
+worn by the ordinary fighters, and somehow the simple addition seemed to
+transform him into a bigger, fiercer man. Also, his eyes now held a
+smoldering light which had not been there before.
+
+The older man, Rana, the subchief, glanced swiftly along the line of new
+faces. Then his gaze returned to McKay. His mouth set and his
+countenance turned hard. He spoke curtly to Yuara, who replied with one
+word. After another long, unpleasant look at McKay, who stared coldly
+back at him, Rana grunted a few words and re-entered the house.
+
+Lourenço, nonplussed by the frigidity of the subchief where he had
+expected gratitude or at least hospitality, glanced questioningly at
+Yuara. But the young man stood mute, looking straight ahead.
+
+"The subchief says we shall enter and see the chief. We must leave our
+guns outside."
+
+"Don't like that," muttered McKay. "That subchief looks ugly."
+
+"But we must obey or provoke a fight, Capitao. Besides, our rifles would
+be useless inside, as they would be instantly seized if we lifted them.
+So let us make the best of it. But I think you can carry your pistols
+with you; they are covered by the holsters, and I do not believe these
+people know what they are. And since Rana spoke only of guns, we will
+keep our machetes. Come."
+
+"Wait a second."
+
+McKay dived a hand into his haversack and brought forth a heavy hunting
+knife with a gaudy red-and-white bone handle, sheathed and attached to a
+leather belt.
+
+"Brought this along as a present for some Indian who might do us a good
+turn," he explained. "Been thinking of giving it to Yuara, but now I'll
+pass it to the chief. Might make a difference. All right, let's go."
+
+With confident tread, but with some misgiving, the five advanced,
+leaving guns and packs on the ground. One by one they bent low and got
+through the doorway. Yuara, with a word to a clubman and a motion to the
+equipment, followed the whites, trailed in turn by his three companions
+of the forest. The clubman, after a curious inspection of the packs,
+stood on guard among them, his bludgeon grasped loosely but
+suggestively, ready to prevent any undue inquisitiveness by the rest.
+But soon he found himself alone, for the other tribesmen transferred
+their attention and themselves to the interior of the _maloca_.
+
+Within the house the soldiers of fortune halted a moment, adjusting
+their vision to the sudden diminution of light. Except for the sunshine
+pouring in at the smoke hole above and at the tiny door behind, the only
+light in the big room came from small cooking fires scattered about the
+place, and for the moment details were withheld from the newcomers'
+sight. Then they found themselves in what seemed a labyrinth of poles
+and hammocks.
+
+Through this confusion Yuara passed with familiar step, and in his wake
+the travelers went to a central fire around which was a comparatively
+clear space. Beyond, in a big hammock dyed with the symbolic scarlet and
+black and tasseled with many squirrel tails, sat a fat, small-eyed,
+heavy-jawed man whose elaborate feather dress and authoritative air
+proclaimed him chief. Beside him stood Rana and another subchief, lean
+and somber-faced. Behind this bulwark of tribal might huddled the women
+and children, staring wide-eyed. As the visitors stopped and returned
+the chief's unwinking regard the warriors packed themselves at their
+backs, blocking all chance of exit.
+
+When the shuffle of feet had died and no sound was audible, Yuara began
+to talk. In his deliberate way he told the complete narrative of his
+journey, which previously he had sketched only in outline. His three
+companions corroborated his tale from time to time by nods, and when the
+discovery of the slain hunter's bones was described one of those three
+stepped forward and laid the dead man's weapons on the ground before the
+chief. As Yuara went on he touched his bandaged arm and pointed to McKay
+and Knowlton. And as he concluded he motioned toward Lourenço.
+
+Ignorant of the Indian language, but guessing the nature of his talk
+from his motions, the Americans stood patiently awaiting the next move.
+For a time all three of the chiefs remained silent; but all of them
+studied McKay, standing bolt upright with arms folded and the
+belt-wrapped knife partly concealed in the hollow of one elbow. Though
+it was evident that Yuara had given the captain full credit for saving
+his life, the faces of the head men showed no sign of friendliness. In
+fact, their expressions were distinctly ominous.
+
+At length the chief turned his eyes to Lourenço. The veteran bushman
+promptly stepped forward and said his say. At the end he turned, took
+from McKay the knife, unrolled the belt, and dangled the weapon before
+the eyes of the rulers. They stared at it in obvious ignorance of its
+character. Not until the Brazilian drew the blade from its sheath and
+the glint of steel struck their vision did they show recognition. Then
+Chief Suba grunted, his little eyes lit up, and he reached for it.
+
+For a few minutes he sat gloating over the gift, admiring the bone
+handle, hefting the weight of the long blade, while the subchiefs gazed
+in envy. When he looked up his face was beaming. But then the sour-faced
+subchief at his left hand muttered something, and Suba's visage
+darkened. His eyes rested again on McKay, went to the bandaged arm of
+Yuara, dropped to his knife--the first steel knife ever owned by him or
+any man of the Suba tribe--and rose again to the black-bearded captain.
+Abruptly then he spoke out.
+
+Lourenço stared in blank astonishment. After a puzzled moment he shook
+his head as if unable to believe he had heard aright. Suba, scowling,
+repeated what he had said. Lourenço shook his head again, this time in
+vehement denial, and began to talk. But Suba, rising with surprising
+agility for a man of his weight, stopped him imperiously and spoke with
+finality. Slowly the Brazilian nodded and turned to his captain.
+
+"I do not understand this, Capitao. But these are the words of the
+chief:
+
+"'The white man with the black beard tries a trick, but it does not
+deceive the free men of the forest. The thing which he thinks to be
+hidden in his own heart is known to Suba and his chiefs. It is known
+also to the chief Monitaya, and to his chiefs, and to his men also. The
+white man is bold. And now his own boldness shall be his death.
+
+"'Since the white man has said he goes to visit the chief Monitaya, and
+since by some demon's power the white man has saved the life of Yuara,
+who is a man of Suba, the men of Suba will allow him to go in peace from
+this place. But Suba will see that he and his companions go to Monitaya,
+who will know how to deal with his visitors. The men of Suba will take
+the strangers at once to the canoes and carry them to Monitaya.
+
+"'If the white man of the black beard and the black mind thought the men
+of the jungle blind to the foulness he would do here, he is a fool. It
+is useless for him or his men to lie and say they know not what Suba
+means. Let him look into his own heart and he will know well.
+
+"'Suba has spoken.'
+
+"Something is wrong, Capitao, but I do not know what it is. It will do
+no good to argue. Let us go at once."
+
+Suba snarled commands to the warriors. They trooped toward the door.
+Without another word or glance at the three chiefs Lourenço stalked
+after the Indians, and his comrades followed with stiff dignity.
+
+Outside, the savages picked up the rifles and packs and carried them to
+the creek, where small canoes lay. The five strangers were allowed to
+crowd themselves together in a four-man canoe, but their guns and packs
+were distributed among four other dugouts, into which armed paddlers
+entered. Other Indians brought provisions to the outgoing craft. In a
+very short time the leading canoe started off downstream, followed by
+the boat of the white men, behind which the other craft pressed close
+and vigilant.
+
+They swung in among the trees, and the _maloca_ of Suba was blotted out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+BLACKBEARD
+
+
+"Well," said Knowlton, after a period of silent paddling, "we have met
+the enemy and we are his'n. No harm done so far, though, and if old man
+Calisaya, or whatever his name is, wants to act nasty we can send him
+and a few others along the road to glory with our gats. We'll travel the
+same road, of course, but we'll take company with us."
+
+"_Si_, senhor," Pedro agreed. "And besides your pistols we still have
+our machetes. Yet I believe Lourenço's words to the chief Monitaya will
+make all well. But I cannot help wondering--" He glanced at McKay.
+
+"I'm wondering, too, Pedro," said the captain. "It's hardly possible
+that these people know why we're here, and hardly likely that they have
+any interest in the Raposa. Lord knows I've nothing else up my sleeve.
+It's a riddle to me."
+
+It remained a riddle to the rest, for no explanation could be gleaned
+from the Mayorunas. At the first halt, which did not come until nearly
+sundown, the Americans discovered that one of the men in the fore canoe
+was Yuara, who had been lying in the bottom of the craft and sleeping
+all the afternoon. From him Lourenço attempted to get information as to
+the reason for Suba's enmity--but in vain. The tall fellow spoke not a
+word in reply, and his face remained unreadable.
+
+Camp was made, and by Yuara's direction the packs of the adventurers
+were restored to them. The rifles, however, remained under guard of
+savages appointed by the subchief's son. When the night meal was out of
+the way nothing remained but to seek hammocks and sleep, for further
+attempts at conversation by Lourenço met with the same silent rebuff
+from every cannibal addressed. None showed active hostility by either
+look or manner, but it was plain that between wild and civilized men
+stood a wall--a wall not too high for the jungle dwellers to leap over
+in deadly action if occasion should be given. Wherefore the whites held
+themselves aloof, said little, and slept early.
+
+"I am glad Yuara is with us," Lourenço said. "As he promised, he does
+not forget what was done for him. He will keep this band in control, and
+unless I am much mistaken he will tell Monitaya all he knows of us,
+which surely will not do us any harm. At any rate, we can sleep in
+safety to-night. And since it does no good to puzzle about what is gone
+by or to worry about what has not yet to come to pass, let us sleep
+now."
+
+"Ho-hum!" yawned Tim. "Renzo, ye spill more solid sense to the square
+inch than any feller I seen in a long time. We're here because we're
+here; to-day's dead and to-morrer ain't born yet, and li'l' Timmy Ryan
+hits the hay right now. Night, gents."
+
+So, surrounded by man eaters, the trailers of the Raposa slept far more
+securely than on any night down the river when their companions had been
+supposedly civilized Peruvians. Whether a watch was kept by their guards
+during the night they neither knew nor cared, since they had no
+intention of attempting escape.
+
+They awoke to find the men of Suba diminished in number by half. Yuara,
+deigning to speak for the first time since leaving the _maloca_,
+explained that the absent men had gone hunting for their breakfasts.
+Before long the hunters came straggling back, bearing monkeys and birds,
+which were divided among their companions. None of this meat was offered
+to the prisoners, who ate unconcernedly from their pack rations. Tim,
+after watching the Indians sink their sharp-filed teeth into broiled
+monkey haunches and tear the meat from the bones, snorted and turned his
+back to them.
+
+"Look like a gang o' bloody-faced devils gobblin' babies," he muttered.
+"I'll believe now they're cannibals, all right."
+
+So uncomfortably apt was his simile that the others grimaced and turned
+their eyes elsewhere until the savage meal was finished. Then their
+attention became riveted on a queer proceeding at the canoe wherein
+Yuara had journeyed yesterday.
+
+To the gunwales amidships two of the men fastened a couple of small
+crotched posts. In the forks was laid a pole, crosswise of the boat, and
+from this, by slender fiber cords, four slabs of wood were hung.
+Strolling down to the canoe, the travelers found that athwart its bottom
+had been laid a crosspiece supporting two shorter crotched posts,
+between which stretched another transverse pole; and from this pole in
+turn the lower ends of the four slabs had been suspended. Now the
+savages joined the tips of each pair of slabs by carved end sections,
+and the contrivance seemed to be complete--a sort of grate, its bars
+sloping at an angle of forty-five degrees.
+
+As the Americans eyed the arrangement in perplexity, one of the crew
+picked up from the bow of the canoe a pair of mallets the heads of which
+were wrapped in hide. With these he struck the slabs in rapid
+succession. Out rolled four notes of astonishing volume--the first four
+notes of the musical scale. Again and again he ran them over, then
+stopped. The deep tones thrummed away along the creek and died.
+
+"By George! a big xylophone!" Knowlton exclaimed, admiringly.
+
+"It sure talks right out loud," said Tim. "Lot o' class to these guys,
+at that. Bet this is their brass band, and we'll go rip-snortin' into
+the next town like we was on parade. Oughter have some flags to hang up
+in the boats, and mebbe a drum corps to help out. Wisht I had a tin
+whistle or somethin' and I'd join the orchester. I can toot a whistle
+fine."
+
+"My favorite instrument is the old-fashioned dinner horn," laughed
+Knowlton. "But I think you're wrong--this is some kind of signaling
+apparatus."
+
+"You have it right, senhor," Lourenço affirmed. "I have heard this sort
+of thing used, though I never before saw the instrument itself. Those
+notes will carry at least five miles, and the cannibals send messages by
+striking the bars in different order. This run which we have just heard
+is always used first, and no message is sent until a reply is received."
+
+"Bush telegraph," nodded McKay. "First call your operator and then shoot
+the message in code. Pretty ingenious for a bunch of absolute savages."
+
+Lourenço turned to Yuara and asked a question. Yuara curtly replied.
+
+"He says, Capitao, that this is to tell Monitaya we come. But we now are
+too far off for Monitaya's men to hear. The bars are made ready before
+starting so that they can be used as soon as we are within hearing. He
+says also that we start now."
+
+The Mayorunas already were entering their canoes. With cool deliberation
+the whites gathered up their equipment and settled themselves for the
+journey at whose end lay either life or death. The boat of Yuara
+started, and once more the flotilla was on its way.
+
+For an hour or more it swung on among the forested hills before the
+telegraph instrument was put to use. Then it paused, and the sonorous
+voice of the xylophone spoke to the jungle. A period of waiting brought
+no reply.
+
+The canoe moved on for a mile. Again the mallets beat the wood in the
+ascending scale of the call. And then, faint, mellow, far off, sounded
+the answer.
+
+While every man sat silent the bars boomed out their fateful news. Slow,
+brief, deep as a bell tolling a dirge, a reply rolled back. And with the
+solemnity of a funeral cortége the canoes once more moved on, unhurried,
+inexorable, the measured swing of the paddles beating like a pulse of
+doom.
+
+At length the crew of Yuara held their paddles. Yuara himself turned
+toward the second canoe and talked a minute. A signal to his men, and
+his boat proceeded. All the others remained where they were.
+
+"He goes to Monitaya to speak of us," said Lourenço. "He will return. We
+have only to wait."
+
+"Yeah," grunted Tim, disgustedly. "We'll wait till night if he takes as
+long to go through his rigmarole as he done yesterday. If I got to fight
+I want to hop to it, not set round in the shade o' the shelterin' palm
+while them guys are heatin' up the stewpot. This waitin' stuff gits my
+goat."
+
+"You might sing us a song, senhor, to pass the time," Pedro suggested,
+with a tight-lipped smile.
+
+"Say, I'll do that, jest to show these guys I don't give a rip. And
+while their ears are dazzled by me melody I'm goin' to git me holster
+unbottoned and me masheet kinder limbered up. Git set. Here it comes:
+
+ "Ol' Hindyburg thought he was swell,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ He made the kids in Belgium yell,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ But the Yanks come over with shot and shell
+ And Hindyburg he run like hell,
+ Rinkydinky-parley-voo!"
+
+Under cover of his outbreak, which made the savages clutch their weapons
+and glare at him in mingled suspicion and amazement, there proceeded a
+furtive loosening of pistols and machetes.
+
+"A noble sentiment, and more or less appropriate," grinned Knowlton.
+"But don't give them another spasm for a few minutes, or they may rise
+up and kill us all in self-defense. They're on the ragged edge now."
+
+"Aw, them guys dunno how to appreciate good singin'. But I should worry;
+I got me gat fixed now like I want it."
+
+Time dragged past. The Americans and Brazilians smoked and exchanged
+casual comments on subjects far removed from their present environment.
+The Mayorunas watched them with unceasing vigilance, as if expecting a
+sudden break for life and liberty. Their chief had intimated that
+Monitaya would kill these men; and now was their last chance to try to
+dodge death. But neither the black-bearded McKay nor any of his mates
+manifested the slightest concern. And at last the canoe of Yuara came
+back.
+
+It came, however, without Yuara himself. The son of Rana had remained at
+the _malocas_ ahead, whence he sent the command to advance. Closely
+hemmed in by the men of Suba, the white men's boat surged onward at a
+brisk pace. Around a bend in the creek it went, and at once the domain
+of Monitaya leaped into view.
+
+Two big tribal houses, each considerably larger than the one of Suba,
+rose pompously in a wide cleared space beside the stream. Before them,
+ranged in a semicircle, stood hundreds of Mayorunas--men, women,
+children--all silently watching the canoes of the newcomers. In the
+center of the arc, like the hub of a human half wheel, a small knot of
+men waited in aloof dignity, four of them adorned with the ornate
+feather dresses of subchiefs, backed by a dozen tall, muscular savages,
+each armed with a huge war club. Before all stood a powerful,
+magnificently proportioned savage belted with a wide girdle of squirrel
+tails, decked with necklaces of jaguar teeth and ebony nuts, crowned by
+plumes which in loftiness and splendor surpassed all other headgear
+present--the great chief Monitaya.
+
+At the shore, beside a row of empty canoes, Yuara was waiting. He
+mentioned for his men to bring their dugouts to the regular landing
+place, and when they obeyed he gave commands. Then he turned and walked
+toward Monitaya.
+
+"I go," stated Lourenço, rising. "You stay here until called. Yuara has
+told his men to leave all weapons in the canoes."
+
+He walked away after the son of Rana, and if any misgiving was in his
+heart it did not show in his confident step. Halting before the big
+chief, he began talking as coolly as if there were not the least doubt
+of welcome for himself and those with him. Monitaya gave no sign of
+recognition, of friendliness, or of enmity. Proud, statuesque, he stood
+motionless, his deep eyes resting on those of the Brazilian.
+
+"Sultry weather," remarked McKay.
+
+"Just so, Capitao," agreed Pedro, narrow eyed. "We shall soon know
+whether we shall have storm."
+
+"Indications are for violent thunder and lightning soon," Knowlton
+contributed. "See those husky clubmen awaiting? Looks as if a public
+execution were about to be pulled off."
+
+"Yeah. But say, ain't that chief a reg'lar he-man, though! No
+pot-bellied fathead like that there, now, Suby guy. Hope I don't have to
+drill him. I bet I won't, neither. He looks like he had brains."
+
+Hoping Tim was right, but dubious, all watched the progress of the
+parley. Lourenço evidently was stating his case in logical sequence,
+recalling to the chief's mind the time when he had led him to revenge
+against the Peccaries of Peru, then going on to tell of the arrival of
+the strangers and the object of their search. Yuara's sudden, quick
+glance at him showed that the Raposa had been mentioned for the first
+time. A little later his face became slightly sullen, and the watchers
+guessed that Lourenço was now referring in somewhat uncomplimentary
+terms to the treatment received in the _maloca_ of Suba. Soon after that
+the Brazilian ended his speech.
+
+In a deep, quiet tone Monitaya spoke first to Lourenço, then to one of
+his subchiefs. The bushman beckoned to his waiting companions. At the
+same time the subchief stepped out and called two names. As McKay,
+Knowlton, Tim, and Pedro arose and stepped ashore with the weaponless
+men of Suba, out from the great human arc came two men. All advanced
+toward the chief. And though the Americans were studying the central
+figures as they walked, they also noticed that the pair of Mayorunas who
+had been summoned were lame. One walked with a stiff knee, the other as
+if a whole leg was paralyzed.
+
+"Squad--halt!" muttered McKay. A step and a half and the four stood
+aligned and alert, two strides from Monitaya.
+
+The eyes of the chief dwelt long on McKay, and they were hard eyes.
+Without shifting his gaze he grunted a few words. The two crippled
+Indians stumped forward and stared into McKay's face. Through a long
+minute the Americans felt a sinister tension grow in the air about them.
+Then, slowly, the cripples turned about and faced their ruler. In the
+tones of men sure of themselves, they spoke one word.
+
+With the utterance of that word the tension broke. Through the long line
+of watching tribesmen ran a murmur. The clubmen relaxed from their ready
+poise. The subchiefs glanced at one another as if disappointed. And the
+stern face of Monitaya himself was transformed by a wide, friendly
+smile.
+
+A sweeping gesture and the cordial timbre of the chief's voice told the
+Americans plainly what Lourenço translated a moment later.
+
+"We are welcome, comrades. We shall sleep in the _maloca_ of Monitaya
+himself and a feast shall be made for us. Our lives have just hung on
+one word, but now that the word is spoken we are safe. I cannot tell you
+more now, for I do not wholly understand this matter myself as yet--but
+I shall learn. Now is the time, Capitao to give presents, if you have
+any for the chief."
+
+"I have. But our packs are in the canoe, and I'll be hanged if I'll make
+a beast of burden of myself at this stage of the game."
+
+"I will have all the packs brought up, Capitao. The men of Suba took
+them from us at their _maloca_; now they shall restore them before all
+these people."
+
+He addressed Monitaya affably, then spoke more brusquely to Yuara. That
+young man, whose previous austerity now had dissolved into open
+friendliness, uttered four words. Immediately his men returned to the
+canoes and brought up not only the packs, but the rifles.
+
+From his blanket roll McKay brought forth a cloth-wrapped package out of
+which he drew a half-ax, its blade gleaming dully under a protective
+coating of grease, which he swiftly swabbed off. From his haversack he
+produced a heavy chain of ruby-red beads. Under the bright sun the beads
+glowed like living things, and the glittering steel flashed back a
+dazzling beam. The two gifts together had cost considerably less than
+ten dollars in New York, but to the chieftain they were priceless
+treasures; and as McKay, with a formal bow, extended them to him, his
+face shone with delight. Yet he made no such greedy grab for them as had
+been displayed by Suba when tendered the knife. His acceptance was
+achieved with a calm dignity which brought a twinkle of approval to the
+eyes of the white men.
+
+In the same dignified manner he led the way to the _maloca_ which
+evidently was the older of the two and which had always been his home.
+The semicircle of his subjects broke up into a disorderly crowd which
+streamed after him and his guests or surrounded the men of Suba with
+holiday greetings. Within the tribal house the adventurers proceeded to
+the central space where burned the chief's fire. There Monitaya ordered
+certain hammocks removed to make room for those of the visitors. Soon
+the travelers were seated at ease in their hanging beds, their packs and
+rifles lying on the ground beneath them, while near at hand clustered
+groups of Mayorunas, staring at them in naïve curiosity.
+
+Pedro drew a long breath.
+
+"Senhores, that was a very close call," he declared. "As Lourenço says,
+our lives have hung on one word. What was that word, comrade?"
+
+"The word was, 'No,'" answered Lourenço. "Monitaya asked those two
+crippled men, 'Is this the man?' As you saw, they looked at the capitao,
+giving no attention to the rest of us. Then they said, 'No.' You will
+remember that the capitao was the one whom Suba also picked upon. As
+soon as Monitaya finishes talking with those men I shall ask him what
+all this means."
+
+The big chief was giving directions to a score of young fellows, who
+presently scattered to various parts of the house and accoutered
+themselves for hunting. Thereupon Lourenço approached Monitaya with the
+familiarity of former acquaintance, being received with a good-humored
+smile. For a time the two conversed. As they talked the smile of the
+ruler faded and his face grew dark, while into the Brazilian's voice
+came a wrathful growl. Finally both nodded. Lourenço returned to his
+hammock, frowning.
+
+"Capitao, it is all because of your black hair and beard. Through all
+the _malocas_ of the Mayorunas, far and near, has gone the word to watch
+for a big, black-bearded man who is neither a Brazilian nor a Peruvian,
+but of some country unknown to these people; and when such a man is
+caught, to kill him and his companions without mercy. And the reason for
+such a command is this:
+
+"For many moons the Mayorunas, especially those of the smaller and
+weaker _malocas_, have been losing women. From time to time sudden raids
+have been made by gangs of gun-carrying Peruvian Indians and
+_mestiços_--half-breeds--who shot down the defenders of the houses
+before they could reach their weapons, and carried off girls. This, of
+course, is nothing new here, for such things have happened occasionally
+for many years. But within the past five years there has been a
+difference in these attacks which has made them much more deadly.
+
+"These raids used to be made always at night, and they were few and far
+between. But of late they have come about also in the day, at times when
+almost all the men of the small _malocas_ were far out in the forest
+hunting meat and the women had little protection. Several chiefs have
+been killed by the raiders, who seemed to be acting according to an
+agreed plan, to be organized for this work, and to know when to strike
+and how to get away quickly. And what is more, the men who did this were
+not chance parties who came only to get women for themselves and then
+stayed away. The same men came back time after time.
+
+"A few of these were killed, but only a few; and all the dead were
+Peruvians. Being dead, they could tell nothing. But the Mayorunas felt
+that all these raids were directed by one mind. And they became sure of
+this when one captured girl escaped by killing a Peruvian with his own
+knife and returned to her own _maloca_. She said the raiders took her
+and the other girls to the big man with the black beard, who waited at a
+safe place a day's march from the tribal house.
+
+"A few weeks later another small _maloca_ several miles from here was
+attacked at night while two men of Monitaya were there, having stayed
+out too late on a hunting trip and taken refuge with their neighbors
+until day. Both these men were hit and crippled by bullets in the wild
+shooting that opened the attack. One was struck in the knee, the other
+in the lower part of the back. But both caught a glimpse of the leader's
+face and saw that he was the black-bearded man himself.
+
+"So you see, Capitao, why we have been near death. Suba and Monitaya
+both thought you were the man. We were lucky to escape alive from Suba,
+and still more lucky that hero were two men who knew the face of the
+blackbeard."
+
+"Schwandorf!" barked McKay.
+
+"Yes, Capitao, it must be the German--"
+
+"I know it's Schwandorf! And I know his game! He's a slaver!"
+
+"A slaver?"
+
+"That's it. Knew I'd seen that sneak before. He worked the same game in
+British Guiana eight years ago on a small scale. Had a gang of tough
+bush niggers from over in Dutch Guiana to do his dirty work. Stole
+Macusi girls--they're the best-looking Indians in B. G.--and sold them
+like cattle to gold miners. Cleaned up quite a pot before the English
+got on to him, but had to get out of the country on the hot foot--didn't
+have time to take his gold with him. His name wasn't Schwandorf over
+there, and he had no beard; he was thinner, too, and posed as a Russian;
+but he's the man. Must have made his get-away by the back door--down the
+Branco to the Amazon. Now he's running Mayoruna girls into Peru. He
+could sell them to rubber men or miners and make good money, eh,
+Lourenço?"
+
+"_Si._"
+
+"Sure. And that's why he wanted to kill off his Peruvians--they knew too
+much; probably were trying to bleed him for hush money. He must have a
+regular slave route and a gang of border cutthroats to do his
+raiding--men who don't go downriver. Murderer, slaver--wonder how many
+other crimes are on his soul."
+
+"Them two are enough," growled Tim. "And he 'ain't got no soul."
+
+"No soul," echoed Pedro. "You have said it, Senhor Tim. And if ever
+these people capture him he soon will have no body."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+FEVER
+
+
+In the _maloca_ of Monitaya a feast was in the making.
+
+Fires glowed all about the great room. Hunters came in, bearing birds or
+beasts which were placed before the tribal ruler for inspection and
+approval. Fishermen armed with tridents or crude harpoons arrived with
+sizable trophies of their skill. And at length two young bowmen advanced
+proudly with a freshly killed wild hog. After glancing at this the chief
+added to his usual nod a few words of praise which made the huntsmen
+grin with all their pointed teeth.
+
+Lourenço, squatting comfortably on a jaguar skin beside the lavishly
+decorated hammock of Monitaya, carried on a lazy-toned monologue which
+probably dealt with his various experiences since his last meeting with
+these people and which appeared to interest and amuse the chief. The
+others, lolling back in mingled fatigue and relief from tension, studied
+the interior of the place and watched the activities around them.
+
+As in the _maloca_ of Suba, the small forest of poles and hammocks
+seemed a higgledy-piggledy maze wherein was neither beginning nor end.
+Yet, as the newcomers took time to observe it, they presently found that
+the confusion was only apparent and that there existed an efficient and
+orderly arrangement. The hammocks, seemingly slung from any available
+pair of poles in utter disregard of one another, really were arranged in
+triangles. On the ground under the hanging beds lay woven grass mats and
+hides of the sloth and the jaguar; and in the space inclosed by each
+trio of hammocks burned a small fire. The hammocks were the beds of men,
+the mats and furs the couches of women and children, and each fire was
+the focal point of the family residing in that triangle.
+
+Above the hammocks, from transverse poles, were suspended the weapons of
+the men: the great bows, the long blowguns, the fighting spears whose
+deadly points now were sheathed in thick scabbards of grass, the
+unpoisoned fish spears and harpoons. From these poles also hung the
+quivers of arrows and darts and the small rubber-covered pouches wherein
+a little fresh poison was carried by warrior or hunter. Thus both the
+ground and the air were utilized, and by the compactness of the
+arrangement an entire family with its worldly goods, was enabled to live
+in a comparatively small space. Looking around the wide room and
+remembering the big half circle of Indians who had stood outside, the
+two ex-officers estimated that in this tribal house and its twin dwelt
+seven hundred people.
+
+Tim and Pedro, less interested in the Mayoruna domestic economy than in
+the Mayorunas themselves, were scanning the figures moving about in the
+reddish haze of smoke. Most of them were women, all nude and naïvely
+unconscious of any need of clothing. Like the men of the tribe, they
+bore the red and black rings and streaks on face and body; but, unlike
+the males, each wore a facial ornament in the shape of an oval piece of
+wood thrust through the lower lip. From time to time those near by
+glanced up from their work and gave the new men unmistakably friendly
+looks--particularly several young but well-grown girls who obviously
+were still unmated. In fact, these last smiled openly at the lithe,
+handsome Pedro, and red Tim was by no means overlooked.
+
+"I got me orders," said Tim, _sotto voce_, "and I'm danged if I crack a
+smile back at them girls. But I sure feel like grinnin'. Watch yourself,
+old-timer; they're tryin' to flirt with ye."
+
+Pedro, mindful of watchful eyes, turned his gaze to Tim's face before
+allowing himself to smile. Then he laughed.
+
+"Do not fear," he said. "My heart is still my own."
+
+"Same here. Specially when I remember these females would grin jest the
+same if them club swingers had spattered our brains all over the front
+yard awhile back. But I wisht sombody'd give the girls a nightie or
+somethin' to wear. I been around some and I seen quite a lot, but I
+ain't used to bein' vamped by a bunch of undressed kids with goo-goo
+eyes the size of a plate o' fish balls. I'm only a bashful country kid
+from N'Yawk."
+
+"Live and learn," chuckled Pedro. "And clothes really have nothing to do
+with modesty."
+
+"True for ye. Clothes is mostly a disguise, anyhow, specially with
+women, and an awful expense, besides. These guys are lucky, I'll say;
+they 'ain't got to buy their wives no fur coats or silk stockin's or
+nothin'. All the same, I got all I can do to hold me face straight when
+I see these li'l owl-eyes givin' us the glad look. I'd oughter stayed
+back in Remate de Males, where a feller can wink at a woman without
+gittin' all his pardners massacreed."
+
+"Perhaps it would not be fatal, now that we are guests of the chief. But
+it is best to take no chances."
+
+"Safety first. That's us. Grin at one of 'em and another might git sore
+because she missed out, and first thing ye know ye've started somethin'
+without meanin' to. Let's look at somethin' harmless--one o' them
+poisoned spears, f'r instance."
+
+At that moment Monitaya and Lourenço both arose, the chief to inspect in
+person the progress of the arrangements for the feast, the bushman to
+return to his companions with additional news.
+
+"Monitaya tells me," he said, "that his people have lost girls in other
+ways than by the murderous attacks of the gunmen. A number of young
+women who have gone into the bush near their _malocas_ to get urucu and
+genipapa, which they use to make the red and black body dyes, have
+disappeared. So have several who went to the creeks for their daily
+baths. Warriors who tried to trail them have found the footprints of a
+few men, but always lost them at water. The girls had been taken away in
+canoes. Even this tribe of Monitaya, which never has been attacked by
+night raiders because it is too strong, has not been safe from these
+stealthy woman stealings by daylight. Three girls have been taken from
+here within the past two moons, and others have disappeared from other
+_malocas_."
+
+"Hm! And Schwandorf hasn't been here recently," said Knowlton.
+
+"No. It must be that he has agents who work when he is not here, or else
+this is done without his knowledge. I have told Monitaya what I know of
+Schwandorf, and he agrees that the women are taken as slaves. I have
+also told him that when we return down the river we shall see that
+Schwandorf troubles the Mayorunas no more."
+
+"Excellent," McKay approved. "Have you asked him about the Raposa?"
+
+"Not yet. It does not pay to hurry business with these people. After the
+feast is out of the way I will talk further with him."
+
+No more was said for a time. The five lounged at ease, sniffing the
+savory odors arising from the reddish clay pots and pans in which fruit,
+fish, or fowl was frying in tapir lard, or meat was stewing. At length a
+number of tall, shapely women, apparently the handsomest of their sex in
+the tribe, laid a number of small mats in a semicircle on the ground
+before the chief, and placed thereon a steaming array of edibles. Furs
+were placed outside the line of mats. From somewhere appeared all four
+of the subchiefs, accompanied by Yuara. Thereupon Monitaya, with a
+smiling nod to his guests, squatted within the arc. Forthwith the
+visitors advanced in a body, disposed themselves comfortably on the
+furs, and assailed the viands with a vigor that brought a delighted grin
+to the face of their barbaric host.
+
+Fried bananas, tender fish, broiled parrot which was not so tender, a
+thick stew of somewhat odorous meat seasoned with tart-tasting herbs,
+roast wild hog, and other things at whose identity the whites could not
+even guess, all were chewed and washed down with generous draughts of a
+rather sour liquid resembling beer. Remembering Lourenço's previous
+warning, each man took care not to slight any portion of the meal or to
+show distaste with anything, whether it pleased the palate or not.
+Throughout the feast the tall women hovered near, bringing fresh
+supplies whenever a dearth of any edible appeared to threaten. And when
+at last the feasters were full to repletion Monitaya himself designated
+what he considered titbits to tempt them further.
+
+"Gosh! if I eat any more I'll bust, and I'm danged if I'll bust jest to
+satisfy this guy," asserted Tim. Wherewith he put one hand under his jaw
+and patted his stomach with the other, signifying that he was filled to
+the throat. Pedro lifted his elbows, dropped his jaw, and made motions
+as if gasping for air. The chieftain grinned widely. The grin became a
+chuckling when Tim, after a vain attempt to rise, lay back at full
+length on his rug and begged some one to make a cigarette.
+
+"Guess I'll have to follow Tim's example," confessed Knowlton. And he
+too stretched out. Pedro and Lourenço also sprawled back. McKay, after
+glancing around, compromised with his dignity by leaning on one elbow.
+The subchiefs and Yuara, with slight smiles, relaxed in various
+postures. Monitaya alone arose--not without some difficulty--and got
+into his hammock, where he beamed down at them.
+
+"Suppose this is a compliment to the chief," smiled McKay. "He thinks he
+has eaten us helpless."
+
+"Speakin' for li'l old Tim Ryan, that ain't no joke, neither. Lookit all
+the girls givin' us the laff. Who are them tall ones that's been rushin'
+the grub? Waitresses or somethin'?"
+
+"Those are the chief's wives," Lourenço explained.
+
+"Huh? Gosh! he's one brave guy, that feller! Two--four--six--eight--nine
+of 'em! Swell lookers, too. I s'pose he has his pick o' the whole crowd
+here."
+
+"He does not have to pick them Senhor Tim. They pick him. He and the
+subchiefs are the only ones who can take more than one wife. When a girl
+wishes to become the wife of the great chief or of a subchief, she works
+for months making feather dresses and necklaces and hammocks, and when
+these are done she gives them all to him. If he likes her well enough he
+accepts the gifts and allows her to be a wife to him."
+
+"Yeah? And she's flattered to death, I s'pose. Wisht they'd start
+somethin' like that up home, or, anyways, fix it so's a feller could get
+an even break. Way it is now, a feller blows in every dollar he's got,
+and then when he's fixin' to git the ring the girl leaves him flat for
+some other guy that 'ain't spent his dough yet. Yo-ho-hum! I'm goin' to
+take a snooze right there on the table. Wake me up, somebody, when the
+next mess call blows."
+
+And with no further ado he shut his eyes and drowsed.
+
+His companions lolled for some time, smoking and watching the family
+life of the ordinary members of the tribe, nodding now and then to some
+friendly-looking young fellow, but ignoring the mischievous glances of
+the girls. Monitaya himself lay back in his hammock and dozed. His
+wives, stepping nonchalantly among the strangers, cleared away the
+remnants of the feast by the simple process of eating them. Then they
+carried off the clay vessels.
+
+For another hour all hands rested. Then Monitaya sat up, stretched his
+big arms, looked casually around the house to see that all was well, and
+smiled down at his guests. Lourenço, rising to a squat, began a new
+conversation. After a while he turned to McKay.
+
+"The Red Bones and the Mayorunas are neither friendly nor hostile toward
+each other, and there is little communication between them," he
+reported. "From those _malocas_ to the town of the Red Bones is a
+journey of five long days, so the men of Monitaya hardly ever go there.
+
+"The Raposa whom we seek is known to the men of Monitaya, but he never
+has come here to the tribal houses. Hunters from this place have met him
+at times roving the wild forests, and some of the younger men fear him
+as the bad spirit of the jungle. The Mayorunas believe in two spirits or
+demons, one good and one bad, and the bad one is said to roam the
+wilderness, seeking lone wanderers, whom he kills and eats; the people
+sometimes hear this demon howling at night in the dark of the moon. So
+the young men have thought the Raposa might be this demon and have
+avoided him--it would do no good to try to kill a demon, and it would
+only make their own deaths more sure and horrible.
+
+"But the older men do not believe this. They say the wild man is of the
+Red Bone people, and that the reason why his bones are marked in red on
+his living body is that he is neither alive nor dead. If he were dead
+his body would be thrown into the water and left there until his bones
+were stripped by those cannibal fish, the piranhas, and then the bones
+would be dyed red and hung up in his hut, as is the custom among those
+people. If he were alive like other men he would not have those marks on
+his body, but would wear only the tribal face paint. The bone paint on
+him is a sign to all the _Ossos Vermelhos_ that he is alive, but dead,
+and is not to be treated like other men."
+
+"Crazy!" exclaimed Knowlton.
+
+"Yes. I think that is it. His body lives, but his mind is dead. Death in
+life."
+
+"Has he been seen lately?"
+
+The Brazilian repeated the question in the Indian tongue. The chief
+looked toward a certain hammock some distance off, called a name, raised
+an imperative hand. A slender savage came forward. To him the chief
+spoke, then to Lourenço, who, as usual, relayed his information.
+
+"This young hunter saw him six days ago while following a wild-hog trail
+far out in the bush toward the Red Bone region. He came on the fresh
+track of a man who was following the same hogs, and later he caught up
+with that man. It was the red-boned wild man, and the wild man was very
+lame, having a hurt foot. They stood and looked at each other, and then
+the wild man walked away, watching him closely and ready to shoot with
+his bow. After he disappeared in the forest this hunter heard a long,
+shrill laugh and words that sounded like 'Podavi.'"
+
+"Podavi--Poor Davy!" ejaculated Knowlton. "That's he, sure enough! Then
+he's near his own town now--he won't go far with a bad foot. We'd better
+move as soon as we can. Ask about an escort."
+
+Once more the bushman conversed with Monitaya. The ruler's smile
+disappeared. For some time he sat gazing out over the heads of all,
+evidently weighing matters in his mind. When he responded, however, it
+was without hesitation.
+
+"There is neither friendliness nor enmity between the two peoples, as
+has been said," Lourenço stated. "Our business among the Red Bones is
+our own affair, not that of Monitaya, and Monitaya will make no requests
+for us. But in order that we may go safely and return without harm he
+will send with us twenty of his best men. These men will have orders to
+protect us at all times, unless fighting is caused by our making a
+needless attack on the Red Bones. In that case the Mayorunas will do
+nothing to help us. They will only defend themselves."
+
+"Fair enough!" nodded McKay. "Tell him we'll start no fight. If any
+trouble comes it will be from the other fellows. We'll leave here
+to-morrow morning."
+
+Lourenço translated the promise into Mayoruna. But the chief seemed not
+to hear. His eyes had narrowed and were fixed on the face of Tim, who
+still lay on his back and was giving no attention to what went on.
+Following his look, the bushman gazed critically at the red-haired man.
+
+Tim's florid face had paled. His mouth was drawn and his eyes stared
+straight up, wide and glassy. Slowly he rolled his head from side to
+side.
+
+"Gee! Cap," he whispered, hoarsely, "I et too much. My head aches so I'm
+fair blind, and I'm burnin' up. Gimme some water."
+
+With a swift, simultaneous movement McKay and Knowlton put their hands
+on his forehead. Lourenço and Pedro leaned closer and peered into his
+face. All four glanced at one another. Pedro nodded. His lips silently
+formed one dread word:
+
+"Fever!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+FRUIT OF THE TRAP
+
+
+Heavy hypodermic doses of quinine, aided by Tim's rugged constitution
+and the fact that this was his first attack of the ravaging sickness of
+the swamp lands, pulled him back to safety within the next two days. To
+safety, but not to strength. Despite his stout-hearted assertions that
+he was ready to hit the trail and "walk the legs off the whole danged
+outfit," he was obviously in no condition to stand up under the grueling
+pack work that lay ahead. Wherefore, McKay, after consultation with the
+others of the party, and, through Lourenço, with Monitaya, gave him
+inflexible orders.
+
+"You'll stay here. Stick in your hammock until you're in fighting trim.
+Then watch yourself. Don't pull any bonehead plays that'll get these
+people down on you. Take quinine daily according to Knowlton's
+directions--he's written them on the box. If we're not back in a
+fortnight Monitaya will send men to find out why. If they find that
+we're--not coming back--you will be guided to the river, where you can
+get down to the Nunes place."
+
+"But, Cap--"
+
+"No argument!"
+
+"But listen here, for the love o' Mike! I ain't no old woman! I can
+stand the gaff! I'm goin' with the gang!"
+
+"You hear the orders!" McKay snapped, with assumed severity. "Think we
+want to be bothered with having you go sick again? You're out of shape
+and we've no room for lame ducks. You'll stay here!"
+
+Tim tried another tack.
+
+"Aw, but listen! Ye ain't goin' to desert a comrade amongst a lot o' man
+eaters--right in the place where I got sick, too. Soon's I git away from
+here I'll be all right--"
+
+"That stuff's no good," the captain contradicted, with a tight smile.
+"You didn't get fever here. It's been in your system for days. You got
+it back on the river. These people don't have it, or any other kind of
+sickness. I've looked around and I know. As for the man eaters, they're
+mighty decent folks toward friends. We're friends. You'll be under the
+personal protection of Monitaya, and his word is good as gold. It's all
+arranged, and you're safer here than you would be in New York."
+
+In his heart the stubborn veteran knew McKay was right, but, like any
+other good soldier ordered to remain out of action, he grumbled and
+growled regardless. To which the ex-officers paid about as much
+attention as officers usually do. They went ahead with their own
+preparations.
+
+"Be of good heart, Senhor Tim," Pedro comforted, mischievously. "You
+will not lack for company. The chief has appointed two girls to wait
+upon you at all times."
+
+"Huh? Them two tall ones that's been hangin' round and fetchin' things?
+Are they mine?"
+
+"Yes. They are quite handsome in their way, and strong enough to help
+you about if your legs remain weak. In that case you will probably be
+allowed to put your arms around them for support. I almost wish I could
+get fever, too."
+
+Tim's voice remained a growl, but his face did not look so doleful as
+before.
+
+"Grrrumph! I always seem to draw big females, and I don't like 'em.
+Gimme somethin' cute like them li'l' frog dolls in Paree--sort o'
+pee-teet and chick. Still, a feller's got to do the best he can. Mebbe
+I'll live till you guys git back."
+
+With which he availed himself of the prerogative of a sick man and
+grinned openly at the two comely young women who stood near at hand,
+awaiting any demand for services. They were not at all backward in
+reciprocating, and, despite the tribal paint and their labial ornaments,
+the smiles softening their faces made them not half bad to look upon.
+
+"'O death, where is thy sting?'" laughed Knowlton. "Be careful not to
+strain your heart while we're away, Tim."
+
+"Don't worry. It's a tough old heart--been kicked round so much it's
+growed a shell like a turtle. Besides, I seen wild women before I ever
+come to the jungle."
+
+Notwithstanding his apparent resignation, however, Tim erupted once more
+when his comrades shouldered their packs, picked up their guns, and
+spoke their thanks and good-by to Monitaya. He arose on shaky legs and
+desperately offered to prove his fitness by a barehanded six-round bout
+with his commanding officer. When McKay, with sympathetic eyes but gruff
+tones, peremptorily squelched him he insisted on at least going to the
+door to watch his comrades start the journey from which they might or
+might not return. Nor did he take advantage of his chance to hug the
+girls on the way.
+
+With one arm slung over the shoulders of a wiry young warrior who
+grinned proudly at the honor of being selected to help a guest of the
+great chief, he followed the departing column out into the sunshine,
+where the entire tribe was assembled. And when the stalwart band had
+filed into the shadows of the trees and vanished he stood for a time
+unseeing and gulping at something in his throat.
+
+Straight away along a vague path beginning at the rear of the _malocas_
+marched the twenty-four, the two northerners bending under the weight of
+their packs, the pair of Brazilians sweeping the jungle with practiced
+eyes, the score of Mayorunas striding velvet footed, resplendent in
+brilliant new paint and headdresses, armed with the most powerful
+weapons of their tribe, and loftily conscious of the fact that they were
+chosen as Monitaya's best. Savage and civilized, each man was fit,
+alert, formidable. Nowhere in the loosely joined chain was a weak link.
+
+Before the departure the Americans had been at some trouble to rid
+themselves of Yuara, who, with his men, had tarried at the Monitaya
+_malocas_ during Tim's sickness. While Knowlton was giving his ripped
+arm a final dressing he had calmly announced his intention of joining
+the expedition into the Red Bone country, and it had taken some skillful
+argument by Lourenço to dissuade him without arousing his anger. All
+four of the adventurers would gladly have taken him along had he not
+been hampered by his injury, but, under the ruthless rule barring all
+men not in possession of all their strength, he had to be left.
+
+Now, as on the previous jungle marches, the way was led by two of the
+tribesmen, followed by the Brazilians and the Americans, after whom the
+main body of the escort strode in column. The leader and guide, one
+Tucu, was a veteran hunter, fighter, and bushranger, who had been more
+than once in the Red Bone region and withal possessed the cool judgment
+of mature years and long experience; a lean, silent man who, though not
+a subchief, might have made a good one if given the opportunity. With
+him Lourenço had already arranged that a direct course should be
+followed, and that whenever dense undergrowth blockaded the way the
+machete men should take the lead.
+
+For some time no word was spoken. The path wound on, faintly marked, but
+easy enough to follow with Tucu picking it out. It was not one of the
+frequently used trails of the Monitaya people, but a mere _picada_, or
+hunter's track; yet even this had its pitfalls to guard the tribal
+house. Soon after leaving the clearing Tucu turned aside, passed between
+trees off the trail, went directly under one tree whose steep-slanting
+roots stood up off the ground like great down-pointing fingers, and
+returned to the path. All followed without comment.
+
+A considerable distance was covered before any further sign of the
+presence of ambushed death was shown by the savages. Then it came with
+tragic suddenness.
+
+Tucu grunted suddenly, and in one instant shifted his gait from the easy
+swing of the march to the prowl of a hunting animal. Behind him the line
+grew tense. The click of rifle hammers and of safeties being thrown off
+breech bolts blended with the faint slither of arrows being swiftly
+drawn from quivers. Eyes searched the bush, spying no enemy.
+
+Two more steps, and Tucu stopped, head thrust forward, eyes boring into
+something on the ground. The rest, taking care not to touch one
+another's weapons, crowded around and looked down at the huddled form of
+a man.
+
+A matted mass of black hair, a neck burned copper brown by sun, tattered
+cotton shirt and trousers, big, bare dirty feet, a rusty repeating rifle
+of heavy caliber--these were what they saw first. The man lay straight,
+his face in the dirt, his hands a little ahead as if he had been
+crawling forward at the moment of death. Tucu turned him on his back,
+revealing a blanched yellow-brown face which was proof positive of his
+race.
+
+"Peruvian," said Pedro.
+
+"What got him?" demanded Knowlton. "No wound on him."
+
+Lourenço questioned Tucu. The leader, who evidently knew just where to
+look, tore open the thin shirt at the left side and pointed to a tiny
+discoloration surrounding a red dot under the ribs. He muttered a few
+laconic words.
+
+"A blowgun trap," Lourenço explained. "The gun is set a little way
+beyond here. This man, sneaking along the path, broke the little cord
+which shot the gun. The poisoned dart struck in his side. He must have
+pulled out the dart, but he could not go far before his legs became
+paralyzed, and he fell. Then, still trying to crawl, he died."
+
+Pedro picked up the dead man's gun and worked the lever. The weapon was
+fully loaded and showed no sign of recent firing. Pedro coolly pumped it
+empty, gathered up the blunt .44 cartridges, and pocketed them for his
+own use.
+
+Tucu watched the proceeding in satirical approval. Then, leaving the
+body where it lay, he went stooping along the path ahead, his keen eyes
+searching the undergrowth. In a few minutes he returned with the
+blood-stained dart which, as Lourenço had guessed, the stricken prowler
+had pulled from his flesh and dropped. This he passed to a blowgun man.
+The latter carefully opened his poison pouch, redipped the point of the
+dart, held it a moment to dry in a shaft of sunlight, and slipped it
+into his dart case among a score of unused missiles.
+
+"No waste of ammunition here," was McKay's dry comment. "What happens to
+this corpse now?"
+
+Through Lourenço's mouth Tucu answered.
+
+"It will be left here until police warriors come from the _malocas_.
+Certain men travel the paths daily to inspect the traps. When they find
+this man they will cut off his hands and feet with their wooden knives
+and throw the rest aside to be eaten by the animals. He has not been
+dead long or he would have been devoured by some wild thing before we
+came. The trail travelers will set the trap again and take the hands and
+feet to the _malocas_, where they will be washed, cooked, and eaten."
+
+The faces of the Americans contracted slightly. A simultaneous thought
+made them flash startled glances at each other.
+
+"Tim--" Knowlton said, and paused. Lourenço smiled.
+
+"No, Senhor Tim will not be expected to eat man meat," he assured them.
+"I thought of that before we left--one never knows when these traps will
+yield human flesh. So, without letting Monitaya know why I spoke, I told
+him you North Americans believed the flesh of an enemy to be poisonous,
+and that you would not eat it on that account. Monitaya will remember
+that."
+
+"By George! you have a head on your shoulders, old scout! I was worried
+for a minute. If they offered Tim a broiled foot or a stewed hand he'd
+go for his gun."
+
+Briefly Tucu spoke. The Mayorunas separated and went into the forest,
+seeking any sign of other enemies.
+
+"Queer that this chap should come here alone--if he was alone," added
+Knowlton. "Suppose he's the fellow that's been swiping stray girls? Or a
+spy?"
+
+"Neither, I think, senhor. The girls were captured by more than one man,
+and I doubt if this one had been here before. Probably he was one of
+those lone prowlers of the bush whose hand is against every man. He is a
+half-breed, as you see, and came, perhaps, to steal a girl for himself.
+The jungle is well rid of him."
+
+"Uh-huh. Guess you're right. Say, I'd like to see how that blowgun trap
+operates. Can't understand what blows the dart when nobody is here."
+
+"I do not know, either, senhor. Perhaps Tucu will show us."
+
+The savage guide, after a moment's hesitation, pointed along the trail
+and stalked away, the others at his heels. At a spot some fifteen yards
+farther on he turned into the bush at the right, walked a few paces away
+from the path, turned again sharply to the left, advanced once more, and
+halted. Before them, not easy to discern in the masking brush, even
+though they were looking for it, hung the long barrel of the blowgun,
+lashed to a couple of small trees and pointing toward the path.
+
+Tucu stepped to the mouthpiece of the slender tube and pointed to a
+sapling, just behind and in line with it, which had been cut off about
+shoulder-high from the ground. From the tip of this thin trunk dangled a
+wide strip of bark. The savage, having indicated this, stood as if the
+action of the device were perfectly clear.
+
+"Too deep for me," admitted McKay, after a puzzled study of the tube and
+the trunk. The others nodded agreement. Lourenço confessed to the Indian
+the blindness of all.
+
+Thereupon Tucu bent the sapling far over and released it. As it sprang
+erect the bark strip slapped the end of the gun. Also, the watchers saw
+something hitherto unnoticed--a thin, flexible vine attached to the top
+of the thin stump. Lourenço's face showed understanding.
+
+"See, comrades, this is it: The little tree is bent far down and held by
+the long vine. The vine passes around a low branch, then up over other
+limbs, and out across the path, where it is fastened to a root near the
+ground. A man following the path breaks the vine. The little tree then
+flies up and the bark sheet strikes the wide mouthpiece of the gun. The
+air forced into that mouthpiece by the blow of the bark shoots the
+little dart. The dart does not fly as hard as if blown by a man, but it
+goes swiftly enough to pierce the skin of anything except a tapir. As
+soon as the poison is in the blood the work is done."
+
+"It sure is done," Knowlton echoed, thinking of the short distance
+covered by the dead Peruvian after passing this spot. "Mighty ingenious
+apparatus. These people are no fools, I'll say."
+
+"You say rightly," Pedro muttered. Turning, they went out to the path,
+looking askance at the thin death tube as they passed along it.
+
+The scouting Mayorunas returned, having found nothing. Tucu resumed his
+place at the head of the line. Without a backward glance at the body
+sprawling in the trail at the rear, the column swung into its usual
+gait.
+
+The Americans, silent before, were silent again. They had looked for the
+first time on the work of the Mayoruna traps; had observed the
+cold-blooded way in which the Indiana handled the still form on the
+ground; had visualized the forthcoming mutilation of that body and the
+resultant cannibal rites. More vividly than ever before they realized
+that these men and Monitaya himself were relentless creatures of the
+jungle, and that, despite the present existent friendliness, there
+yawned between them and their barbarous allies an impassable gulf.
+
+For the moment the jungle itself seemed a poisonous green abyss of
+creeping, crawling, sneaking death. And though they had faced death too
+often in another land to fear it in any form, though they marched on
+with unwavering step, their eyes were somber as in their hearts echoed
+the last appeal of the man they had left behind them:
+
+"Ye ain't goin' to desert a comrade amongst a lot o' man eaters--"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+THE RED BONES
+
+
+Four days the expedition tramped steadily onward through the rugged
+labyrinthine hills. Four nights its members slept in utter exhaustion.
+Neither by day nor by night was any sign of the Raposa seen, nor of any
+other human being.
+
+So tired from the constant struggle did the Americans become that their
+jaded brains began to picture the mysterious wild man as a mere
+legendary creature, which they never would find even though they
+searched the inscrutable forests until the end of time. Yet when, on the
+fifth day, Tucu informed them that they now were nearing the principal
+settlement of the Red Bones, the announcement cheered them as if they
+were about to enter a civilized city and there meet David Rand safe and
+sane.
+
+Not that any chance of striking his trail had been neglected in the
+meantime. It was thoroughly understood that if he were met anywhere he
+was to be made prisoner, and that thereafter the back trail should be
+taken. Lourenço had impressed on Tucu the fact that the whole journey
+had for its object the finding of the wild man, and that he must not be
+killed if found. Since the Indians were not in the habit of hunting so
+assiduously anyone but a bitterly hated foe, it is quite possible that
+they misunderstood the spirit of the quest and believed the "dead-alive"
+prowler would, if captured, undergo some extremely unpleasant treatment
+at the hands of the white men. But so long as it was made clear that the
+Raposa must be caught alive, if caught at all, Lourenço did not trouble
+about what the Mayorunas might surmise.
+
+Now, as the end of the long, pathless trail approached, arose a question
+of which McKay had previously thought but had not spoken--how he was to
+converse with the Red Bone chief. Lourenço asked Tucu whether the Red
+Bones spoke the Mayoruna tongue. Tucu replied that they did not. He
+added, however, that the languages were not so dissimilar as to prevent
+some sort of understanding being reached between members of the two
+tribes. The veteran bushman nodded carelessly.
+
+"When the tongue fails, Capitao, the hands still can talk," he said. "It
+takes more time and work, that is all. Ah, here is a path!"
+
+It was so. For the first time since leaving the Monitaya region a path
+lay under their feet. And for the first time Tucu and his fellow
+Mayorunas, glancing along that faint track, showed hesitation.
+
+"Why the delay?" snapped McKay.
+
+"They suspect traps. I will go ahead and feel out the way. I have done
+it before on other paths."
+
+After a few words to Tucu, Lourenço cut a long, slim pole. With this in
+hand he preceded the column, walking slowly, pausing sometimes,
+continually prodding the path, studying it with unswerving gaze as he
+progressed. The thin but rigid feeler, strong enough to tip the cover of
+any pit or to spring any concealed bow or blowgun, was at least ten feet
+long, and between the scout and the head of the line Tucu preserved
+another ten-foot interval. Progress was necessarily slow, but it was
+sure.
+
+In this fashion they advanced perhaps half a mile. Not once did they
+have to leave the path, but Lourenço's caution did not diminish. Rather,
+it increased as they neared the Red Bone town. At length another path
+joined the one on which they were traveling. Here Lourenço paused for
+minutes, inspecting with extreme care the ground and the bush.
+
+Suddenly he cocked his head as if listening. Then, with a backward
+motion of the hand to enjoin silence, he faced down the branch path and
+stood calmly waiting.
+
+To those behind came a light rustle of leaves and a scuffle of moving
+feet; a sudden cessation; then Lourenço's voice speaking to some one
+concealed behind the intervening undergrowth. His tone was slow, quiet,
+easy--the tone which, even if the words were not understood, would
+soothe suspicious and abruptly alarmed minds. After another short
+silence he resumed talking, pointing carelessly to the place behind him
+where stood the silent file of Mayorunas. A guttural voice replied. A
+head peered cautiously from the edge of the bush, stared fixedly at
+Tucu, and withdrew. The voice sounded again. Immediately three Indians
+stepped into view, poised for action. Another interval of staring, and
+they relaxed.
+
+"Come forward, comrades," said Lourenço. They came, halting again at the
+junction of the trails. Tucu spoke to one of the newcomers, who scowled
+as if only partly understanding, but grunted some sort of answer. Those
+behind the Mayoruna leader craned their necks and scanned the Red Bone
+men, who continued to eye with evident misgiving the tall-bonneted
+cannibals and the broad-hatted pair of whites.
+
+Man for man, these Red Bones were in every way inferior to the
+emissaries of Monitaya. Their bodies were more gaunt, their skins more
+coppery, their foreheads lower, and their expressions much less
+intelligent. Furthermore, they wore not even the bark-cloth clouts which
+formed the sole body covering of the Mayorunas--they were totally naked.
+The one point of similarity between the two tribes was that the faces of
+the Red Bone men were streaked with red dye. But the facial design was
+much different: two short transverse stripes on the forehead, and three
+lines on each cheek, running from the eyes, the end of the nose, and the
+corners of the mouth, straight back to the ears. Studying those visages,
+Knowlton and McKay recalled Schwandorf's statement that these people not
+only ate human flesh, but tortured prisoners of war. It was easy to
+believe that he had told truth.
+
+McKay, standing behind Pedro, shifted his position a bit. At once the
+eyes of the three Red Bones widened and riveted on his face. Heretofore
+they had seen only his hat and eyes, the rest being hidden from them by
+Pedro's neck and an intervening palm tip. Now that they saw his
+black-bearded jaw, they started slightly and peered intently at him.
+
+"I think, Capitao, you would do well to shave," Pedro suggested, with a
+smile.
+
+"'Fraid so," the captain granted. "Black beards evidently are _de trop_
+in the jungle social set at present."
+
+But then one of the Red Bone men came forward, still squinting narrowly,
+and his expression was not hostile. In fact, it was more friendly than
+it had yet been. After a closer scrutiny, however, his face turned
+blank. Slowly he stepped back and muttered something to his companions.
+
+At this Pedro's eyes narrowed speculatively. But his expression did not
+change, and he said nothing.
+
+A lengthy conference took place between Lourenço and Tucu on the one
+hand and the three Red Bone tribesmen on the other; a difficult talk in
+which words and sign language both were used and frequently repeated.
+Eventually an understanding was reached. The three stepped back, picked
+up some small game which they had dropped on beholding Lourenço,
+returned, and led the way along the path. Lourenço cast aside his poke
+stick and resumed his usual place in the column. The whole line moved
+ahead at a much smarter gait than before.
+
+"Note--this path is not mined," thought Knowlton.
+
+This proved true. Moreover, the way now was more broad and firm, so that
+travel on it was much easier. After twenty minutes of rapid tramping it
+debouched abruptly into a cleared space. Here all halted.
+
+Before them lay a town of small, low huts, crowded closely together in
+two parallel rows which curved together at one end. The other end lay
+open, giving access to a sizable creek whereon floated canoes. At the
+water's edge, along the crude street studded with charred stumps, and
+among the damp-looking huts moved naked figures of men and women
+occupied with various sluggish activities. Some of the men already had
+spied the invading party and were standing at gaze.
+
+"Comrades, we have reached the end of our trail," said Lourenço, running
+a cool eye over the place. "Now all we have to do is to find your Raposa
+and get him and ourselves away alive."
+
+"That's all," Knowlton echoed, unsmiling. "The reception committee is
+forming now." And with the words he unbuttoned his holster.
+
+A shrill yell had run along the double line of houses, and out into the
+stumpy street now swarmed men armed with hastily seized weapons. Hands
+pointed, confused exclamations sounded, and a compact detachment of
+warriors came jogging toward the newcomers. The three guides drew away
+from the Mayorunas. The latter promptly fitted arrows to their bows,
+inserted darts in their blowguns, lifted spears or clubs, and with eyes
+glittering awaited whatever might befall.
+
+A couple of rods away the Red Bones halted, bows ready. A hatchet-faced
+savage who seemed to be in command rasped something at the three
+hunters, who quickened their pace toward him. Tucu strode out four paces
+beyond his own men and stopped. Then both parties waited while the
+hunters reported what they knew to the hatchet-face.
+
+"What did you tell them, Lourenço?" asked McKay.
+
+"That we came on a friendly visit to the chief, for whom we had
+important words."
+
+"Nothing of the Raposa?"
+
+"No. They wasted much time arguing that we must tell them all our
+business and let them inform the chief, while we were to stay back on
+the path until permitted to enter the town. We told them our talk was
+for the chief alone, and that we should come here whether they liked it
+or not. So, having no choice, they led us in."
+
+McKay made no comment. None was necessary. Furthermore, his steady eyes
+had caught a simultaneous head movement of the Red Bones--a peering
+movement, as if all were seeking some one man among the new arrivals.
+Pedro observed this. He spoke softly to Lourenço.
+
+"Lourenço, tell Tucu to say to the Red Bones that we come led by a
+black-bearded white man; that this blackboard comes from the far-off
+country where all men wear black beards; that the blackbeard will speak
+with the chief only."
+
+The Americans looked queerly at the young Brazilian, as did Lourenço
+himself. But without question Lourenço obeyed. Calling to Tucu, he gave
+the message. Tucu moved his head slightly, but gave no other sign of
+having heard.
+
+"Now, Capitao, step forward a little and show yourself more clearly,"
+prompted Pedro.
+
+With another puzzled glance McKay did so. He saw that the brown eyes of
+the younger man held a dancing gleam, but he could not read the thought
+behind those eyes. Yet he noticed that as soon as he stepped out the Red
+Bones all focused their gaze on him. More than that, the spokesman of
+the three hunters pointed at him and said something to the
+sharp-featured leader.
+
+Now that leader came forward alone. Six feet from Tucu he halted again
+and talked in a growling tone. The Mayoruna leader, cool and dignified,
+made answer. After a somewhat protracted exchange Tucu turned his head
+and motioned to Lourenço, who went forward, listened, replied shortly,
+and came back. Meanwhile the first detachment of Red Bones had been
+strongly reinforced by others who had come up singly or in small
+parties. Now the expedition was outnumbered at least four to one by
+hard-faced, brute-mouthed, naked men ready, if not eager, for trouble.
+
+"The Red Bone says we shall see the chief," Lourenço stated. "At first
+he said only you, Capitao, should go to him. Then he insisted that we
+all lay down our arms. Tucu has told him we lay down our arms for no man
+or men; that we come in peace--otherwise there would be many more of us;
+that we leave in peace unless the Red Bones themselves bring on a fight.
+In that case, though we are few, there lies behind us the power of
+Monitaya, and behind Monitaya the power of the Mayoruna chiefs, all
+strong enough to wipe the Red Bone nation off the face of the ground."
+
+"Strong stuff, that," said Knowlton.
+
+"Strong, yes. But no stronger than is needed to impress these people.
+Tucu intends to prevent trouble if he can; and often the best way to
+prevent trouble is to make the other man realize what may happen to him
+if he starts it. Also he has his orders from Monitaya to stay with us at
+all times, and he will follow that order even if you, Capitao, try to
+change it. Now we go together to the chief."
+
+He nodded to Tucu, who grunted to the Red Bone leader. The hatchet-face
+in turn shouted something to the men behind. Slowly they drew apart into
+two groups.
+
+"You are the leader, Capitao," suggested Lourenço. Promptly McKay
+marched forward, head up, eyes front, face bleak. The rest followed,
+Tucu falling in behind McKay when the captain passed him. Preceded by
+the Red Bone spokesman, the line advanced between the two bodies of
+copper-skins and swung along the evil-smelling avenue to its upper end.
+
+There, in the very center of the loop joining the two rows of huts, was
+a house twice as big as any other. From its doorway the inhabitant of
+that house could watch the whole life of the Red Bone town. Obviously it
+was the home of the chief. At its door a pair of warriors stood guard,
+but of the ruler himself there was no sign.
+
+Ten paces from it the thin-featured leader stopped and motioned to McKay
+to halt. As the captain and the line behind him did so he stalked
+onward, passed through the doorway, and faded from sight in the dimness
+beyond. With one accord the members of the visiting party looked around
+them.
+
+The street behind now was filled with the mass of Red Bone warriors who
+had trooped after the column. All exit in that direction was blockaded.
+But the ex-officers noted that between the houses were spaces each wide
+enough to hold a couple of men, and in an undertone McKay gave defensive
+instructions to Lourenço.
+
+"If fighting starts, have the Mayorunas take cover along these houses on
+each side. We who have guns will use the chief's house. We can sweep the
+whole street from there. You two fellows capture the chief alive if
+possible. He'll be more useful as a hostage than as a corpse."
+
+Pedro beamed approval of this swiftly formed plan. Lourenço muttered to
+Tucu, who in turn passed the word down the line. Then all stood waiting.
+
+Presently the Red Bone man came out. He shouted a name. From the doorway
+near at hand, where he had been standing and peering at the small but
+formidable body of newcomers, an old man now stepped forth and advanced,
+limping a little, to the hatchet-face. The latter talked briefly to him,
+then to Tucu. The Mayoruna leader pointed to Lourenço. The old man spoke
+to the Brazilian, who answered at once. Thereupon the wizened old fellow
+entered the chief's house.
+
+"That old man speaks the Mayoruna tongue quite well, Capitao," said
+Lourenço. "He says you and I shall enter and talk through his mouth with
+the chief. All others remain outside, and we must leave our rifles
+here."
+
+"All right. Glad we can leave Tucu out here to control these fellows.
+Here, Merry." He passed his rifle to Knowlton. Pedro took Lourenço's
+gun. With packs still on their backs the chosen men proceeded to the
+doorway and entered the house where waited the ruler of the Red Bone
+tribe.
+
+Behind them the line settled into easier postures of waiting. The Red
+Bones, though so compactly ranged as to cut off any chance of escape,
+held their distance, obviously neither inclined to fraternize nor ready
+to precipitate conflict by crowding. Thus, while keeping their ears open
+for any sound of a concerted movement from behind, the visitors could
+use their eyes to inspect the huts nearest them.
+
+In some of these, women stood near the doorways, staring with unwinking
+absorption at the light-skinned, athletic men outside who were so much
+better to look upon than their own mates. The Mayorunas returned the
+stares with the brief glances of men accustomed to noticing everything
+but totally uninterested--as well they might be, for these poorly
+shaped, heavy-mouthed, mud-skinned females were not to be compared with
+their own women. Knowlton and Pedro, too, looked them over, but with the
+same expression as if inspecting a family of lizards. Then they glanced
+into other huts now empty of life, and in a couple of these they saw
+rigid red-hued objects hanging from the roofs.
+
+"The red bones of the dead, senhor," Pedro muttered, and his blond
+companion, peering again at the sinister decorations, nodded without
+reply.
+
+Voices came to them from the chief's house, talking with droning
+deliberation. Evidently no cause for friction had yet arisen. They let
+their eyes rove on beyond the guarded doorway, to pause at a house a
+short distance away at the right. There stood a clubman, who leaned idly
+on his weapon, but showed no intention of moving from his place. The
+door of that house was closed. Not only closed, but barred on the
+outside.
+
+"Hm! Looks like a jail," said Knowlton. Pedro smiled, but an intent look
+came into his face and he studied the closed house.
+
+Suddenly both started. At one corner of the house, unseen by the
+clubman, a head had cautiously slipped forth. For only an instant it
+hung there before dodging back out of sight. But both the watching men
+had seen that the face, though half masked by long dark hair and a thick
+beard, was much lighter than that of any Red Bone savage. And in the
+hair above one ear was a white streak.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+THE RAPOSA
+
+
+McKay and Lourenço, in a broad, low, musty-smelling room, faced a man
+who stood and a man who sat. The man who stood was the old savage who
+could talk in the Mayoruna language. The man who sat was the chief of
+the Red Bones.
+
+In his first words to the visitors the old interpreter revealed that the
+name of the Red Bone ruler was Umanuh. Later on Lourenço informed McKay
+that in the Tupi _lengoa geral_ of the Amazonian Indians (which,
+however, was not spoken by this tribe) the word "umanuh" meant "corpse."
+And whatever the name may have signified in the language of the Red
+Bones, its Tupi definition fitted with disagreeable precision. For
+Umanuh was a living cadaver.
+
+Gaunt, gray skinned, lank haired, hollow of cheek and eye, with thin,
+cruel lips so tight drawn that the teeth behind seemed to show through,
+ribs projecting, clawlike hands resting on bony knees, his whole frame
+motionless as that of a man long dead, the head man of the bone-dyeing
+tribe was the antithesis of both the piggish Suba and the herculean
+Monitaya. Only his eyes lived; and those eyes were cold and merciless as
+those of a snake or a vulture. A man who ruled by ruthless cunning, who
+would gaze unmoved on the most ghastly tortures, who would devour human
+flesh with ghoulish relish--such was the creature who sat in a red-dyed
+hammock and contemplated the impassive face of McKay.
+
+"Umanuh, great chief, eater of his enemies, with fangs of the jaguar and
+wisdom of the great snake, awaits the greeting of the one-whose-hair
+grows-from-his-mouth," droned the old mouthpiece of the chief.
+
+"Makkay, leader of the fighting men of the Blackbeards, whose voice is
+the thunder and whose hand spits lightning and death, gives greeting to
+Umanuh," responded Lourenço in a like droning tone.
+
+A pause. Umanuh gave no sign of life. McKay, straight and cold, met the
+unwinking stare of the chief with his own chill gray gaze. Between the
+two who spoke not was a testing of wills.
+
+"Makkay brings with him none of the Blackbeard warriors," pointed out
+the interpreter, who seemed to know his master's thought. "He comes with
+only the jungle men of light skins."
+
+"Makkay needs none of his own warriors when he comes in peace. If he
+came in war the terrible Blackbeards with him would cause the whole
+forest to fly apart in smoke and flame. Since he walks in peace to visit
+his friend Umanuh, of whose wisdom he has heard, he brings only his
+friends the Mayorunas, who are friends also to the men of the Red
+Bones."
+
+Another pause. The old man now seemed somewhat uncertain of himself. The
+silent duel between McKay and Umanuh went on. At length the chief's eyes
+flickered a trifle. In a hissing whisper he said something.
+
+"The men of the Mayorunas never come to this country unless seeking
+something," the interpreter promptly spoke up. "What do they seek?"
+
+"Only that which Makkay seeks."
+
+Then, turning to the captain, the Brazilian added: "Capitao, we now have
+reached the point to talk business. Have you any presents? And is it
+your wish to give them now or later?"
+
+"I have a few things. But I'll give them later--if at all. This chief is
+hostile. Tell him what we're here for and see how he acts."
+
+"It has come to the ears of Makkay," Lourenço informed the man of
+Umanuh, "that a man of the Blackbeards lives among the men of the Red
+Bones. Makkay would see that man."
+
+Again the interpreter awaited his master's voice before answering.
+
+"No man of the Blackbeards is among the men of Umanuh," he then denied.
+
+"If he is not among them he is near them," was Lourenço's certain reply.
+"He has been seen both by other Blackbeards and by the Mayorunas. I,
+too, have seen him. He bears on his bones the sign that his mind is out
+of his skull. His eyes are green and his hair touched with white. Umanuh
+and his men know well that I speak true."
+
+The pause this time was longer than before.
+
+"There was such a man, but he is gone."
+
+"Then Makkay asks his friend Umanuh to find that one. A chief so wise
+can easily find him where others would see only water and mud."
+
+"If he could be found what would the great Blackbeard leader do with
+him?"
+
+Lourenço thought swiftly. To say the Raposa was McKay's friend would do
+little good. Friendship meant nothing to this unfeeling brute. Therefore
+the bushman insinuated something which his cruel mind could comprehend.
+
+"If a Red Bone man abandoned his people and went to another tribe, what
+would Umanuh do to him when he was found?"
+
+A cold glimmer in the chief's eyes showed that he thought he understood.
+Moreover, he would much like to see what sort of torture this hard-faced
+Blackbeard would use on a fugitive. It might be something even more
+fiendish than his own pastimes. So the next reply came promptly.
+
+"If that man is found the blackbeard will pay for him?"
+
+"There are gifts of friendship for Umanuh," Lourenço nodded.
+
+"The Blackbeard leader will pay more than the other Blackbeard?"
+
+Lourenço almost blinked. What other Blackbeard? The Raposa himself? But
+the Brazilian repressed his bewilderment.
+
+"Makkay will first see the man to make sure he is the Blackbeard whom
+Makkay wants," he dodged. "Then he will pay well."
+
+"Umanuh will see the gifts now."
+
+"The gifts cannot be shown now. They are packed away. When Makkay has
+looked on the man Umanuh shall look on the gifts."
+
+Another eye duel between the chief and McKay. As before, the captain's
+eye proved the harder.
+
+"Umanuh will think of the matter. Night comes. The man hunted by the
+Blackbeard is not here. The Blackbeard and his men may stay to-night
+across the water. When the sun rises again Umanuh will talk further."
+
+"It is well. Let Umanuh tell his men to stay on this side of the water,
+that we may not mistake them in the night for enemies."
+
+When Umanuh had hissed assent the old man stepped to the doorway and
+summoned the hatchet-faced warrior. To him instructions were given. He
+turned and carried the commands to the tribesmen.
+
+"Makkay wishes Umanuh peaceful rest," said Lourenço. With which he
+flicked his eyes toward the door. McKay, with stiff stride, stalked out.
+Lourenço followed. Both felt the snake eyes of the cadaverous chief
+dwelling on their backs.
+
+To the waiting Knowlton, Pedro, and Tucu it was briefly explained that
+preliminary negotiations had been concluded and that camp now would be
+made on the farther side of the creek. Tucu, observing that the Red Bone
+mass behind was dividing again to let the visitors pass through, gave
+the word to his men. The column began to move out, marching in reverse
+order. Pedro muttered swiftly to his partner.
+
+"Lourenço, see that house with the barred door where the clubman stands
+guard. Remember where it is."
+
+The other swept the loop in one quick glance, located the house, and
+fell into step without a word, the guarded structure fixed on his brain
+as clearly as if he had studied it for an hour. Walking down the
+malodorous street, he said, quietly, "There will be a small moon
+to-night."
+
+"You are becoming a reader of the mind, comrade," Pedro grinned. No more
+was said.
+
+Down to the shore of the creek trooped the party, followed closely by
+the hatchet-face and a score of tribesmen. The whites and the Mayorunas
+got into half a dozen of the waiting canoes and paddled across. In other
+dugouts the Red Bone men also crossed, but they did not land. As soon as
+the borrowed boats were empty the tribesmen took them in tow and
+returned to their own bank. The visitors were left on a partly cleared
+shore, separated from their uncordial hosts by some twenty yards of deep
+water. Not one canoe was left them. Furthermore, the Red Bones now began
+activities indicating an intention to establish a night-long watch on the
+irside of the stream.
+
+"Taking no chances of our raiding them to-night, or even snooping around
+town," said Knowlton. "Keeping everything in their own hands. Reckon
+we'd better post sentries to-night, Rod, just to keep an eye on that
+outpost of theirs."
+
+McKay nodded.
+
+"We four will take it in turn," he agreed. "Lourenço--Pedro--you--I.
+Three-hour tours."
+
+"Pardon, Capitao," interposed Pedro. "It would be well to change that.
+You two senhores take the first two watches."
+
+"Why?" frowned McKay.
+
+"Because Lourenço and I wish to go visiting. We are much smitten with
+the charms of the ladies here."
+
+The captain's frown deepened, but he studied Pedro's devil-may-care face
+keenly before answering.
+
+"Humph! What's up your sleeve? Out with it!"
+
+Pedro glanced around him and across the water. The tribesmen, both of
+the Mayoruna force and of the Red Bones, were watching the colloquy.
+
+"We are watched, Capitao. Let us make camp now and talk later. These men
+do not understand our words, but we cannot tell what they may see in our
+faces. Now speak harshly, as if I had been insolent."
+
+McKay did. He thundered at the young bushman as if about to do him
+bodily injury.
+
+Pedro retreated a step, as if taken aback by the storm he had unleashed.
+When McKay stopped he replied: "Excellent, Capitao. Now I go to start
+work on the _tambo_."
+
+He trudged away with a sullen gait. On both sides of the stream the
+Indians muttered and looked at the tall commander with increased
+respect. Truly, the Blackbeard was a fierce ruler and one who must not
+be angered; he had the voice of a great gun and the temper of a jaguar.
+That other man was lucky to have his head still on his shoulders!
+
+When the camp was made at the edge of the bush and the four comrades
+were grouped in their hammocks, Lourenço narrated in detail the
+conversation with Umanuh. Knowlton reciprocated with news of what he and
+Pedro had seen at the corner of the barred house.
+
+"I almost jumped after him, Rod," he admitted. "Had all I could do to
+hold myself. But I knew anything sudden like that might start war right
+there, and we wouldn't have a Chinaman's chance of getting away with
+him, so I stood fast. But he's here, and old Umanuh's a liar by the
+clock if he says otherwise."
+
+"He is the same man we saw in the forest, Lourenço, or my eyes are
+twisted," added Pedro.
+
+"Hm! Something very fishy here," commented McKay.
+
+"Very fishy indeed, Capitao," Lourenço echoed. "The man is within call,
+yet Umanuh says he is not here. And Umanuh wants us to buy the man. What
+is more, he asks if we will pay more than the other Blackbeard. What
+other Blackbeard? The man himself has a dark beard, and since we left
+headquarters Pedro and I have grown black whiskers, too. Yet Umanuh
+cannot mean the crazy man would pay him to stay here, or that either of
+us Brazilians would try to buy him. There are no other men with black
+beards--except the German woman-stealer; and of course he cannot be the
+one."
+
+"No?" Pedro asked, softly.
+
+"No, certainly. Why? Of what were you thinking?"
+
+Pedro's brown eyes twinkled, but he made no answer. He only inhaled a
+long puff from his cigarette and looked across the water at the
+hairpin-shaped town.
+
+"What about that visiting trip of yours to-night?" McKay asked.
+
+"I wish to see what is in that house with the barred door, Capitao. When
+I am curious about such a matter Lourenço always becomes curious, too,
+so I shall have to take him with me. If I did not he would say I was
+making love to the chief's wives."
+
+"_Por Deus!_ That may be all the barred house holds--the wives of the
+chief," guessed Lourenço. "Why waste time and risk death to look into
+that place?"
+
+"_Quem nao arrisca nao ganha_, as the coronel would say--he who risks
+nothing gains nothing. I feel that we should visit that house. Something
+calls me back to it."
+
+Lourenço studied his partner a moment, then nodded slowly. But McKay
+interposed decided objection.
+
+"Too dangerous. Also unnecessary. We'll get Rand--if the man is
+Rand--through the chief. Your night spying might ruin everything and get
+you killed into the bargain. Nothing to gain and all to lose. Stay
+here."
+
+Pedro's eyes hardened. But it was Lourenço who answered.
+
+"Capitao, I think we had best do as Pedro says. It is a queer thing and
+I cannot explain it, but I have known him to have such ideas in the past
+and they have always worked out for the best. He himself does not know
+why he does some things--things which look totally foolish and which
+often are very dangerous--except that he feels like doing them. Yet I
+have never known this foolishness to fail to turn out well. He and I
+will go over to-night and see what we may see."
+
+The captain's brows drew together. Flat insubordination! Then he
+remembered that these men were not subordinates at all; remembered also
+what Coronel Nunes said concerning their ability to get into and out of
+dangerous situations. When Knowlton sided with them he capitulated.
+
+"Up in the States we'd say Pedro was 'riding his hunch,'" was the
+lieutenant's remark. "And I've known a hunch to bring all kinds of good
+luck. Gee! I'd like to go across with you lads myself! But I'm no jungle
+expert, especially after dark, and I'd only be in the way. Besides,
+we'll sure have to stick here and keep up appearances while you're gone.
+How will you get over? There's no way but swimming, and this creek's
+probably inhabited by the usual 'gators and snakes and things."
+
+"When one can travel only by swimming, one swims," Pedro smiled. "Leave
+that to us, senhores. Now the sun sinks fast and I have hunger. Let us
+eat."
+
+Night was at hand. While the whites talked some of the Mayorunas had
+quietly slipped away into the bush, seeking whatever fresh meat might be
+obtainable without straying too far from camp. Naturally, the hunting
+was poor so near an inhabited place, but now the absent men came
+stealing back with a few small birds and one monkey. Though the savages
+asked nothing and evidently expected nothing from the whites to eke out
+this scant provision, the latter opened their meager larders to Tucu,
+ordering him to see that every man had at least a few mouthfuls to eat.
+Tucu, like a good commander, made no bones of accepting the invitation
+for the good of his men. When all hands had stowed away the last meal of
+the day the rations were reduced almost to the vanishing point.
+
+"Those miserable whelps over there might have had the decency to give us
+a few bites," Knowlton growled, looking at the Red Bone men on the other
+bank, who were gorging themselves on meat brought by their women.
+
+"It is quite possible that they intend to give us several bites later
+on," Pedro suggested, with a mirthless smile.
+
+"Uh-huh. Shouldn't wonder. But it's also possible that they'll have to
+assimilate a few lead pills before chewing us up. Rod, we'll have our
+work cut out standing guard to-night. I wouldn't put it past that lying
+old Umanuh to try rubbing us out before morning."
+
+"Nor I," concurred McKay. "Only question is whether he dares take a
+chance against our guns and against the likelihood that Monitaya will
+send other men to investigate our disappearance. Better keep well out of
+sight."
+
+As he spoke the last light of day vanished. Stars and a quarter moon
+leaped out in the swiftly darkening sky. The small fire of the
+expedition threw dim shadows against the poles of the night shelters.
+Lights glimmered in the Red Bone huts, and other lights began to streak
+across the gloom--the bright little lanterns of fireflies coasting along
+the stream. But at the point where the Red Bone night guard lurked no
+light shone. They had built no fire, and now they were almost invisible
+in the faint moonshine--sinister shadows which even now might be
+meditating murder or worse.
+
+Lourenço lounged over to Tucu, who was watching those shadows with a
+fixed cat stare, and informed him that until morning a man with a gun
+would be always on guard while the rest slept. The Indian grunted
+approval. By way of precaution against being killed by his own men, the
+Brazilian added the information that later on he and his comrade would
+leave the camp and go upstream for a time. At this Tucu's eyes dwelt on
+his, veered to the lights of the town, and returned. In them was a
+plain, though unspoken, question. The bushman ignored it and strolled
+back to his _tambo_.
+
+The moon sailed higher. The animal uproar of early night began to
+diminish. The fire, almost buried under slow-burning wood whose acrid
+smoke alleviated the insect pests, smoldered dull red. McKay and
+Knowlton drew lots for the first sleep, the captain winning and promptly
+getting under his net. In the Mayoruna shelter all was dark and silent,
+each man sleeping lightly with one hand on a weapon. The two Brazilians
+also were out of sight in their hut.
+
+Up and down, a barely distinguishable figure, Knowlton passed slowly
+with holster unbuttoned and rifle cocked, eyes turning periodically to
+the Red Bone outpost and ears intent to pick any unusual sound out of
+the night noise. Gradually the small lights of the town faded out. To
+all appearance, sleep had whelmed it for the night. The watchers on the
+farther shore stirred a little at times, but the blot they made in the
+moonshine remained fixed in the same spot. The only moving things were
+the khaki-clad sentinel and the blazing fireflies.
+
+Another hour rolled slowly by. The sentinel stopped and stood at a
+corner of the _tambo_. Now was as good a time as any for the Brazilians
+to start their perilous reconnaissance. Perhaps they had gone to sleep.
+He squinted at their hammocks. Yes, they were occupied. Stepping softly
+to the hammock of Pedro, he lifted the net to whisper to the occupant.
+Then he stared, dropped the net, and lifted Lourenço's curtain. A soft,
+self-derisive chuckle sounded in his throat as he stole out again.
+
+The hammocks were occupied, yes; but only by packs and rifles. Armed
+only with machetes, the two bushmen now were--where? He did not even
+know when or which way they had gone. Fine sentinel, wasn't he, to let
+two full-grown men sneak away right under his nose? And if they could
+get out so slick, why couldn't somebody else--a murderous Red Bone, for
+instance--get in with equal facility?
+
+Wherefore he became all the more alert. Instead of resuming his slow
+pace, he stood quiet at a corner, scrutinizing everything within his
+range of vision, listening more intently than ever. Two or three times
+he leaned forward and lifted his piece as some splashing noise in the
+creek came to him; but each time the cannibal guards on the other bank
+also sprang to see what caused the sound, then grunted to one another
+and relaxed, so he knew it was made by piscatory or reptilian life. Near
+him nothing moved. And the moon sailed on westward, smoothly, steadily
+measuring off the silent hours of the night watch.
+
+Then all at once every nerve in him strained toward the back of the
+_tambo_. Something was there! He had not heard it--seen it--smelled
+it--but he felt it; a nameless thing that did not belong there. With
+smooth speed he pivoted, looked, listened. Nothing there.
+
+Motionless, feeling slightly creepy, concealed under the roof corner, he
+waited. A sound came--a stealthy sound. Something was creeping in.
+Lourenço and Pedro, perhaps? Stooping low, he peered along the ground
+under the hammocks.
+
+A man was coming--coming on all-fours like an animal. He was too
+stealthy to be either of the Brazilians. Knowlton glimpsed him only
+dimly, but he was sure this was no man who belonged here. And now, as on
+a previous occasion almost identical in its circumstances, the watchman
+acted in accordance with Tim Ryan's General Order Number Thirteen.
+
+In three jumps he was upon the invader. His gun butt crashed down on the
+rising head. The other collapsed on the ground.
+
+Swiftly Knowlton snapped a match with his thumb-nail. The sudden flare
+half blinded him, but what he saw made him suck in his breath. When the
+match went out he turned the senseless body over, drew his pocket
+flashlight, stabbed its white ray downward. Then he committed the
+unpardonable sin of the army--he dropped his rifle.
+
+Dark haired, dark bearded, streaked with red dye and bleeding slightly
+at the nose, at his feet lay the man for whom the indomitable trio had
+traveled thousands of miles and dared all the deaths of the jungle--the
+Raposa.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+SHADOWS OF THE NIGHT
+
+
+"Rod! Wake up!"
+
+The tense whisper aroused McKay instantly. With one sweep of the arm his
+net was torn aside and he leaped out with pistol drawn.
+
+"Right, Merry. What is it?"
+
+"We've got him! Look!"
+
+The electric ray again streaked the gloom. The astounded captain did not
+drop his gun, but he came near it. For a long minute he stood as in a
+trance. When he attempted to holster his weapon he fumbled three times
+for the sheath before he found it.
+
+"Whew!" he breathed. "Have you killed him?"
+
+"Nope--don't think so. Lord! I hope not! Now that I think of it, I did
+give him a mighty solid smash. Used the butt. He was crawling in here,
+and naturally I didn't stop to ask for his card. Feel his head."
+
+McKay complied. His exploring fingers found only a huge bump under the
+thick hair.
+
+"No, his skull's whole. Didn't even split the scalp. You crowned him
+hard, but unless he got concussion he's still useful. His nosebleed
+comes from hitting the ground, I think. Turn off the light. Are you
+still on guard?"
+
+"Yes. The Brazilians are out."
+
+"Take a turn and see that all's clear. Can't tell what might break any
+minute now. Leave your flash here."
+
+Passing the flat, nickel light-box to the captain, Knowlton retrieved
+his gun from the ground and resumed his patrol. Slight as the
+disturbance had been, uneasiness was in the air. The savages on the far
+shore were up, peering at the _tambo_ and muttering to one another.
+Measuring the distance, the lieutenant saw that, though they had
+undoubtedly seen the flashlight switched on and off and made out the
+movements of men, they could not have discerned what lay on the ground
+beyond the hammocks. Nearer at hand, Tucu and a couple of the Mayorunas
+were awake and looking out. But the sight of the sentinel strolling up
+and down in apparent unconcern and the absence of light in the _tambo_
+gradually quieted the suspicions on both sides of the water. Soon the
+Red Bones squatted again and the Mayorunas lay back with minds at ease.
+
+Then a dim sheen of light showed for a time at the back of the white
+men's shelter, fading out after a few minutes into the usual gloom.
+McKay had pulled a blanket over himself and the unconscious man, masking
+his torch glare from any watching eye while he studied the face and form
+of the invader. After the faint radiance vanished certain sounds came to
+the sentry's ears. Then McKay's tall figure loomed in the vague
+moonshine. Knowlton stopped beside him.
+
+"It's Rand," the captain vouchsafed in an undertone. "No question of it.
+Features identical, though face is drawn. White hair mark, broken nose,
+green eyes. I opened one eye. Got a bad foot, partly healed; looks as if
+he'd torn it on a stub. Poor devil seems nearly starved."
+
+"So? Then that's why he sneaked in like that--wanted to steal some grub.
+Those mutts over yonder probably haven't fed him since he got hurt."
+
+"That's it. He's had to do his own foraging, and his foot has given him
+mighty little chance. Damn those brutes!"
+
+"Right! But now what? Look out that he doesn't sneak away again."
+
+"He won't. I tied his feet. He's in Pedro's hammock, still dead to the
+world. If he wakes up and starts to yell I'll gag him. We've got to get
+away now as soon as we can."
+
+"How?"
+
+"Don't know. By water, perhaps. Wish those bushman were here. Haven't
+heard any noise over there, have you?"
+
+"All quiet. They're safe--or dead."
+
+"Hm! Confounded foolishness, anyway. But we've no means of getting out
+until they're back. Couldn't desert them, besides. What time is it?"
+
+"Ten-thirty. You go on watch at midnight."
+
+"I'm on watch now, inside. They may be back any time. If they don't show
+up in the next couple of hours I'll send Tucu to find out why. We'll
+have to get those canoes over here, too. Water leaves no trail."
+
+He turned back into the hut, leaving Knowlton figuring chances. To
+obtain those canoes was a man-sized job. To put the Red Bone guards out
+of action without arousing the whole tribe was an even bigger job. But
+no boats could be brought over until the outpost was silenced, that was
+sure.
+
+Another half-hour crept past. Still no noise from the town, no
+suspicious move on the other shore. Then from the _tambo_ itself came a
+low mumble of voices. Knowlton stepped swiftly into it. As noiselessly
+as they had gone the two bushmen had returned.
+
+In his usual concise phrases McKay was informing them of the capture of
+the Raposa. With his back to the stream and the flashlight held close to
+his body, he played the light for an instant on the face of the still
+unconscious man. Then, once more in darkness, he asserted:
+
+"Now that we have him, we must get out of here. Only chance to do that
+is to get the canoes. With them we can at least be away from this town
+by sunrise, and it will take the Red Bones just so much longer to find
+our trail where we take to the bush. We'll get a flying start that way.
+Anything else to suggest?"
+
+"That is the best plan, Capitao," Lourenço agreed. For the first time
+since the Americans had known him his voice held a note of suppressed
+excitement. "It is the only plan worth while. And I do not think we
+shall have to take to our legs soon--if at all. I believe this creek
+connects with that which flows past the Monitaya _malocas_. We have
+learned some things. _Por Deus!_ If only we had known the Raposa was
+here!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because then we could have brought company with us. Senhores, guess
+what the barred house holds."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Women of the Mayorunas! Girls stolen from Monitaya and other
+settlements!"
+
+"Jumping Judas!" ejaculated Knowlton. "Are you sure?"
+
+"Sure, comrades! These foul Red Bones are the men who have been lurking
+around the Mayoruna tribe houses and capturing girls who went into the
+bush. They have taken the prisoners to the water, where the trails
+always were lost and where they could find hiding places until night,
+then drive their canoes past the clearings and get out of that country.
+So there must be some water connection by which these men travel, and by
+which we too can travel. If we go downstream we are almost sure to find
+it by daylight."
+
+"But why--what's the idea of their stealing the girls? For victims? If
+so, how are the girls still alive?"
+
+"Do you not see, senhor?" Pedro broke in, impatiently. "Did not Umanuh
+ask if we would pay more than the other Blackbeard for the Raposa? What
+other Blackbeard?"
+
+"Schwandorf!" the Americans blurted, simultaneously.
+
+"Not so loud! Schwandorf, of course! Umanuh works with the German. He
+catches girls by stealth and sells them to the German to add to his
+slave gangs. While the Mayorunas all blame the Peruvians for the
+disappearances, Umanuh works unsuspected. He is holding these women
+until Schwandorf comes again--and it may be that Schwandorf is not far
+off at this moment. Now that we have come seeking the wild man, Umanuh
+at once thinks of selling him also; and he wonders whether we or
+Schwandorf will pay the more for him."
+
+"By thunder! I believe you're right!" Knowlton coincided. "He's stalling
+for time, holding us here while Schwandorf comes up, I'll bet. No wonder
+he and his men are wary of the Mayorunas--they thought we'd come to
+snoop around and catch 'em with the goods. You fellows must have done a
+mighty slick job to find out this stuff without getting caught. Isn't
+the house guarded at night?"
+
+"Indeed it is! Two clubmen are there now, and there is only the one
+door. Not even a window. But Lourenço worked a small hole between two
+logs at the back while I watched the clubmen, and through the hole he
+whispered with one of the women inside. If only we had known the wild
+man was here we could have jumped the guards and tried to bring back the
+women. But of course your business about the Raposa had to be thought of
+first, so all we could do was to tell them friends were here."
+
+For a few seconds there was the silence of thought. Then Knowlton
+chuckled.
+
+"I'll say we have our hands full this night. Now we not only have to get
+ourselves and Rand out of here, but also rescue the fair damsels from
+the clutches of the ogre. 'Twon't do to leave them here while we go back
+to Monitaya and get the rest of his army. By the time we could come back
+they'd be gone--one way or another. What's done has to be done now or
+never."
+
+"Right!" McKay commended. "We'll have to save the women, of course.
+Question is--how?"
+
+Lourenço answered at once.
+
+"My idea, Capitao, is this: We two will return. With us we will take
+Tucu. The three of us can handle those guards quietly. We must have
+Tucu, because the women do not know us and might balk at the last
+moment. Women are queer creatures, and these might think themselves
+safer inside prison walls than following two strange men through the
+night; but Tucu can handle them. When once we are clear of the houses
+Tucu can lead the women to the bank above here, and we shall try for the
+canoes. Then it will be fast work to get away, but if we have good
+fortune it can be done."
+
+"Confound it! You fellows are taking all the risks! Can't you take more
+men--"
+
+"No. No man but Tucu. He has a cool head. These others, if they knew,
+would go blood-mad and attack the Red Bones to avenge their lost women,
+and so would get us all killed. Now I will talk with Tucu."
+
+He slipped into the Mayoruna shelter and returned with the cannibal
+leader, whom he led to the far side of the _tambo_ before speaking.
+Then, in whispers which the other tribesmen could not overhear, he
+explained the situation. Knowlton took another turn or two along his
+post, finding that the Red Bones across the water were stirring about
+and evidently aware that something was going on; but they made no move
+either to get into a canoe or to send a man to the houses beyond. As he
+stopped again at the corner near the whispering pair he heard Tucu
+grinding his teeth, and as the savage turned his face toward the Red
+Bone outpost it was a mask of murder. But he spoke no word as he slipped
+back to his own men.
+
+"He will wake another man and tell him what to do," Lourenço explained.
+"But only we four shall know of the women until they are freed. Will one
+of you lend Tucu a machete? He may need a weapon, and he cannot carry
+his big bow on this trip."
+
+A few minutes later the three crept out behind the _tambo_, Tucu
+gripping McKay's machete. As a final word Lourenço said: "Our men here
+may move about a little after a time, but do not try to keep them quiet.
+It is a part of the plan."
+
+With that he was gone. Listen as they might, the Americans could hear no
+sound to indicate that three men now were traversing the black tangle
+beyond.
+
+McKay took up his rifle and assumed the sentry work. Knowlton sat in his
+hammock, grateful for the chance to rest his weary legs. From the
+hammock where the Raposa lay no sound came. With a worried frown the
+lieutenant leaned over him and laid hand on his heart. After a while he
+sat up again in relief.
+
+"Lord! I sure knocked him cold!" was his thought. "But he's still with
+us, and there's no use in reviving him now; the less noise over here the
+better. Hope I didn't jar his brains loose altogether; he might wake up
+a murderous maniac. Poor devil! A millionaire, yet half starved and more
+than half nutty."
+
+He glanced at the dim scene before the hut. The moon now had journeyed
+so far westward that the creeping shadows of the tall trees had moved
+out almost to the creek, and the two crude shelters and the sentinel
+were surrounded by dense gloom. The Red Bone men opposite must rely on
+their ears alone hereafter, for they could not see through this
+darkness. McKay was visible enough to his own party, but not to the
+enemy. The blond man in the hammock watched the somber figure of his
+comrade, followed the flight of a big firefly whose light floated near,
+thought of the two bushmen out in the dark, and looked again at the
+still form of Rand.
+
+"Drifters all," he soliloquized. "The fireflies and Rod and Tim and I
+and those Brazilian dare-devils--all floating around because we can't
+keep still, and never getting anywhere. And you, you silly-ass Rand,
+have a mint waiting for you up home, and we have to come find you and
+lead you up there and shove your nose into it. And if you get your
+brains back you'll be a nine days' wonder and a hero of the jungle and
+all that, and the girls will all tumble over you--because you've got a
+couple of millions in your sock. And we fellows who yanked you out of
+hell by the left hind leg can pocket our pay and go jump off the dock,
+for all anybody cares. Ho-hum! All the same, I'd rather be me than you,
+old thing. Free to drift and able to handle myself. You can have the
+money and the moths that hang around it."
+
+With which he yawned, squinted again at the sinister figure squatting
+out yonder in the moonshine, arose, and made himself useful. Working
+very quietly, he took down three of the hammocks, rolled them up, laid
+them at the corner nearest the creek; made up the packs by sense of
+touch and placed them and the rifles of the absent pair in the same
+place. Then he lifted the Raposa from the one remaining hammock, laid
+him on the packs, rolled up the hammock itself, and put it under the
+unconscious man's head. If given time when the crisis came, he meant to
+save all equipment. If not, Rand lay where he could be grabbed without
+delay.
+
+Before he completed the work he became aware that the Mayorunas all were
+awake. Not only awake, but moving stealthily about, as Lourenço had
+predicted. McKay also knew it and stepped back into the hut, where
+Knowlton told him what he had done. But so softly did the men of
+Monitaya move that the Red Bone watchers showed no sign of alarm. Both
+the Americans observed, however, that the cannibals across the stream
+had their heads together and that occasionally one looked up at the
+little moon.
+
+"Get that, Rod? They're waiting for the shadows to crawl over there and
+cover them and the water. They know that then we can't see what they're
+up to. I'm betting they intend to pull some dirty work after that."
+
+"Yep. But intention and accomplishment are two different birds. Wonder
+what these Mayorunas are fixing to do. Wish I could talk their
+language."
+
+"Tucu evidently left orders for them to get up at a certain time, but
+why I don't know. We'd better let them alone."
+
+The shadow line passed out upon the water, slipping by infinitesimal
+gradations across its mirror surface. The Mayorunas had become quiet.
+The whites waited in silent suspense for they knew not what. Far out in
+the forest a jaguar gave his coughing roar at intervals. Little by
+little the Red Bone men arose from their squat until they stood erect. A
+tense stillness held both forces. And the shadows crawled on--on--and
+reached the farther bank.
+
+Then a Red Bone man shoved his head forward, squinting upstream as if he
+had heard something move in the rank grass. He began to sneak softly in
+that direction. At that moment, from the water's edge a little above the
+camp, sounded a loud hiss.
+
+Before the sound died a sudden thrum of bow cords filled the air. A
+whisper of five-foot shafts speeding over the water--a rapid-fire series
+of tiny impacts--a couple of short groans--the thumps of falling
+bodies--and the Red Bone outpost was no more. Shot through and through
+by the deadly war arrows of the Mayorunas, they were dead before they
+struck the ground. And from the men of Monitaya sounded one short,
+subdued "Hah!" of savage satisfaction.
+
+Up from the ground where that hiss had sounded rose a tall figure which
+waved its arms and danced about in impromptu signals. Then it ran for
+the canoes. Out from the gloom upstream other figures took shape,
+running fast for the same point. With one simultaneous movement Knowlton
+and McKay seized the Raposa and rushed with him to the stream.
+
+"Senhores!" sounded Pedro's voice, low but tense, across the water. "Be
+ready!"
+
+"Ready and waiting!" snapped McKay. "Who are those people. Your women?"
+
+"_Si._ We are not discovered--"
+
+Across his words smote a long shrill yell from the town.
+
+"_Por Deus._ We _are_ discovered! Get our rifles, for the love of _Deus
+Padre_."
+
+He leaped into a canoe, drove it headlong across, and dived for the
+_tambo_. Behind him the other figures dashed panting up to the landing.
+Tucu's voice rasped in swift commands. The fugitives swarmed into other
+dugouts. The Mayoruna men, still ignorant of the identity of these
+people, but assured by Tucu's voice and manner that they were not
+enemies, lowered their weapons and rushed for the water. Up in the town
+the yelling swiftly grew into a roar, and running figures came pelting
+toward the creek.
+
+The canoes struck the bank. Some were partly filled, some empty and in
+tow. Into Pedro's canoe the whites bundled the Raposa, while the
+Mayorunas got into anything within reach. Lourenço appeared from nowhere
+and urged the Americans to open fire. As he spoke, arrows thudded into
+the ground and the water.
+
+"Take this man and go!" rasped McKay. "We're losing our equipment,
+but--"
+
+His rifle leaped to his shoulder. Flame spat from it. From the van of
+the charging Red Bones shrilled a death scream.
+
+Again and again the captain's gun cracked. Knowlton's joined in. Before
+their rifles grew silent the blunt roar of Pedro's repeater broke out.
+And with the emptying of their long guns the Americans drew their short
+ones, and in a concerted ripping crash the forty-fives volleyed death
+and dismay into the oncoming cannibals.
+
+The rush was checked. For a few seconds the Red Bones wavered and milled
+about. Into their mass poured a cloud of arrows and blowgun darts from
+the silent but no less deadly weapons of the Mayorunas. As the whites
+paused to reload, Pedro opened a new blast from Lourenço's rifle, which
+his comrade had passed to him on the run. Lourenço was not shooting, but
+working madly and alone to save the equipment. And, thanks to the
+renewed deadly fire of the guns, he saved it.
+
+Before the wicked belch of the three rifles and the two automatics the
+Red Bones gave back more and more. Their arrows plunged all around the
+fighting men, but they fell at random, for the gunmen and the canoes
+were virtually invisible in the deep shadows. Downstream, Tucu's harsh
+voice jarred in commands as he straightened out the line of boats.
+
+At the next lull in the firing Lourenço panted: "In, comrades! We are
+loaded. In!"
+
+"Great guns! Are you still here?" snapped McKay. "I told you--"
+
+"In! Talk later. Come!"
+
+The three gun fighters swiftly obeyed. With a powerful heave Lourenço
+sent the canoe after the others. Americans, Brazilians, and the Raposa
+hunched up among the packs, all went sliding down a jungle Styx.
+
+A moment later the Red Bone warriors, taking heart from the cessation of
+firing, poured an avalanche of arrows into the spot where they had been.
+And as the canoe, last in the escaping line, was swallowed up in the
+impenetrable blackness of the forest a hair-raising screech of
+diabolical fury blended with a swift succession of splashes back where
+the cannibals were plunging headlong into the stream to reach the dead
+or wounded men whom they vainly hoped to find on the farther shore.
+
+"I told you to take this man and go!" McKay fumed. "By disobeying orders
+you risked losing him."
+
+"Oh, pipe down, Rod!" remonstrated Knowlton. "If they had, where'd we be
+now? This was the last canoe."
+
+"_Si._ It is so," added Lourenço, his voice hard edged. "As it is, the
+man and the equipment and you also are here. And let me tell you this,
+Capitao Makkay, whether you like it or not: Pedro and I would see this
+wild man and a million others like him in a hotter place than this
+before we would abandon fighting comrades."
+
+To which McKay, finding no adequate answer, made none whatever.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+THE SIREN OF WAR
+
+
+Like a fleet manned by sightless sailors the line of boats blundered on
+through the blackness. With no guiding light, the canoes bumped the
+banks and collided with one another in perilous confusion. Speed was
+impossible, yet speed was imperative. Knowlton and his little flashlight
+solved the problem.
+
+"Say, fellows, let's take the lead," he suggested. "This little light
+isn't much, but it's something, and there are some extra batteries in my
+haversack when this burns out. We can see a little way ahead, and pass
+back the word to the rest. What say?"
+
+"_Na terra dos cegos quem tem um olho e rei_--in blindman's land he who
+has one eye is king," said Pedro. "That little white eye in your box may
+save us all. Lourenço, tell those ahead to let us pass."
+
+Without question the preceding dugouts swerved, and the boat of the
+white men slipped by. At the head of the line they found Tucu and his
+crew struggling manfully to make progress without wrecking the whole
+fleet at the turns. Vast relief and instant acceptance of the new
+leadership followed Lourenço's explanation. At once the floating column
+began to pick up speed. And it was well that it did.
+
+Howls of baffled hate came faintly through the tree mass from the Red
+Bone town. Some time later more yells of rage sounded, much nearer--back
+at a place on the creek which the last boat had cleared only a few
+minutes previously. Some of the Umanuh men had made torches and run
+along one of the Red Bone trails to a bend in the stream, only to find
+the water bare of everything but dying ripples.
+
+Whether the enemy attempted to follow in canoes the escaping party never
+knew, for none succeeded in overtaking the rearmost boat. And after that
+one snarling uproar on the creek bank they heard no more of the land
+pursuit. The narrow margin of safety gained by the aid of the flashlight
+proved enough to give a commanding lead, and from that time on the only
+obstacles to their retreat were those of darkness and winding waters.
+
+Hour after hour Knowlton squatted in the extreme bow, picking out the
+turns and snags just ahead and passing the word back to Lourenço, who,
+in the stern, steered in accordance with his orders and relayed the
+course to Tucu, just behind. Amidships, Pedro and McKay plied steady
+paddles and the Raposa lay all but forgotten on the baggage. There were
+no halts. If any boat back in the blackness got into difficulties it
+extricated itself as best it could, unaided by the rest, and fell into a
+new place in the column.
+
+At last a wan light, which was scarcely a light, but rather a lessening
+of the density, came about the stream. The renewed racket of birds and
+beasts announced that up overhead the sky had paled into dawn. Slowly
+the nearest tree trunks began to take shape in the void, and presently
+the shore line became visible to all eyes. At the same time Knowlton's
+tiny lamp dimmed and faded out.
+
+"Another battery gone," he announced, opening the case and dropping its
+contents into the creek. "Ho-yo-ho-hum! Gee! I'm all in! Eyes feel like
+a couple of burnt holes. Well, gents, I move that at the first available
+spot we go ashore, feed our faces, look at the ladies, and perform our
+morning salute to Umanuh--said salute consisting of applying the right
+thumb to the end of the nose and snappily twiddling four fingers."
+
+"Motion carried." McKay's set face relaxed. Then, his glance dropping to
+the Raposa, it tightened again. "Oh, hullo, Rand! How you feeling?"
+
+The unconscious man was unconscious no longer. Moreover, his expression
+was not that of one just emerging from a stupor and bewildered as to his
+surroundings. Though he had made no movement to change his position, his
+eyes indicated that he had been awake for some time. They dwelt steadily
+on McKay, then strayed past the captain to Pedro, Lourenço, and the
+first Mayoruna crew following a few feet behind. His face was
+inscrutable, and he spoke no word.
+
+"You're with friends. Understand? Friends. You're going home. These
+Indians are friends, too. Get that? _Friends!_"
+
+The green eyes hung on McKay's face again; but, as before, no answer
+came in word, movement, or expression.
+
+"No good, Rod," said Knowlton, who could not see the rescued man's face,
+but watched McKay's. "'Fraid I knocked his last brains down his throat.
+Dead from the neck up."
+
+"I don't know about that. He doesn't look vacant. See here, Rand. We're
+going to land and eat! You hungry? Uh-huh. Thought you'd understand
+that. He's alive, Merry. Maybe not all here, but enough to get us."
+
+"Good!"
+
+The blond man turned his attention downstream again. Soon he suggested,
+"How about landing at that little open space down there at the left,
+Lourenço?"
+
+"Very good, senhor. It looks dry."
+
+The canoe swerved and floated down to a spot on the left shore where
+bright light poured down from an opening in the overhead wall of
+foliage.
+
+"Now look here, Rand," warned the captain. "We'll untie you. But if you
+try to duck into the bush, now or later, you get shot. Shot!
+Understand?"
+
+He tapped his pistol, and the gray eyes boring into the green ones were
+hard as chilled steel. For the first time Rand responded--a slow, short
+nod.
+
+McKay cut the cord around the wild man's ankles, then stepped ashore and
+held out a hand. Rand arose quietly, jumped to the earth unassisted,
+lifted his bad foot and stared at it, then limped onward into a spot
+where the sun now shone bright and warm, and sat down to bask.
+
+"Have to fix that foot, I expect," yawned Knowlton. "But my eyes right
+now are one solid ache, and I'm going to rest them. Watch him, will you,
+Rod? Can't tell what he might do. Of course you wouldn't shoot him,
+but--"
+
+"Wouldn't I? Not to kill, no. But if he makes one break I'll drill a leg
+for him. He's going to the States!"
+
+"Sure. I'm with you all the way. Now beat it and let me repose myself."
+
+He bathed his eyes, then lay down in the canoe with a wet handkerchief
+across them. Pedro and Lourenço already were ashore and raiding the
+slender packs for food. The Mayorunas were debarking and watching each
+new boat as it drew up, their eyes on the women who had wielded paddles
+with them but whose faces they now saw closely for the first time. In
+the shaft of sunlight McKay stood tall and forbidding, rifle in the
+crook of one arm, hat pulled low, guarding the gaunt man at his feet and
+viewing the landing of the expedition.
+
+The women, all young, numbered eleven. Their skins looked slightly
+pallid, their eyes too big and black, their faces somewhat drawn--the
+results of close confinement and anxiety; but none showed any sign of
+abuse. For commercial reasons alone, Umanuh had seen to it that the
+woman flesh he held for sale should remain uninjured. Now, saved from
+the slave trail or worse, the girls showed no more emotion than if on a
+mere journey after turtles or fish. A few spoke to men whom they
+evidently knew. Others gathered in a dumb cluster and awaited whatever
+might come next. With these Tucu talked in gruff monosyllables.
+
+When all were ashore, a dozen of the men went into the jungle to hunt.
+The others sought firewood, inspected weapons, talked with one another
+and with the girls, who stared at McKay and asked who he was. A number
+of the warriors looked sourly at Rand, whose face still bore the Red
+Bone tribal streaks which now, to Mayoruna minds, was the insignia of
+the enemy. All knew he was the man who had been sought, all saw that he
+was not a Red Bone, but a white man; yet their mental reaction to the
+sight of the sinister red cross on the forehead and the straight cheek
+lines was rabidly hostile. McKay, all-seeing, decided to wash Rand's
+face for him before journeying much farther. But Rand himself gave no
+sign that he either knew or cared what the feeling of the Mayorunas
+might be. Utterly impassive, he stared back at them.
+
+Then one of the women pointed at him and said something to Tucu. The
+tall watchdog's jaw set a little harder as he waited the effect.
+Somewhat to his surprise, Tucu and a couple of the other men now gave
+Rand a more friendly look. Soon afterward Tucu passed Lourenço, who
+talked with him a few minutes. Catching the Brazilian's eye, the captain
+motioned him nearer and asked for any news.
+
+"Tucu says, Capitao, that most of these girls are from _malocas_ other
+than that of Monitaya, though some of Monitaya's women also are here.
+And one of them says this man, the Raposa, tried to release them a short
+time ago and was nearly killed by the Red Bones for it. They let him
+live only because he is crazy, and they fear to kill a crazy man."
+
+"What! He tried to get them clear?"
+
+"Yes. He opened the door and motioned for them to run, but before they
+could escape they were caught. He was badly beaten. You will remember
+that he was hiding behind that same house when Pedro and Senhor Knowlton
+saw him. Perhaps he meant to try again."
+
+"Hm! Crazy and wild, but a white man for all that. How did you manage to
+free the women?"
+
+"Very simple," was the cool answer. "We stabbed the guards, opened the
+door, and came back to the creek with the women."
+
+"Just like that, eh? And the guards made no resistance, I suppose."
+
+"Not much," grinned the bushman. "They were not allowed to."
+
+"I see. Very simple, as you say. About as simple as our calm and
+unhurried departure."
+
+"Something like that, Capitao. What do you desire for breakfast--salt
+fish and coffee, or coffee and salt fish?"
+
+"A little of everything, thanks. Here comes some monkey meat, too."
+
+The first of the hunters had returned, bringing two big red howlers.
+Others drifted in at intervals, and not one returned empty handed; for
+here in the virgin jungle the game was plentiful, particularly at this
+early hour. Soon the air was heavy with the odor of broiling meat, and
+from the fire of the Brazilians the fragrance of coffee was wafted to
+the nostrils of the recumbent Knowlton. He arose, swallowing fast.
+
+"Gee! I'm half drowned!" was his humorous complaint. "The smell of eats
+makes my mouth water so fast I have to gasp for air. Must tickle your
+nose, too, eh, Rand, old top?"
+
+Rand, famished though he was, gave no sign of assent or of hunger. In
+fact, he gave no sign of anything. Stoically he sat, eyes front.
+
+"By thunder! the man's got pride!" the lieutenant added, in a lower
+tone. "Almost ready to keel over from lack of food, but stiff as a
+cigar-store Indian. Darned if I'm not beginning to respect him!"
+
+Tucu approached, carrying two big monkey haunches. One he offered to
+McKay, the other to Rand. The latter's immobility vanished in a flash.
+With a lightning grab he seized the proffered meat and sank his teeth in
+it. As he wolfed down the tough flesh the three men standing over
+exchanged glances. Tucu laid a hand on his stomach and pressed inward,
+signifying that the man had long gone hungry. The others nodded. Then
+they split the other haunch between them and fell to gnawing.
+
+Lourenço, bringing coffee to the captain, asked Tucu in what direction
+the Monitaya houses lay. Without hesitation the Indian pointed off to
+the left. The Brazilian glanced at the creek, estimating its general
+direction and rate of flow, then returned to his fire.
+
+Offered coffee, Rand took it and sipped it with evident relish. Likewise
+he accepted a cigarette, which he puffed like a man just learning to
+smoke--or one who has not smoked for years. For his meat, his drink, and
+his smoke he gave no indication of gratitude. His attitude was as
+indifferent and matter-of-fact as if he were one of the Mayorunas. When
+his smoke was ended he began inspecting his bad foot.
+
+"Let's see that," said Knowlton, dropping on one knee. "Looks pretty
+sore. Yes, it's more than sore; it's infected. How'd you get it,
+anyway?"
+
+No answer. Knowlton probed his face keenly. Rand straightened out his
+legs, wriggled his toes, and scowled.
+
+"Queer!" muttered the lieutenant, rising. "He looks as if he actually
+didn't know how he got that wound. You'd think he'd remember that much,
+anyhow. I sure am afraid his head is all scrambled up."
+
+He went to the canoe, returned with his meager medical kit, and knelt
+again.
+
+"Now listen here, Rand. I don't know how well you understand me, but I'm
+taking the chance. This foot has to be opened up and cleaned out.
+Otherwise you're going to have serious trouble with it. I'm going to
+hurt you. If you raise a row you'll get an anæsthetic--a swift punch
+under the ear. Better sit still and make no fuss."
+
+With which he went to work. He did a thorough job, and there was no
+doubt that it hurt. But Rand gave no trouble, nor even a sign of
+pain--except that he dug his fingers into the dirt.
+
+"Good boy!" the amateur surgeon approved, when he finished. "You're a
+Spartan--if you happen to remember what that is. Now we'll move on. But
+before we go, wash your face good and hard. Get that tribe paint off.
+These Indians with us don't like it. You're no Indian, anyhow; you're
+white, like us. Savvy? White man. Wash off paint!"
+
+He rolled up his kit and returned to the canoe. The Mayorunas, men and
+women, were entering their own craft. Rand sat motionless a moment,
+McKay and the Brazilians watching him keenly. Slowly then he got up of
+his own accord, limped to the water's edge, and began to scrub his face.
+
+When he desisted the marks still showed, for the red dye clung
+stubbornly to his skin; but they were fainter than before. The other men
+eyed him thoughtfully, none speaking. He settled himself in his former
+place, curled up, and began to doze.
+
+"A queer fish!" Pedro said, softly. "Is he crazy or not?"
+
+"Hanged if I know," replied McKay. "He's no maniac, anyhow. I'd give
+real money to know just what his mental condition is. But we can forget
+him for a while. I'm going to let you fellows sleep by turns now. I had
+some sleep last night; you've had none at all. Merry, your eyes need
+rest. You curl up in the bow and snooze one hour. Then another man, and
+so on. And how about letting Tucu lead the parade again?"
+
+"Excellent, Capitao! I was thinking of that." Lourenço talked to Tucu,
+who swung out into the current. The boat of the white men followed, then
+the others. At a steady cruising speed the brigade surged on downstream.
+
+Knowlton's allotted hour passed. Pedro took his place and was instantly
+asleep. In turn he was aroused, and Lourenço laid down his paddle. But
+just then Tucu's canoe slowed and floated in to the left bank.
+
+The others backed water and looked at a very narrow ravine--almost a
+cleft--in a rising hillside. Through it led a lane of water. From the
+third boat, in which were two women of the Monitaya tribe, now came
+voices carrying information to the Indian leader. At once he turned his
+boat into the cleft.
+
+"This is the connection we have been seeking." Lourenço explained. "The
+women say the boats of their captors came through this crack in the
+hill. At the end we shall find the creek of Monitaya."
+
+The women spoke truth. After threading their way along the weedy
+water-path, which was barely wide enough to give passage for the boats,
+they emerged at a slant into another stream. Down this, with the sure
+instinct for direction of the hereditary jungle-dweller, Tucu turned his
+prow without asking the women whether to go with or against the current.
+Once more on the waters of their home creek, the Mayorunas quickened
+their strokes and howled merrily on toward their _malocas_.
+
+Lourenço took his nap and resumed his place. Hour after hour the fleet
+sped on. Noon passed without a halt, the paddlers munching at whatever
+fragments remained from breakfast. By turns the Americans and Brazilians
+each got another hour's sleep, McKay consenting to relax when all his
+mates had rested. Rand dozed and awoke at intervals, seeming content and
+comfortable despite his cramped position.
+
+By four o'clock even the Mayorunas began to lag in their strokes.
+Excluding the halt at sunrise, they now had been journeying for fifteen
+hours, in the last nine of which they had covered many miles of
+serpentine water. The heat of the day and the constant drive of the
+paddles had taken their toll, and now the body of every man fiercely
+demanded more food. McKay, knowing that in jungle travel distance is not
+a matter of miles, but of hours, had begun to figure that the journey
+which had taken nearly five days of overland work might be completed
+that night by the swiftly moving canoes. But now, recognizing the signs
+of exhaustion, he realized that without some powerful spur the Indians
+would not attempt to reach the home _malocas_ until the morrow.
+
+Then the spur came. Even as Tucu began scanning the shores for a good
+camp site, he and every other Mayoruna suddenly ceased paddling and
+threw up his head. Faint and far, a xylophonic call of beaten wooden
+bars rapped across the jungle, rising and falling in swift, regular
+cadence--a sirenical flow and ebb of sound waves. Over and over it
+undulated, rapid, incessant, imperative.
+
+A chorus of excited grunts broke from the canoe brigade. The dugout of
+Tucu leaped away like a roweled horse. Lourenço and Pedro buried their
+paddles in mighty strokes, hurling their boat ahead to keep from being
+run down by those behind.
+
+Lourenço barked at Tucu, who flung back an answer.
+
+"Paddle hard, Capitao! If we do not keep up we shall be wrecked. That
+message is the war call of the Mayorunas--calling in the hunters from
+the forest to take arms against an enemy. We must race now with these
+madmen around us, or we go under. Paddle!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+STRATEGY
+
+
+In the last light of the fast-fading day the canoes darted from the
+forest into the clearing where stood the Monitaya _malocas_.
+
+Long before their arrival the siren call had ceased, but there had been
+no lessening of speed by the racing dugouts. On the contrary, the last
+long mile had been covered in a final desperate spurt, the paddles
+swinging in swift unison to the accompaniment of a ferocious chant of
+one syllable: "Hough! Hough! Hough!" This explosive cadence had echoed
+down the stream ahead of them; and now, as the panting crews emerged
+from the jungle, they found themselves flanked by a long line of their
+fellow-warriors, bristling with drawn arrows and ready spear points. But
+of the enemy whose presence that great xylophone had betokened there was
+no sign.
+
+At sight of the familiar feather bonnets of their own men the tense
+Monitayans let their weapons slowly sink. And when Tucu, leaping ashore,
+gaspingly demanded news of the fight, the line dissolved into a mob
+which rushed to welcome him and his mates. In the first few breaths it
+was learned that no fight had yet taken place, but that all the warriors
+had been brought in and ordered to prepare to march at the next sunrise;
+and that the sudden war call had been sent out as the result of the
+arrival of a stranger.
+
+Then the crowd parted, and through it came striding two men whose
+appearance caused the white men to erupt into hoarse shouts of greeting.
+One, whose hard face swiftly relaxed into a half smile of relief, was
+the great chief himself. The other, whose jutting jaw suddenly dropped
+and whose blue eyes opened in incredulity, was Tim--Tim, once more
+strong and florid and aggressive, gripping his rifle, astounded at the
+sight of his comrades standing there alive and alert. They soon learned
+why.
+
+Dropping his gun, he sprang at them with an inarticulate roar of
+welcome. He wrung their hands, pounded their shoulders, laughed, cried,
+swore, all at once. Then he burst out:
+
+"Glory be! Ye're alive, homelier 'n ever and tough as tripe! We thought
+ye was wiped out sure! We was all set to start in the mornin' and pull
+them Red Bones to pieces. Mebbe we'll do it yet, too. How'd ye break
+through? Did ye kill Sworn-off and his gang?"
+
+"Schwandorf? Gang? Haven't seen anybody but Red Bones--though we sure
+saw plenty of them," replied Knowlton. "What are you talking about?"
+
+"Then ye missed him by about one point windage. When'd ye leave? Last
+night? I bet he's there by now. Gee! Where'd ye git them girls? And
+who's this guy? Great gosh! Is he the Raposy? Wal, for the love o'
+Mike--"
+
+"Tim!" broke in McKay. "What's all this about? Now wait. This is the
+Raposa. These girls are Mayoruna women held prisoners by the Red Bones.
+We got them last night and lit out in the middle of a general
+engagement. Now open up with your news."
+
+"Right, Cap. We got a visitor to-day--old friend of ourn--li'l' old
+Hozy, the only white guy in that Peruvian crew we had. He's all dolled
+up like an Injun--shaved face, tribe paint, and so on. He come through
+the Injun country that way--I dunno yet how he done it, him bein' a
+Peruvian and all, but he got through, and he says Sworn-off and a whole
+gang of bad eggs is back here to git this Raposy guy and all the girls
+they can lay hands on. He says Sworn-off's got them Red Bones workin'
+for him, and you fellers must be massacreed sure by now.
+
+"Good thing I was here when he come, or he'd be cut up and in the
+stewpot. Monitaya's a good skate, but he sure is poison to anything
+Peruvian, and soon as Hozy begun to try to talk he got wise and dang
+near bumped him off. I got him to cool down some, and he believes Hozy's
+tellin' the truth, but even at that they got Hozy tied up like a dog.
+Come look at him."
+
+But it was necessary to wait awhile for Tucu and Lourenço to tell
+Monitaya the tale of what had taken place; for the chief demanded
+immediate and full details, and not until he had them would he return to
+his _maloca_ and his hammock throne. By that time the little moon was
+again ruler of the sky and the keen hunger of the voyagers had grown
+ravenous. Followed by the rescued and the rescuers, he then stalked into
+the tribal house and to his usual place, where he commanded that food be
+brought.
+
+On the ground, directly in front of the chief's hammock, sat a gaunt,
+painted Indian around whose neck was a stout noose, the other end of the
+cord being held by a muscular savage whose skull-smashing club was
+gripped loosely in his other fist. As the whites reached them the noosed
+man's face cracked in a grin.
+
+"Greetings, señores," said the voice of José. "You will pardon me for
+remaining seated, yes? The man behind me is itching for an excuse to
+crush my head."
+
+"José!" exclaimed both Knowlton and McKay. Though Tim had said José was
+"tied like a dog," they had not thought to find the expression literal
+truth. The sight angered them and they turned to Lourenço.
+
+"Tell Monitaya we want this man freed!" McKay snapped. At his peremptory
+tone the cannibal chieftain looked oddly at him, and when Lourenço
+translated the demand--though in a more diplomatic manner--he scowled.
+But he gave the clubman the word and the rope was lifted from the
+prisoner's neck.
+
+"_Gracias, amigos_," he bowed. "If I still remain seated, it is because
+I am very weary--and I have not eaten since yesterday."
+
+His thin face and his projecting ribs not only corroborated his simple
+announcement, but indicated that for more than one day his food and rest
+had been almost _nil_. Naked, painted, minus his fierce mustache and
+flamboyant headkerchief, he appeared a far different man than the
+domineering _puntero_ of a short time back. But his bold black eyes, his
+reckless grin, and his mocking tone proved him the same swashbuckling
+José, undaunted by hunger, exhaustion, or his position as prisoner of
+man eaters whose enmity was implacable.
+
+"Well, you're going to eat now, or we'll know why not!" vowed Knowlton.
+"We understand that you brought a warning to Monitaya. Is this his way
+of treating men who risk their lives to befriend him?"
+
+José shrugged.
+
+"Once an enemy, always an enemy. That is their rule. And do not think
+that I traveled the bush and threw myself into this snake heap from love
+of Monitaya. I do not care if he and all his race are blown to hell. I
+am here because, as I once told you, José Martinez never forgets. Thank
+you, señor, I will eat now and talk later."
+
+Deftly he extracted a chunk of meat from a clay pot which had been
+placed before Knowlton and in turn tendered to him. Monitaya watched him
+eat, but gave no sign of disapproval; and the Americans, and even the
+Brazilians, made an aggressive show of friendship toward the lone
+Peruvian for the express benefit of the chief. They knew well that by
+their rescue of the Mayoruna women they had made their own position
+among these people virtually impregnable, and that their recognition of
+José as a friend probably would be his only bulwark. Wherefore they left
+no doubt in the minds of the watchers as to where he stood in their
+regard.
+
+Monitaya, sitting in regal dignity, looked down upon two parties of
+seven feasting with famished speed--the rescued women who were not
+members of his own tribe, and the four Americans, two Brazilians, and
+one Peruvian. All the others had scattered--Tucu and his band to their
+own family triangles, and the four Monitaya girls to become the nuclei
+of feminine groups which demanded intimate accounts of their capture and
+treatment by the captors.
+
+To the strange women at his feet the chief paid scant attention now,
+though he meant to interrogate them after their hunger was satisfied.
+His eyes dwelt on Rand, the strange combination of white man, Indian,
+and jungle demon of whom he had heard so much and on whose tanned skin
+the red skeleton streaks told the tale of a "mind out of the skull."
+José and Tim stared in frank curiosity at the dead-alive newcomer, whose
+silent composure remained totally unperturbed. But the seven new girls,
+though ignored by the chief and his guests, were by no means neglected
+by the other men of the _maloca_, being thoroughly stared at by most of
+the young bucks--and, it must be confessed, by a goodly proportion of
+the married men also.
+
+When at length the meal was finished Monitaya commanded the girls to
+stand before him and narrate their experiences. The men lit smokes, José
+seizing the proffered cigarette with avidity, Rand accepting his with
+the usual odd deliberation.
+
+"Wal, Hozy, old feller, ye're in right with the chief now," asserted
+Tim. "Ye got all our gang with ye, and she's some li'l' old gang, I'll
+tell the world. This feller Renzo can talk cannibal so good he makes
+Monitaya hunt for the dictionary, and he'll tell the chief in ten
+seconds what I tried half an hour to say this afternoon--that ye belong.
+I 'ain't been here long enough to learn much o' their lingo, ye
+understand. If I could spout it like French, now, there wouldn't been no
+trouble."
+
+McKay and Knowlton snickered. They knew Tim's French was several degrees
+worse than the usual American doughboy's "frog" talk.
+
+"Good thing you couldn't," derided Knowlton. "You'd have had José
+crucified before we got here."
+
+"That's right, gimme the razz! Course, I did have a li'l' trouble makin'
+some o' them frogs understand, but that was because they was so ignorant
+they didn't know their own language when they heard it spoke right.
+Anyways, ye got to admit Hozy's still with us and sassy as ever, and he
+wouldn't been if Timmy Ryan hadn't been round to powwow for him."
+
+"You have it right, señor," José agreed, gravely. "Without you I should
+now be dead. I can speak the Mayoruna tongue quite well, but of what use
+is it to talk any language when men will not listen? It was you and your
+gun that saved me."
+
+"Gun? Good Lord! Did you pull a gun on Monitaya?" ejaculated the
+lieutenant.
+
+"Aw, no. That is--I guess mebbe I did wave me piece around while I was
+arguin'--I can always convince a guy better if I got somethin' in me
+hand. But I didn't git real rough."
+
+"You are lucky to be still alive, Senhor Tim," said Lourenço. "If
+Monitaya were not the man he is you would not be alive. I am glad we
+have returned."
+
+"Meanin' I need a guardeen? Say, lookit here now--"
+
+"As you were!" clipped McKay. "We're all wasting time. José, let's hear
+your report. I thought you were going to put Schwandorf out of action
+for good?"
+
+"And I am, Capitan! That is why I now am here. If I had reached him
+immediately after leaving the Nunes place it would have been done at
+once. But a man travels slowly when he is alone and has lost much blood,
+and before I met Schwandorf again I had time to think coolly. Then when
+I saw him I changed my plans.
+
+"Some days down the river I met him traveling fast in a canoe paddled by
+hard men whom I know. He pretended to be greatly grieved when I told him
+you all were dead. Oh yes, señores, I told him that! I was playing with
+him, and it amused me to see how he thought he was deceiving me when I
+was really fooling him. I said we were attacked by Indians a short way
+above the Nunes place and that I alone escaped. Then he said something
+that made me decide not to kill him for a time.
+
+"He told me he had learned that this man here--his name is Rand,
+yes?--that the man Rand was a bank thief who had run away from North
+America, and that a reward would be paid for him. He said your real
+reason for coming here was that you were detectives trying to earn the
+reward. That is false, is it not, señores?"
+
+"We're no detectives. Rand's no thief."
+
+"Ah, so I thought. But Schwandorf often tells truth to conceal his lies,
+so that it is sometimes hard to know which is true and which untrue. He
+went on to say he had warned you not to come into this Indian country,
+and he was sorry you had been killed--the snake--but since you were dead
+we might get the money for ourselves. If we succeeded in catching the
+man Rand and taking him out alive I should get half the reward, or five
+hundred dollars.
+
+"I saw plainly what his plan was. I might be useful to him in catching
+Rand if Rand was out in the bush, for I have traveled this country alone
+more than once and am a far better bushman than the German. But whether
+I got Rand or not, I never should live to demand my part of the money. I
+know too much about Schwandorf--things which I shall not tell now. So
+when the right time should come, José would meet with a fatal accident,
+such as a bullet in the back, or a knife in the throat while sleeping.
+But I did not let him know I saw this. I pretended to fall in with his
+plan like the fool he thought me to be.
+
+"It was not Rand alone that brought him here. You have brought back
+Mayoruna women from the Red Bone country, so you know the Red Bones are
+women stealers. And they steal for Schwandorf. You may believe me or
+not, señores, but I did not know this until the German told me. Oh yes,
+I knew he dealt in women, but of the Red Bone part of his business I was
+ignorant. As soon as I learned it I saw how I could put the illustrious
+Señor Schwandorf out of action, as you say, and at the same time try to
+save you.
+
+"I sharpened my knife to a razor edge, deserted the German when we
+reached the right place, shaved with my knife, painted myself with the
+red and black plant dyes, and came overland to this place, thinking you
+would be here if still alive. But you had traveled faster than I
+expected and had gone into the Red Bone country, so my chance to save
+you seemed to have passed. I could only try to tell this chief the Red
+Bones were stealers of his women and that the German was with them,
+knowing that if he believed me he would go on the war trail against them
+and kill them all. But if Señor Tim had not befriended me I should have
+died too soon to tell my tale. That is all, señores. Now can you spare a
+little more tobacco?"
+
+They could and they promptly did. With a new cigarette glowing he lay
+back and looked quizzically at the women lined up before Monitaya.
+
+"How many men has Schwandorf?" asked McKay.
+
+"About twenty in all, Capitan. There were eight in his crew, and they
+were to meet a dozen more at a place on the Peruvian side."
+
+"All riflemen?"
+
+"_Si._ He brought many cartridges for them. They are to raid tribe
+houses of these people."
+
+"Capture women and run them into Peru?"
+
+"_Si._" José yawned as if speaking of a deal in salt fish.
+
+The Americans looked thoughtfully around the big house. They saw that
+every man near them was inspecting some kind of weapon--making sure that
+bow cords were unfrayed, that arrow heads and spear points were firm,
+that the long blowguns had received no cast from suspension, and that
+darts were absolutely straight and true. The strong but cruel faces of
+the warriors were stamped with malignant hatred of the Red Bone tribe
+and the Blackbeard who enslaved their women. The command to prepare for
+a march at dawn had not been withdrawn.
+
+"We'll be expected to go, too, and I'd sure like another crack at
+Umanuh, not to mention the Schwandorf outfit," said Knowlton, "but we
+have friend Rand on our hands now, and our first duty is to get him out
+of here safely."
+
+"Aw, Looey, have a heart! I 'ain't had no action since that li'l' scrap
+down the river, and I got to have some excitement before we blow. What's
+more, we can't beat it now, with Monitaya dependin' on us to fight on
+his side. He'd git sore, and I don't blame him."
+
+His superior officers and the Brazilians frowned. Every man of them
+itched to close with the enemy in one final decisive battle. Yet--
+
+"What 'll we do with Rand?" Knowlton voiced the general thought.
+
+The green eyes of the Raposa turned to him, rested long on his, traveled
+deliberately along the other faces. And then, to the utter astonishment
+of all, the dumb spoke.
+
+"I'll fight," said Rand.
+
+Speechless, the men around him stared. His face was inscrutable as ever,
+his eyes fathomless, his voice flat and toneless. But slowly he raised
+his hands as if holding a bow; twitched his right thumb and forefinger
+in the motion of loosing a shaft; let the hands sink. His gaze calmly
+lifted from theirs and dwelt on the farthest wall. Not another word did
+he speak.
+
+"Begorry! there's yer answer!" triumphed Tim. "He says, 'Fight!' And I
+bet he can sling a wicked bow and arrer, at that. Don't ye s'pose he
+wants a crack at them Red Bones, after the way they used him?"
+
+"I think, comrades, that the man has settled the matter for us," Pedro
+seconded. "None of us wants to run away; and, as Tim says, we are
+expected to help Monitaya. We should be considered cowards, worse than
+dogs, if we refused. If we do not fight the Red Bones we may have to
+fight these Mayorunas, who now are our friends. We must stay."
+
+McKay nodded, still studying the expressionless countenance of Rand.
+
+"That's settled," he announced, crisply. "Now, Lourenço, find out
+Monitaya's plan of battle."
+
+The chief had finished his examination of the women and Lourenço
+promptly put the question. Monitaya laconically replied.
+
+"His purpose is not changed by our arrival, Capitao. He and his men go
+to-morrow to attack and destroy the Red Bones. When they reach the town
+of Umanuh they will surround it, and all will rush in when the chief
+gives his yell of war."
+
+"About what I expected. An Indian has a single-track mind always. But
+his strategy is rotten. Might be good enough if he had only Umanuh to
+deal with, but with Schwandorf in the game it's different. Ask him how
+he expects to protect his women while he's gone."
+
+"He says," Lourenço reported, "that there will be no danger to the
+women, because his warriors will be between the women and their enemies
+until those enemies are dead."
+
+"Very simple. So simple that it's foolish. He doesn't figure on the
+other fellow's mind at all; doesn't realize that a man like Schwandorf
+is bound to outguess him on such straightaway tactics and isn't at all
+likely to play into his hands. But that's the exact situation. The
+German will outguess him, and it's up to him to outguess the German in
+turn. We'll do his guessing for him.
+
+"Schwandorf goes into Umanuh's town, learns what's happened, finds the
+Red Bones frothing at the mouth, and is sore himself. He figures that
+we've returned here with the women, that Monitaya's men are blood-mad
+against the Red Bones, and that they'll do just what they are planning
+to do--march on Red Bone town and leave their women unprotected except
+by the old men, whose defensive power is negligible. He is in this
+country for the express purpose of getting girls, and with Monitaya's
+men away from their _malocas_ he has a wide-open chance to make the
+biggest slave haul of his life. So he plans to outmaneuver Monitaya,
+attack this place, capture all the young women, allow the Red Bones to
+massacre everyone else and burn the houses, and then move on without the
+loss of a man. After that perhaps he intends to find us and get Rand, or
+perhaps to attack other Mayoruna _malocas_. At any rate, his first
+objective is this place. Am I right so far?"
+
+"Dead right," Knowlton nodded.
+
+"Very well. Now he may figure that, having found the water connection
+between the two creeks, the Mayorunas will come against Umanuh by the
+canoe route. Or he may think they'll make the overland trip. In either
+case, the Red Bones have to come through the bush, for the simple reason
+that they haven't boats enough to carry all their force. Their canoes
+were rather few when we were there, and we commandeered several of them
+for our own use. If they decide to come part of the way in canoes
+they'll have to work a come-and-go transport service, bringing the
+fighting men down in batches to some rendezvous from which they must
+finish the journey on foot. Chances are that they'll disregard the
+canoes and all march overland by some route that would dodge the
+Mayoruna line of march. But in either case they're coming here. And it's
+here, in the place where he's not expected to be, that Monitaya should
+meet them. Let him fortify himself and await the assault. It will come."
+
+"And we shall be saved many weary miles of leg work," José smiled.
+"Capitan, your strategy is magnificent."
+
+"Begorry! it ain't so bad at that!" Tim approved. "Hozy, me and you will
+have our hammicks slung out front here when the show starts and do our
+shootin' prone. Suits me fine. Put it up to the chief, Renzo."
+
+Lourenço did. Very carefully he explained it all to Monitaya, dwelling
+on the fact that McKay himself was a warrior chieftain and familiar with
+the fighting methods of such men as the atrocious Blackbeard, and
+depicting graphically the horror of an attack by the barbarous Red Bones
+on the defenseless women. It took him some time to divert the chief's
+stubborn mind from the original plan, but in the end he succeeded.
+
+To the vast astonishment and disappointment of the vengeful warriors,
+Monitaya curtly announced that the projected march would not take place.
+They stared as if disbelieving their ears, and more than one black look
+was given Lourenço. But not a man questioned the countermanding of
+orders, not a mutter was heard. The great chief had spoken, and his word
+was final.
+
+Reluctantly they laid aside the weapons on which they had been toiling
+with such purposeful zeal. The chief watched them with a little smile of
+pride--pride in their zest for war, pride in their unquestioning
+acceptance of his dampening order. Then he coolly told them to continue
+their work; told them, further, that the next morning all the streams
+were to be poisoned, new traps set, and scouts stationed far out on
+every trail to await and report the approach of foes. Instantly their
+faces flamed again and from every quarter of the wide house rose an
+excited hum. They were to fight, after all!
+
+"Tough eggs, these lads, if ye ask me," yawned Tim. "Bet ye we'll see a
+row worth lookin' at when she does break."
+
+He forebore to mention the fact that in rifle power their assailants
+would outnumber them four to one.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+THE BATTLE OF THE TRIBES
+
+
+The next four days, though they were days of waiting, were busy enough
+to satisfy the most impatient Mayoruna warrior.
+
+Outposts were established on every route by which the attacking force
+would be likely to approach the twin _malocas_, the watchmen being given
+the strictest commands not to fight, nor even to allow themselves to be
+seen, but to run at top speed with the warning.
+
+Poison detachments went forth to collect the ingredients for making
+deadly the water and the weapons. Those detailed to the work of
+polluting the streams gathered quantities of blue-blossomed,
+short-podded plants with yellow roots, the roots being pulped and thrown
+into the slow currents, which straightway became fatal to man or beast
+The wurali squad procured their favorite materials and, in a flimsy shed
+well away from the houses, prepared a plentiful supply of the venomed
+brew.
+
+New traps were set at points where a man or two might be picked off,
+though it was realized that these would have little effect on the final
+result. And inside the big houses men especially skilled in the
+manufacture of arrows and darts toiled swiftly and steadily from dawn
+till far into the night.
+
+These activities, however, were only the usual defensive preparations
+made by the warriors whenever they knew a sizable body of foes was
+somewhere in the vicinity. It remained for the brains of the white men
+to devise additional features, simple enough in themselves, but
+astounding to the savages, who were accustomed only to the primitive
+battle tactics of their ancestors. For the first time in their lives the
+cannibals found themselves digging in--and also digging out.
+
+After a survey of the terrain and a catechism of Lourenço and Monitaya
+as to the usual methods of attack and defense, the two officers broached
+an idea born of the exigencies of the situation. As they expected, the
+great chief was somewhat slow to approve it, for it involved a literal
+undermining of the walls of his fortresses. But despite the natural
+inflexibility of his mental processes he was an unusually intelligent
+savage, and eventually the patient reiteration of the advantages of the
+scheme won him first to assent and then almost to enthusiasm. Wherefore
+the amazed tribesmen were set to work, armed with crude wooden shovels,
+in digging holes under the logs which sheltered them from man, beast,
+and jungle demon.
+
+All along the walls, at intervals marked by McKay and Knowlton, the
+tunnels were dug. At the same time another large gang excavated before
+each of the _malocas_ a deep, curving trench, the two long pits being
+separated by a ten-foot space of solid earth affording free passage from
+the houses to the creek. Meanwhile the women and the older children were
+weaving flimsy covers from withes and vines. As soon as a tunnel was
+completed it was masked outside the walls by one of these covers, on
+which a thin layer of earth and grass was laid. The two trenches were
+likewise concealed, and the loose earth was carried inside the house and
+packed solidly against the walls flanking the doors.
+
+At sundown of the fourth day the work was ended. And so well was it done
+that when the great chief, his subchiefs, and his foreign allies went on
+a final tour of inspection they could find no sign that the houses were
+honeycombed with exits or that the ground in front of the little
+entrances was not solid at all points.
+
+"Rod and I took the idea from those pit traps out on the trails,"
+Knowlton explained for the dozenth time. "Holes are covered to look
+exactly like the rest of the ground. Every man of us has to be inside
+when the enemy arrives, but we have to get out quick when the right time
+comes, so we go under the walls. And can't you see those brave women
+stealers go kerplunk down into the trenches? Oh boy!"
+
+Whereat Lourenço and José smiled as if enjoying a secret joke. They
+were. For they knew something of which the Americans were not
+aware--that Monitaya had improved on the trench-trap idea of the whites
+by studding the bottom of those trenches with barbed araya bones smeared
+with wurali.
+
+"Yeah, and I figger them guys 'll git some jolt when these houses, which
+'ain't got nobody in 'em but women and kids, begin to spit lead out o'
+loopholes and spew screechin' cannibals up out o' the ground. Gosh! I
+wouldn't miss seein' Sworn-off's face for a keg o' beer--and that's
+sayin' somethin'."
+
+Wherein Tim expressed the general sentiment.
+
+So ended the fourth day. When the fifth broke no man showed himself
+outside the walls. Except the few outposts, every male of the Monitaya
+_malocas_ bided within, awaiting with growing tension the arrival of the
+enemy. It was more than likely, McKay had pointed out, that the main
+body of the barbarous force led by Schwandorf would be preceded by a
+handful of scouts, and quite possible that one or more of these would
+slip past the outguards and spy on the tribal houses. The sight of even
+one warrior would instantly apprise any such spy that the others must be
+near, and the word would go back at all speed to the Red Bones.
+Wherefore the only Monitayans to pass through the tiny doorways that
+morning were a few young women sent out as bait. These, naturally, took
+good care to stay near the entrances.
+
+Within, the men waited at their appointed places. Each tunnel had its
+quota of warriors, the number being divided evenly to assure a speedy
+and simultaneous exit. The Americans had elected to fight from the
+_maloca_ of the great chief, while the Brazilians and José were to
+garrison the doorway of the other house as soon as the warning came.
+Rand, wordless and imperturbable as ever, now was armed with a strong
+bow and plenty of new arrows with unpoisoned heads; and he, of course,
+would remain with his own countrymen. Thus, preparations completed, all
+settled themselves to the interminable hours of waiting.
+
+Up on the heaped earth near the doorway, which made the walls
+practically bullet-proof to a height of six feet and thus would protect
+the women and children, one or more of the Americans was constantly on
+the lookout through some inconspicuous loophole. Hour after hour dragged
+past, and no unusual movement or sound came to reward their vigilance.
+Under the glare of the sun the roof and walls grew hot; under the silent
+strain of endless anticipation the impatience of the fighting men became
+a ferment. At length Pedro, unable to keep still, mounted to a peephole
+near Knowlton. Scarcely had he put his eye to the opening when both men
+sucked in their breath.
+
+At the edge of the bush a man's head peered from behind a tree. And at
+the same moment a single canoe came creeping out of the bush and up to
+the landing place. The head behind the tree was that of a Red Bone spy.
+The two in the small canoe were Yuara and a companion from the Suba
+tribe.
+
+"Lourenço!" hoarsely whispered Pedro. "Yuara comes. Tell girls to run to
+welcome him and guide him between the pits. A spy is watching. If Yuara
+walks on the pits he dies and our trap is revealed. _Por amor de Deus_,
+send girls quickly!"
+
+Lourenço acted instantly. Seizing two young women, he propelled them
+doorward, talking swiftly the while. Yuara and his mate were already
+advancing innocently toward the few girls outside, none of whom had wit
+enough to warn him. But the two whom the Brazilian had grasped happened
+to be of quick intelligence, and now they darted out. Before the
+visiting pair could reach the death trap the girls were upon them,
+laughing as if delighted to see a man once more, and deftly turning them
+aside to the point where two unobtrusive stubs marked the bridge of
+safety.
+
+Vastly astonished by such effusive welcome from two girls whom they did
+not know, but by no means displeased thereby, the young warriors of the
+Suba clan were piloted to the door and inside. As they disappeared, the
+head of the spy also vanished.
+
+"Woof!" muttered Knowlton, wiping sweat from his brow. "That was close!
+Here's hoping we have no more visitors."
+
+Yuara and his companion meanwhile were being interrogated by both
+Lourenço and Monitaya, who in turn enlightened them as to the present
+state of affairs. At the promise of war the faces of the Suba men lit
+up.
+
+"Yuara comes only on a visit to learn news," Lourenço told the rest.
+"You remember that the day after our return a canoe was sent downstream
+to a point where the wooden bars could be beaten and heard by Suba's
+men, and that a warning against the Red Bones and Schwandorf was given
+in that way. Yuara has become anxious to know more, so he is here."
+
+"If he sticks around he'll learn a lot," predicted Tim.
+
+With no waste of words or motion Yuara coolly attached himself and his
+fellow-tribesman to McKay. Monitaya and his subchiefs were informed of
+the arrival and departure of the enemy scout. The word passed among the
+warriors, who, despite their innate equanimity, began to grit their
+pointed teeth and quiver like dogs held in leash. But another hour
+passed, and yet another; and still no word from the outposts arrived.
+
+Suddenly a chorus of screams shrilled from the women outside. In a
+frenzy of fear they plunged through the doorways. Blending with their
+outcries, a hoarse yell of ferocity rose raucously from the direction of
+the creek. At once a louder ululation burst forth at the rear and sides
+of the clearing. Monitaya's outguards had failed and the _malocas_ were
+surrounded.
+
+Loping from the bush fringing the stream came a score of yellow-faced,
+shirtless, barefooted brutes crisscrossed with cartridge belts and
+gripping rifles. At their head loomed a burly black-whiskered creature
+with a revolver in each hand--the malignant Schwandorf himself.
+
+Grinning like a pack of yellow-fanged wolves, they doubled toward the
+low entrances, their guns spouting wantonly at the upper walls--a ragged
+volley meant to terrorize the defenseless women within, none of whom
+were to be killed until the handsomest had been cut out and set aside
+for slavery. Some of the heavy bullets bored through between logs and
+thudded wickedly into rafters and roof poles within. But from the
+loopholes where the defending rifles lurked no shot cracked in reply.
+
+The fiendish howling of the Red Bones, sweeping in from all sides to the
+butchery, swelled into a feline screech that almost drowned the roar of
+the rifles. Into the view of the watchers at the loopholes streamed
+hideous faces and naked brown bodies swerving inward from left and right
+to follow at the heels of the Blackbeard and his gunmen. In a few
+seconds more the trotting line of Peruvians was backed and flanked by a
+horde of demons hungering for the taste of women and babes. On they
+came--
+
+With the suddenness of a cataclysm the ground opened. Riflemen vanished
+in midstride. Savages screaming triumphant hate were gone in the flick
+of an eye. Others, instinctively digging their heels into the ground the
+instant those ahead of them disappeared, were hurled forward and down by
+the momentum of the following mass. Before the rush could be checked the
+trenches were packed with men struggling in frenzy to get out, wounding
+themselves and one another with the deadly points of their poisoned
+weapons.
+
+Of the twenty gunmen only four remained. They were the four immediately
+behind Schwandorf. By blind chance the German had set foot on the narrow
+isthmus separating the twin trenches, saving himself and the henchmen at
+his heels from being engulfed. Now, as the Red Bones fought back from
+the trap yawning before them, he and the surviving Peruvians stood
+staring in momentary stupefaction at the welter of death on their
+flanks. The malevolent yells of the savages had been cut short by the
+catastrophe, and for the moment no sound was heard but the grunts and
+snarls of struggling men.
+
+Then into the semisilence burst a mighty voice--the battlefield voice of
+McKay.
+
+"Now! Fire at will!"
+
+The walls spat flame and lead. A scythe of death swept above the ground
+where stood Schwandorf and his riflemen. The Peruvian half-breeds
+collapsed and lay still. But Schwandorf, shocked into activity by the
+impact of that first word, dodged death by an infinitesimal fraction of
+a second. Hurling himself backward, he struck the earth just as the
+bullets sped through the air over him. With a lightning rebound he was
+up while fresh cartridges were jumping into the rifle barrels menacing
+him. Headlong he dived into the mass of Red Bones just behind. And the
+next bullets darting after him killed the savages, leaving him unharmed.
+
+The command of McKay and the crack of the rifles sent the quivering
+Mayorunas into the fight. In a flash every masking tunnel cover was
+thrown bodily into the air. Before the thunderstruck Red Bones had
+recovered from the shock of finding their gun-armed leaders annihilated
+and their mass being swept by swift-shooting rifles hidden in the walls,
+they beheld a horde of vindictive foes erupting from under those walls
+like warrior ants rushing from subterranean galleries. A blood-chilling
+yell of concentrated fury smote their ears; a hastily loosed storm of
+war arrows and short throwing-spears ripped into their flesh; a
+swift-running arc of light-skinned men swerved around them, shooting and
+stabbing as they went. They, who had so exultantly surrounded the homes
+of women and children, now were surrounded in turn.
+
+From the doorway of Monitaya's _maloca_ the two Brazilians and José now
+leaped forth and, firing as they ran, dashed to hold the entrance of the
+other big house. A few arrows whirred around them during their transit,
+but the shafts were shot hurriedly and missed. Meanwhile the three
+bushmen were striking down enemies at every flash of their guns, firing
+with the swift surety of veterans of many a running fight. They reached
+their objective unwounded; and when they reached it a fringe of dead
+foes marked their passage along the face of the hostile array. Once
+within the door, they rapidly reloaded and sprayed lead along the
+trenches, which, though now nearly full, had become a dead-line past
+which no Red Bone sought to go.
+
+Up on the earth embankments within the chief's house the four Americans
+fought steadily on; the soldiers shooting as coolly as if engaged merely
+in rapid-fire target practice, the silent Rand methodically driving
+arrows in swift succession from his wall-slit. Arrows thudded thickly
+into the logs masking them. Bullets, too, slammed into their
+rampart--bullets from the heavy revolvers of Schwandorf, who, ever
+keeping himself protected by the bodies of his cannibal allies, shot
+with both hands as the chance came. And the German could shoot. With
+only the small gun muzzles as targets, he planted bullets so close as to
+knock dirt more than once into the eyes of the riflemen and render them
+momentarily useless. After a time he got a bullet fair into a loophole.
+
+Knowlton grunted suddenly, swayed back, toppled, fell down the parapet.
+For a few seconds he lay still.
+
+"Looey!" howled Tim. "How ye fixed? Hurt bad?"
+
+The lieutenant heaved himself into a sitting position, stared around,
+clapped a hand to his right shoulder, looked at the red smear his palm
+brought away, reeled up, and scrambled back to his rifle. Schwandorf's
+bullet had drilled clear through the shoulder, and in falling his head
+had struck one of the upright poles. Without a word he got his gun into
+action once more, shooting now from the left shoulder. Tim, with a tight
+grin of relief, devoted himself once more to trying to shoot down the
+dodging German.
+
+The encircling Mayorunas, their first paroxysm of fury vented, now
+settled in cold hate to their work. On all sides their clubmen and
+spearmen were bludgeoning and stabbing at the close-packed Red Bones,
+leaping in, killing, springing back and onward with terrible efficiency.
+Beyond these a thin but deadly line of bowmen poured arrows in
+high-looping curves over the heads of the hand-to-hand combatants, the
+shafts whizzing far up, turning, and plunging down unerringly into the
+center of the enemy force. Each of those arrows could, and many did, end
+the lives of two or three adversaries by gouging their skins and letting
+the fearful wurali into their blood. The blowgun men too were darting
+into every opening, handling their clumsy weapons like feathers and
+constantly moving to spy out fresh targets.
+
+But the men of Monitaya were by no means escaping unscathed. The Red
+Bones, assailed from every quarter and milling about in hopeless
+disorder, were fighting now with desperate frenzy. Their own clubbers
+and stabbers were charging out and smashing skulls or piercing abdomens,
+their arrows rose in all directions at once, and some into whose veins
+the wurali had struck sprang in the last moments of life on nearby foes
+and bit like mad dogs. With a leader and a chance to form into any sort
+of flying wedge they might have broken through with comparative ease and
+taken a far heavier toll. But they had no leader: for Umanuh, whose name
+meant "corpse," now was a corpse in truth, his merciless brain oozing
+from a skull shattered by a Mayoruna clubman; and Schwandorf was very
+busy looking out for Schwandorf. So it was every man for himself, with
+the devil rapidly taking not only the hindmost, but the foremost as
+well.
+
+Thicker and thicker fell the dead. The trenches now not only were filled
+to the level of the ground, but piled with a windrow of bullet-torn
+bodies knocked down by the ever-spitting rifles. José, Pedro, and
+Lourenço abandoned all shelter and knelt in plain sight before the door
+which they had kept clear of all close attack. Monitaya, until now a
+field general who strode up and down roaring commands and encouragement,
+suddenly cast away his regal role and, seizing a club from one of his
+bodyguard, hurled himself on the nearest Red Bones--a raving, ravening
+demon of destructiveness whose glaring eyes smote terror into those
+fronting him and whose weapon swung like the club of Hercules. His
+bowmen and blowgun men, at last out of missiles, came charging in with
+bare hands or weapons seized from fallen warriors. Maneuvering had
+ended. Henceforth the fight was a grappling mêlée.
+
+Then the gunfire dwindled and died. The rifle cartridges were spent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+THE PASSING OF SCHWANDORF
+
+
+The three soldiers flung down their hot, empty guns.
+
+"Nothin' left but the gats and the steel," rumbled Tim. "Me, I'm goin'
+out and git some fresh air."
+
+With which he drew pistol and machete, leaped down, and lunged through
+the door. McKay bounded at his heels.
+
+"Merry! Rand! Stay here!" he commanded. Then he was outside, his pistol
+roaring in unison with Tim's.
+
+Knowlton and Rand looked at each other. The lieutenant fumbled his
+pistol from its holster, got it firmly in his left hand, slid down the
+embankment, and staggered out. Rand coolly walked over to Tim's
+discarded gun, picked it up, and followed.
+
+Over at the other doorway the bushmen threw aside their useless guns and
+drew their machetes. José, grinning like a death's-head, whirled the
+bush knife aloft and mockingly dared the Red Bones still fronting him to
+come and take it from him. Pedro and Lourenço indulged in no such
+bravado, but leaped like jaguars at their foes. Whereupon José,
+muttering a curse on them for getting the jump on him, dashed forward
+with furious abandon.
+
+Their pistols emptied, the Americans also drew machetes--all except
+Rand, who had no weapon but the bulletless rifle--and waited. Few
+unwounded Red Bones now were left; but among those few Schwandorf still
+lived.
+
+"Schwandorf!" bellowed McKay. "You yellow cur--you _Schweinhund_! Come
+and fight!"
+
+"Yeah!" taunted Tim. "The women and kids are inside. Come and git 'em!"
+
+Schwandorf came. He came not because he wanted to, however, for his
+guns, too, were empty. He came because the Red Bones, sensing the
+challenge and loathing the Blackbeard who had shielded himself so long
+among them, threw him out bodily. They had no time to stand and watch
+what might happen to him, but they took time to cast him out where he
+must stand on his own legs. Then, snarling, they resumed their now
+hopeless battle against their encompassing executioners.
+
+For a moment the German stood glowering at McKay. Then, with a dramatic
+gesture, he threw aside his useless revolvers and advanced empty handed.
+
+"Man to man?" he growled.
+
+"Man to man!" echoed McKay, passing his pistol to Tim and sheathing his
+machete. Fists clenched, he sprang forward.
+
+Schwandorf halted. His hands remained empty--until the captain was
+within eight feet of him. Then he leaped back, his machete jumped into
+his fist, and its point stabbed for his antagonist's abdomen.
+
+An instantaneous side-step and twist of the body saved the captain from
+evisceration. The blade ripped through breeches and shirt and scraped
+the skin. As Schwandorf yanked it back for another thrust McKay struck
+it away with one hand and, without drawing his own steel, jumped again
+at his assailant. An instant later the two blackbeards were clenched in
+a death grapple.
+
+Schwandorf found his long knife useless and dropped it. He strove for a
+back-breaking hold, but found it blocked. McKay, though an indifferent
+swordsman, was a formidable wrestler and fist fighter, and the German's
+advantage in weight was more than offset by the American's quickness and
+wiry strength. Science was thrown to the winds. A heaving, choking,
+wrenching man-fight it was, stumbling over bodies, each straining every
+muscle, trying every hold to twist and break the other and batter him
+down to death.
+
+Smashing fist blows brought blood dripping from their faces.
+Bone-wringing grips forced gasps from their lungs and superhuman spasms
+of resistance from their outraged nerve centers. They fell across a
+corpse, rolled on the ground, throttled, kicked, struck, and tore.
+Finally, in a furious outburst of energy, the American fought his enemy
+down under him, clamped his body with iron knees, and crashed a terrific
+punch squarely between the German's glaring eyes. Schwandorf went limp.
+
+At that instant a backward eddy of the battle surged over the pair. The
+maniacal Red Bones, fighting to the last bitter drop of doom, found two
+white men under their feet. Screeching, snarling, they fell on them like
+wild beasts, tearing with tooth and nail. Their arrows were gone, their
+darts exhausted, and no spearman was among them; they fought with
+nature's weapons, while above them one lone clubman struggled to swing
+down his lethal bludgeon without killing his fellows.
+
+McKay, wrenching his machete loose and gripping it with both hands, got
+its point upward and jabbed blindly at the weight of flesh bearing him
+down. Faintly to his ears came yells of rage and the impact of
+blows--the battle roars of Tim and Knowlton, who with their machetes
+were cleaving a way to their captain. But the beastly demons over him
+still crushed him down on Schwandorf, smothering him under the burden of
+bodies dead and alive. His stabs grew weak. Exhaustion and lack of air
+were killing him more surely than the savages.
+
+Pedro, Lourenço, José and the inexplicable Rand came slashing and
+clubbing a path of their own to the beleaguered Scot--the Brazilians
+cutting straight ahead with deadly surety, the painted Peruvian chopping
+and thrusting with a fixed grin, Rand swinging the gun butt down on head
+after head. From still another direction Yuara and his satellite came
+boring in with spears snatched from dead hands. The three rescue parties
+reached the squirming heap at almost the same moment. But Yuara was the
+one whose arrival counted most.
+
+In one last convulsive struggle McKay heaved himself up until he was
+once more on his knees. His head came out of the welter, his mouth wide
+and gulping for breath. The lone clubman grunted, swung his weapon high,
+and with all the power of his muscular body drove it down at that
+upturned, unprotected face.
+
+With a mighty plunge Yuara threw himself over the captain. His spear
+sank into the stomach of the clubman. But the heavy wooden war hammer
+fell with crushing force. As the Red Bone collapsed with the spear head
+buried in his middle, his slayer also dropped under that terrible stroke
+with head mangled beyond recognition.
+
+Yuara, son of Rana, warrior of Suba, who owed his life to McKay's rough
+surgery, had paid his debt.
+
+Under the impact of his body McKay also slumped forward, senseless.
+
+Over them now burst the bloodiest berserk battle of that bloody day. The
+soldiers, the bushmen, and the reclaimed Raposa, already smeared from
+head to foot with red stains from their own veins and those of foemen,
+went stark mad. Before their united ferocity the men of Umanuh dropped
+as if rolled under by an inexorable machine of war. Backward they
+reeled, striving now to escape the red wall of cold steel surging at
+them--only to fall under a fresh attack of ravening Mayorunas who came
+pouring in upon them from the sides. The last of the group lurched
+headless to the ground under a decapitating side-swing from the awful
+club of Monitaya himself.
+
+Then Knowlton, his lifeblood still draining slowly but surely away
+through his wounded shoulder, pitched on his face and was still.
+
+"Back!" gasped Tim. "Git looey and cap out o' this! Here, you Raposy!
+Lend a hand!"
+
+The Raposa, his green eyes ablaze and his obdurate calmness totally
+gone, glared around as if seeking one more Red Bone to kill. Then, as
+Tim heaved the lieutenant across his shoulders and went lunging across
+contorted bodies toward the _malocas_, he ran back to the heap where
+McKay lay and dug him clear. Lourenço aided him in lifting the captain,
+and they bore him off after Knowlton.
+
+Pedro and José shoved the other bodies aside until they uncovered the
+prone figure of Schwandorf--a ghastly form dyed from hair to heels with
+the blood of the cannibals whom he had led there. To all appearances he
+was dead. Yet the Brazilian and the Peruvian looked keenly at him, then
+at each other.
+
+"There is a saying, is there not, that the devil takes care of his own?"
+grinned José. "It would be sad if this man should yet live and escape.
+See! What is that tall Red Bone doing over yonder?"
+
+Pedro followed his pointing finger. He saw no such Red Bone as José had
+mentioned. But when he looked back at Schwandorf he noticed something
+that made him glance quickly at José once more.
+
+"Ah yes, Señor Schwandorf is truly dead," the Peruvian added, wiping his
+machete carelessly on one bare leg. "Whether or not the devil takes care
+of his own, as I was saying, there is no doubt that _el Aleman_ now is
+with the devil. So, since we can do nothing for him, let us look after
+the two North American señores."
+
+Pedro, with a grim smile, turned with him toward the tribal houses.
+There was nothing else for them to do, for the Mayorunas now were
+dispatching the last survivors of the attacking force. Before the pair
+entered the low doorway a long, triumphant yell burst from the hoarse
+throats of the men of Monitaya. Of all the Red Bones who had swept in
+such ghoulish glee into that clearing not one now remained alive.
+
+At that shout of victory and the entrance of the men to whose
+precautions and prowess they owed so much, the women flocked again into
+the center of the _maloca_ and the children dived out through the
+tunnels to behold the battlefield. Though bullets and arrows had come
+through the doorway, those inside had escaped all injury by hugging the
+protective earth embankment or taking refuge in the vacant shafts under
+the walls. Now the older women, experienced in treatment of wounds,
+busied themselves with the white warriors, while the younger ones
+fetched water and pieces of isca--a natural styptic made by ants--or
+made up pads of poultices of healing herbs.
+
+Tim, who had expected to play surgeon with his crude knowledge of first
+aid, found himself not only relieved of his job, but being bathed and
+plastered with the others. He, José, Pedro, Lourenço, and even Rand were
+gashed by thrusts from broken spear hafts, bleeding from open bites,
+ripped by glancing sweeps of tooth-set clubs, bruised by fierce
+blows--minor injuries all, but such as might easily have resulted in
+blood poisoning unless given prompt attention. Later on they were to be
+thankful for those ministrations, but now they tolerated them only
+because they could do nothing for the captain and the lieutenant.
+
+McKay and Knowlton were under the direct and capable treatment of the
+wives of the great chief. Of the two McKay looked by far the worse, but
+actually was in much better condition. From the waist up he was clawed,
+bitten, and bruised so badly that he was a fearsome spectacle; his left
+arm was dislocated, three fingers of his right hand were broken, and his
+muscles were so wrenched that for a week afterward he moved like a
+cripple; but his present unconsciousness was largely due to exhaustion
+and partial asphyxiation. Knowlton, whose skin was comparatively
+unmarked, but whose veins had continued to pour vital fluid from his
+gaping bullet wound during his stubborn fight, now was badly weakened.
+But whatever could be done for him was being done, and the others could
+only stand by.
+
+The women not engaged in caring for the fighting visitors soon found
+themselves busy with their own male relatives, who came stumbling in by
+themselves or were carried by others. The Red Bones, though finally
+annihilated, had made their mark in the Mayoruna tribe. At that moment
+thirty-six of Monitaya's warriors lay dead among the bodies of their
+enemies, and before the next sunrise several more passed on to join the
+spirits of their comrades in arms. Yet all who survived, though some
+were crippled for life, thought only of the victory and gloated on their
+scars of combat. As for those who had fallen, they were dead, had died
+as Mayorunas should, and so needed no sympathy or regret. Even now their
+bodies were being collected for immediate transportation into the
+forest, where, in accordance with the tribal custom, they would be
+burned.
+
+Some of the men who brought in the wounded men continued on to the
+bushmen and, in significant sign manual, requested a loan of their
+machetes. Having received them, they hastened out to join those who,
+equipped with hardwood knives, were gathering the sinister trophies of
+triumph before heaving the dead Red Bones out to the waiting vultures.
+
+"Urrrgh!" growled Tim. "'Twas a lovely scrap, but I wisht I was
+somewheres else, now it's over. While ye was away they brought in the
+fists and feet o' some guy they caught in a trap--"
+
+"We know," nodded Pedro.
+
+"Yeah. Wal, I s'pose we got to look pleasant. Dog eat dog, as the feller
+says. Long as somebody has to git et, I'm glad it ain't us." Wherewith
+he turned to the Raposa and changed the subject. "Raposy, old sport, ye
+sure done some good work, for a crazy guy. I'll tell the world ye
+cracked heads like a Bowery cop full o' bootleg booze."
+
+The Raposa's green eyes glimmered. In fact, they almost twinkled. And
+for the second time the wild man spoke.
+
+"I am not crazy."
+
+"Huh? My gosh! Ye spoke four whole words! That makes six in a week. Be
+careful, feller, or ye'll strain yerself. And as far's bein' crazy's
+concerned, don't let it worry ye none. We're all crazy, too, or we
+wouldn't be here."
+
+Under cover of his banter the veteran eyed the other sharply. As he
+turned his gaze aside to the moving figures about him he thought:
+"Begorry! he don't look like a nut, at that. Mebbe somethin's
+unscrambled his brains again. Here's hopin', anyways."
+
+The big tribe house now was full of life. Small groups of warriors,
+their hurts dressed with primitive poultices, gathered around the
+hammocks of those more seriously injured and discussed the battle.
+Others came in bearing armfuls of severed Red Bone hands and feet, which
+were distributed among the family triangles. The women, their remedial
+work done, now turned to the clay cooking vessels, freshened the fires,
+stripped the flesh of their enemies from the bones, and set it to boil.
+Among the hammocks moved the subchiefs, their eyes still shining with
+the light of battle, examining the wounded men and glancing at the
+preparations for the dire feast to come.
+
+Over all drifted a steadily thickening smoke which rolled up and out
+through the vent in the peak of the roof, where the setting sun smote it
+with rays of gleaming red. Around the _maloca_ gleamed the red light of
+the cooking fires among whose burning fagots bubbled the red pots and
+pans. Red men and women passing about in a crimson setting--the scene
+formed a fitting end to the reddest day in the unwritten records of the
+tribe, who since noon had proved themselves worthy champions of the
+ancient god whose name they never had heard, but who nevertheless ruled
+their lives--the red god Mars.
+
+Monitaya himself, head high and chest swelling with pride, now came
+striding lithely in, followed by a young warrior carrying something. He
+stopped between the hammocks of McKay and Knowlton, studied their faces
+gravely, listened as his wives told of what had been done. At almost the
+same moment the eyes of the pair slowly opened and stared up at him.
+
+The face of the great chief melted in one of its transforming smiles.
+The captain and the lieutenant grinned pluckily back. With a nod of
+silent comradeship the big savage turned to his own hammock and sat
+down. Two of his women built up the royal fire and fell to work on the
+things handed over by the young warrior. Tim and his mates took one
+squint at what they were doing. Then they moved between the fire and the
+two officers, blocking the view.
+
+"'Bout time ye woke up and listened to the birdies," Tim chaffed.
+"Fight's over, and we been hangin' round waitin' for ye to quit snorin'
+so's we could hear ourselves think. Lay still, now! Ye're all plastered
+up nice and comfy--and don't preach to me no more about the girls. Ye
+had every dang one o' the big chief's wives hangin' over ye and kissin'
+ye so hard it sounded like a machine gun. Ain't that right, fellers? Me,
+I'm so jealous I could bite the both of ye."
+
+"Schwandorf dead?" hoarsely queried McKay.
+
+"Huh? Oh, him? Sure. Ye fixed him right, Cap. The pretty li'l'
+blackbirds has flew away with him by now. Say, ye mind that feller
+Yuarry? Know what he done? Wal--"
+
+And while he talked, behind his back the wives of Monitaya completed
+their task and dropped into the great chief's stewpot the flesh of the
+black-bearded slaver and slayer who would menace them no more.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+PARTNERS
+
+
+Seven men squatted around a camp fire on the river bank. Beyond them,
+half revealed by the flickering light of the flames, rose the poles of a
+_tambo_ wherein empty hammocks hung waiting. At the edge of the water
+lay two canoes.
+
+Five of the men wore the habiliments of civilized beings, though their
+shirts and breeches were so tattered and stained that a civilized
+community would have looked askance at them. The other two were nude as
+savages, but their beards and tanned skins were those of white men.
+Beards of varying length seemed, in fact, to be the fashion, for
+everyone present wore one, and all but two were very dark. Of the odd
+pair, one's thin face was partly covered by stubby, blond hair, while
+the other's jaw was masked by a growth of unmistakable red.
+
+Lifting their cigarettes, the blond man and a tall, eagle-faced comrade
+moved their arms stiffly, as if still hampered by injuries. Newly healed
+scars showed on the skins of the rest.
+
+"Injuns are a funny lot," declared the red-haired one. "There's
+Monitaya, now. Keeps us a couple weeks, doctors us half to death, feeds
+us till we gag, gives us new canoes, sends a platoon o' hard guys with
+us to see that we git to the river safe--and don't even say good-by. No
+handshake, no 'Good luck, fellers'--jest a grin like we was goin' to
+walk round the house and come right back. And the lads that come out
+with us done the same--turned round and quit us without a word. I bet if
+we lived amongst 'em long we'd git to be dummies, too."
+
+For a moment there was silence. For no apparent reason all glanced at
+one of the naked men, on whose skin faintly showed reddish streaks.
+
+"You would," he said.
+
+"Huh! Gee! Rand's talkin' again! First time since we licked them Red
+Boneheads. Two whole words. Go easy, feller, easy!"
+
+"I will be easy. But it's time I talked. I am not dumb. I am not crazy."
+
+The green-eyed man spoke slowly, as if forming each word in his mind
+before pronouncing it. The rest squatted with eyes riveted on his face.
+
+"I have not talked before because I had to find myself. I had to hear
+English spoken and become used to it. I had to put things together in my
+mind. Even now some things are not clear. But I can talk and make sense
+of my talk. I will tell what I can remember. First tell me one thing.
+McKay, am I a murderer?"
+
+"A murderer? You? If you are we never heard of it."
+
+"A man named Schmidt. Gustav Schmidt. German merchant at Manaos."
+
+"Gustav Schmidt? Piggy little runt, bald and fat, with a scar across his
+chin?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"He's dead, but you didn't kill him. He was shot a little while ago by a
+young Brazilian for getting too intimate with the young fellow's wife.
+We heard about it while we were in Manaos, and saw his picture. What
+about him?"
+
+"I thought I killed him. I struck him with a bottle. I was told he was
+dead. How long have I been here?"
+
+"You left the States in 1915. It is now 1920."
+
+"Five years? My God! What has happened in that time? Is my mother well?"
+
+The others looked pityingly at him. Slowly Knowlton spoke.
+
+"Your mother died two years ago from heart trouble. Your uncle, Philip
+Dawson, also is dead."
+
+Rand's jaw set. The others shifted their gaze and busied themselves with
+making new cigarettes, spending much time over the simple task.
+
+"Poor mother!" Rand said, huskily. "Uncle Phil--he was a good old scout.
+And I was here--buried alive--only half alive! My head--Tell me, what
+happened on the night before you dressed my lame foot? I remember
+clearly everything from the time I woke in the canoe before daylight
+that morning. Before that there is a blur."
+
+Knowlton sketched the events of that night, and told also of the glimpse
+which he and Pedro had caught of the "wild man" while waiting outside
+the house of the Red Bone chief. A flash lit up Rand's face.
+
+"So that is how I got my sore head. You struck me with your rifle butt.
+That explains much. Before I became a wild beast I was shot in the head.
+The bullet did not go through the skull. It struck me a terrible blow on
+the crown. When I recovered consciousness I was not myself. I have never
+been the same until--"
+
+"Gee cripes!" exploded Tim. "That's it. I seen that same thing up home.
+Bug Sullivan, it was. When he was a li'l' feller he tumbled downstairs
+and hit his head, and for 'most ten years he was foolish. Then a brick
+fell off a buildin' and landed on his bean. It knocked him for a gool,
+but when he come out of it he was bright as a new dime. Looey, when ye
+busted Rand with yer gun ye jarred somethin' loose inside, and now he's
+good as any of us."
+
+"By George! You're right!" cried the lieutenant. "Things like that do
+happen. I've heard of them. Haven't you, Rod?"
+
+McKay nodded.
+
+"That is it," affirmed the Raposa. "I have not been insane. But much was
+gone from me. My mind was a house full of closed doors which I could not
+open. I knew who I was and why I was here, but I knew also that
+something had happened to my brain; knew I was defective; believed I was
+wanted for murder. So I could not go out. I could only stay here, prowl
+the jungle, live the jungle life.
+
+"Now that the closed doors have opened again, others have swung shut. I
+cannot remember much of my wild-beast life here. Some things are clear.
+Too clear. Torturings and horrible feasts. Perhaps I should be grateful
+that some things are forgotten.
+
+"But now my life up to the time I was shot is plain again. I talked with
+a man who had traveled the Amazon and the Andes. I never had seen
+either, and I was ripe for something new. A steamer was just sailing
+south, and I got aboard in a hurry. No baggage but a suitcase and five
+thousand dollars. I had traveled a good deal--Europe, Canada, Japan--and
+always found that plenty of money was all a man needed. Thought it was
+the same way here. I've learned better.
+
+"I visited Rio--a few hours--and then came up along the coast and
+inland. At Manaos I got into trouble. Went ashore and got to drinking
+with two Germans. One of them--Schmidt--grew ugly and said a lot of
+rotten things about the States. Tell me something, men--is the war over
+and did our country get into it?"
+
+"It is, and it did." And Knowlton outlined the epochal occurrences of
+the world conflict.
+
+"And I missed that, too!" mourned Rand. "But I started a war of my own
+down here, anyway. When I quit seeing red I had a bottle neck in my hand
+and both the Germans were down. Somebody said Schmidt was dead. A couple
+of men tried to grab me. I fought my way clear, hid awhile, got back on
+the boat without being noticed, and paid one of the crew well to hide me
+in the hold and feed me. Nearly died from heat and suffocation down
+there, but lived to reach Iquitos, where my man smuggled me ashore. I
+thought I was safe there. But before I could make a move to travel on I
+fell into the hands of that cursed Schwandorf."
+
+"Schwandorf!"
+
+"Schwandorf. He was in Iquitos. The sailor who hid me must have sold me
+out to him. Schwandorf told me he was a police officer in Brazilian
+employ. Said he would take me back to stand trial for murdering Schmidt.
+The dirty blackmailer took all my money to keep his mouth shut and take
+me to a 'safe place.' The safe place was up this river. I came up here
+with him in a canoe paddled by some tough Peruvians. Then he began
+trying to bully me into doing dirty work for him--running women into
+Peru. I saw red again and jumped for him. He gave me that bullet on the
+head.
+
+"After that things are badly blurred. I found myself among savages. How
+I got there, why I wasn't killed, I don't know. Schwandorf was there
+awhile. Then he went away with his gang, leaving me very sure of only
+one thing--I was a murderer and would be executed if caught. And--well,
+that's about all, except that the savages seemed rather afraid of me and
+didn't want me around."
+
+There was another silence. Then Lourenço remarked:
+
+"Between Schmidt and Schwandorf you have suffered much. It is possible
+that there was a connection of some sort between them. But neither can
+ever trouble you again. I do not see why Schwandorf took the trouble
+even to put you among the Red Bones. One more bullet would have ended
+you."
+
+"Any ideas on that subject, José?" asked McKay.
+
+"Only a guess, Capitan. I was not here five years ago, and I knew
+nothing of Schwandorf then. But I know he always schemed for his own
+good and overlooked no chances. So perhaps, finding this man not dead,
+but darkened in mind by his bullet, he thought he might be able to use
+him in some way at some future time. A dead man is not useful to anyone.
+If this man should never become valuable he could live and die forgotten
+among savages, where he could do Schwandorf no harm. If worth something
+he could be found again."
+
+"Cold-blooded Prussian efficiency," nodded McKay. Then he spoke directly
+to Rand.
+
+"Since you're mentally sound," he went on, "we may as well tell you how
+you happen to be among us. We three--Merry, Tim, and I--came here to
+find you. The settlement of the Dawson estate hinges on you."
+
+"On me? How? I've no claim to it. Paul Dawson, Uncle Phil's son--"
+
+"Is dead, too. Killed in action in the Argonne, You're next in line."
+
+McKay watched him keenly. So did Knowlton. The half-expected jubilance
+did not come.
+
+"So Paul's gone," was Rand's reply. "Hard luck. Suppose I hadn't been
+found--then what?"
+
+"In due time the money would go to a school. Boys' school."
+
+"Orphans? Blind? Cripples?"
+
+"Hardly." McKay's mouth curved sardonically. He named a preparatory
+school of the "exclusive" type. Rand's mouth also twisted.
+
+"That hotbed of snobbery? That twin sister to a society girls' finishing
+school? Might have known it, though. Uncle Phil was fond of the sort of
+education that doesn't educate. I'm glad you fellows found me. I'll go
+home and collect every red cent, just to keep it out of the hands of the
+supercilious bunch of bishops that run that sissy-spawner."
+
+Knowlton chuckled appreciatively.
+
+"It's not the sort of school that breeds he-men, for a fact," he agreed.
+"But you don't seem much enthused over having a couple of millions
+dropped into your lap."
+
+Rand sat still. His face remained cheerless, impassive.
+
+"What is money?" he said, presently. "I've always had plenty of it.
+What's it done for me? When you have it you can't tell whether people
+are friends to you or only friends to your money. It makes you cynical,
+suspicious. What's worse, you depend too much on it. You think it will
+do everything. Then if you land in a place where it's no good and you
+haven't got it, anyway, you're up against it a good deal harder than the
+fellow who never had it but knows how to handle himself without it."
+
+"True for ye," Tim concurred, heartily. "All the same, I bet ye'll
+change yer tune after ye git home."
+
+"Will I?" The green eyes impaled him. "Maybe. But I don't think so. I've
+had my run at blowing in money on myself alone. Now I'm going to blow
+some on other folks. I missed out on the war, but--There must be quite a
+few of our fellows lamed and crippled by that war. And I'll gamble that
+the government isn't treating them all like princes. I know something
+about governments."
+
+"Princes? Say, feller, there's many a dog that's took better care of
+than some of our boys back home!"
+
+"So I thought. The income from a couple of millions, along with some of
+the principal, will do a lot of good if used right. And--" His eyes
+turned to the three bushmen.
+
+"Do not look at us in that way," said Lourenço, reading his thought. "We
+can make all the money we need, and we came with the capitao and his
+comrades only because we wanted excitement. Use your money for the
+crippled men who need it."
+
+"And José Martinez also is well able to provide for his wants," coolly
+added the other naked man. "I am here only to settle old scores, and now
+they are settled. Each man is goaded by his own spur--money, wine,
+women, excitement, revenge. Money is not mine."
+
+He yawned, arose, stretched like a cat, and stepped toward his hammock.
+The two Brasilians also moved toward the _tambo_. The others stood a
+moment longer beside the fire.
+
+"Well, since we three didn't come here because of wine, women, or
+revenge," Knowlton said, whimsically, "it must have been for money and
+excitement. Don't know which was the stronger lure, but if we could have
+only one of the two I think we'd let the money slide. How about it,
+Rod?"
+
+"Right! And, Rand, let me say this: Before we knew you we had an
+impression that you were more or less of a worthless pup. We've changed
+our ideas. If you ever go broke and want to hit a trail into some new
+place to make a strike of your own, and you need partners, let us know."
+
+And he held out his hand.
+
+The naked millionaire took it. For the first time a faint smile
+lightened his face.
+
+"I'll do that, partners!" he promised.
+
+"Yeah! That's the word. Pardners! Only, li'l' Timmy Ryan bucks at ever
+travelin' back into this here, now, Ja-va-ree jungle. I got enough of
+it. Right now I'm homesick."
+
+"So say we all," affirmed Knowlton. "Now let's turn in."
+
+But Tim stood a little longer looking out at the moonlit river and the
+two waiting canoes. His gaze roved along the stream, northward. He
+lifted his head, opened his mouth, expanded his lungs, and then the
+astounded denizens of forest and stream cut short their discordant
+concert to listen to something they never had heard before and never
+would hear again--a great voice thundering a censored version of a North
+American army song.
+
+ "Home, boys, home! Home we want to be!
+ Home, boys, home, in God's countree!
+ We'll raise Ol' Glory to the top o' the pole
+ And we'll all come back--not a dog-gone soul!"
+
+
+
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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Pathless Trail, by Arthur O. (Arthur Olney) Friel</title>
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+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Pathless Trail, by Arthur O. (Arthur
+Olney) Friel</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: The Pathless Trail</p>
+<p>Author: Arthur O. (Arthur Olney) Friel</p>
+<p>Release Date: October 24, 2009 [eBook #30324]<br />
+[Last updated: October 11, 2022]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PATHLESS TRAIL***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>E-text prepared by David Garcia, Mary Meehan,<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (http://www.pgdp.net)</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figleft">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt=""/>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figright">
+<img src="images/spine.jpg" alt=""/>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h1>THE PATHLESS TRAIL</h1>
+
+<h2>BY ARTHUR O. FRIEL</h2>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h3>NEW YORK<br />
+GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP<br />
+PUBLISHERS</h3>
+
+<h3>Made in the United States of America</h3>
+
+<h3>THE PATHLESS TRAIL</h3>
+
+<h3>Copyright, 1922, by Harper &amp; Brothers<br />
+Printed in the United States of America</h3>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h4>TO<br />
+THE MEMORY OF<br />
+MY FATHER<br />
+GEORGE WILLIAM FRIEL</h4>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
+<p>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I. <span class="smcap">Sons of the North</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II. <span class="smcap">At Sundown</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III. <span class="smcap">The Voice of the Wilds</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV. <span class="smcap">The German</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V. <span class="smcap">Into the Bush</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI. <span class="smcap">In the Night Watch</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII. <span class="smcap">Cold Steel</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII. <span class="smcap">The Double-cross</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX. <span class="smcap">Fiddlers Three</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X. <span class="smcap">By the Light of Storm</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI. <span class="smcap">Out of the Air</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII. <span class="smcap">The Arrow</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII. <span class="smcap">The Way of the Jungle</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV. <span class="smcap">A Duel with Death</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV. <span class="smcap">The Cannibals</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI. <span class="smcap">Blackbeard</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII. <span class="smcap">Fever</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII. <span class="smcap">Fruit of the Trap</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX. <span class="smcap">The Red Bones</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX. <span class="smcap">The Raposa</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI. <span class="smcap">Shadows of the Night</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII. <span class="smcap">The Siren of War</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII. <span class="smcap">Strategy</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV. <span class="smcap">The Battle of the Tribes</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV. <span class="smcap">The Passing of Schwandorf</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI. <span class="smcap">Partners</span></a><br />
+</p>
+<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>THE PATHLESS TRAIL</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<h3>SONS OF THE NORTH</h3>
+
+
+<p>Three men stood ankle deep in mud on the shore of a jungle river,
+silently watching a ribbon of smoke drift and dissolve above the somber
+mass of trees to the northwest.</p>
+
+<p>Three men of widely different types they were, yet all cradled in the
+same far-off northern land. The tallest, lean bodied but broad
+shouldered, black of hair and gray of eye, held himself in soldierly
+fashion and gazed unmoved. His two mates&mdash;one stocky, red faced and red
+headed; the other slender, bronzed and blond&mdash;betrayed their thoughts in
+their blue eyes. The red man squinted quizzically at the smoke feather
+as if it mattered little to him where he was. The blond watched it with
+the wistfulness of one who sees the last sign of his own world fade out.</p>
+
+<p>Behind them, at a respectful distance, a number of swarthy individuals
+of both sexes in nondescript garments smoked and stared at the trio with
+the interest always accorded strangers by the dwellers of the Out
+Places. They eyed the uncompromising back of the tall one, the easy
+lounge of the red one, the thoughtful attitude of the light one. The
+copper-faced men peered at the rifles hanging in the right hands of the
+newcomers, their knee boots, khaki clothing, and wide hats. The women
+let their eyes rove over the boxes and bundles reposing in the mud
+beside the three.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Ingles?</i>" hazarded a woman, speaking through the stem of the black
+pipe clutched in her filed teeth.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Notre-Americano</i>," asserted a man, nodding toward the broad hats.
+"Englishmen would wear the round helmets of pith."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Mercadores?</i> Traders?" suggested the woman, hopefully running an eye
+again over the bundles.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Exploradores</i>," the man corrected. "Explorers of the bush. Have you no
+eyes? Do you not see the guns and high boots?"</p>
+
+<p>The woman subsided. The others continued what seemed to be their only
+occupation&mdash;smoking.</p>
+
+<p>The smoke streamer in the north vanished. As if moved by the same
+impulse, the three strangers turned their heads and looked
+south-westward, upriver. The red-haired man spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"So we've lit at last, as the feller said when him and his airyplane
+landed in a sewer. Faith, I dunno but he was better off than us, at
+that&mdash;he wasn't two thousand miles from nowheres like we are. The
+steamer's gone, and us three pore li'l' boys are left a long ways from
+home."</p>
+
+<p>Then, assuming the tone of a showman, he went on:</p>
+
+<p>"Before ye, girls, ye see the well known Ja-va-ree River, which I never
+seen before and comes from gosh-knows-where and ends in the Ammyzon.
+Over there on t'other side the water is Peru. Yer feet are in the mud of
+Brazil. This other river to yer left is the Tickywahoo&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Tecuahy," the blond man corrected, grinning.</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah. And behind ye is the last town in the world and the place that
+God forgot. What d'ye call this here, now, city?"</p>
+
+<p>"Remate de Males. Which means 'Culmination of Evils.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah. It looks it. Wonder if it's anything like Hell's Kitchen, up in
+li'l' old N'Yawk."</p>
+
+<p>They turned and looked dubiously at the town&mdash;a row of perhaps seventy
+iron-walled and palm-roofed houses set on high palm-trunk poles, each
+with its ladder dropping from the doorway to the one muddy street. Then
+spoke the tall man.</p>
+
+<p>"Before you see it again, Tim, you'll think it's quite a town. Above
+here is nothing but a few rubber estates, seven hundred miles of unknown
+river, and empty jungle."</p>
+
+<p>"Empty, huh? Then they kidded us on the boat. From what they said it's
+fair crawlin' with snakes and jaggers and lizards and bloody vampires
+and spiders as big as yer fist. And the water is full o' man-eatin' fish
+and the bush full o' man-eatin' Injuns. If that's what ye call empty,
+Cap, don't take me no place where it's crowded."</p>
+
+<p>A slight smile twitched the set lips of the tall "cap."</p>
+
+<p>"They're all here, Tim, though maybe not so thick as you expect. Lots of
+other things too. Who's this?"</p>
+
+<p>Through the knot of pipe-puffing idlers came a portly coppery man in
+uniform.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll be&mdash;Say, he's the same chap who came onto the boat in a
+police uniform. Now he's in army rig," the light-haired member of the
+trio exclaimed. "O Lordy! I've got it! He's the police force and the
+army! The whole blooming works! Ha!"</p>
+
+<p>Tim snickered and stepped forward.</p>
+
+<p>"Hullo, buddy!" he greeted. "What's on yer mind?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Boa dia</i>, senhor," responded the official, affably. With the words he
+deftly slipped an arm around Tim's waist and lifted the other hand
+toward his shoulder. But that hand stopped short, then flew wildly out
+into the air.</p>
+
+<p>Tim gave a grunt and a heave. The official went skidding and slithering
+six feet through the mud, clutching at nothing and contorting himself in
+a frantic effort to keep from sprawling in the muck. By a margin thin as
+an eyelash he succeeded in preserving his balance and stood where he
+stopped, amazement and anger in his face.</p>
+
+<p>"Lay off that stuff!" growled Tim, head forward and jaw out. "If ye want
+trouble come and git it like a man, not sneak up with a grin and then
+clinch. Don't reach for no knife, now, or I'll drill ye&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Tim!" barked the black-haired one. "Ten-<i>shun</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>Automatically Tim's head snapped erect and his shoulders went back. He
+relaxed again almost at once. But in the meantime the tall man had
+stepped forward and faced the raging representative of the government of
+Brazil.</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon, comrade," he said with an engaging smile. "My friend is a
+stranger to Brazil and not acquainted with your manner of welcome. In
+our own country men never put the arm around one another except in
+combat. He has been a soldier. You are a soldier. So you can understand
+that a fighting man may be a little abrupt when he does not understand."</p>
+
+<p>The smile, the apology, and most of all the subtle flattery of being
+treated as an equal by a man whose manner betokened the North American
+army officer, mollified the aggrieved official at once. The hot gleam
+died out of his eyes. Punctiliously he saluted. The salute was as
+punctiliously returned.</p>
+
+<p>"It is forgotten, Capitao. As the capitao says, we soldiers are
+sometimes overquick. I come to give you welcome to Remate de Males. My
+services are at your disposal."</p>
+
+<p>"We thank you. Why do you call me capitao?"</p>
+
+<p>"My eyes know a capitao when they see him."</p>
+
+<p>"But this is not a military expedition, my friend. Nor are any of us
+soldiers now&mdash;though we all have been."</p>
+
+<p>"Once a capitao, always a capitao," the Brazilian insisted. Then he
+hinted: "If the capitao and his friends wish to call upon the
+superintendente they will find him in the intendencia, the blue building
+beyond the hotel. It will soon be closed for the day."</p>
+
+<p>The tall American's keen gray eyes roved down the street to the
+weather-beaten house whose peeling walls once might have been blue. He
+nodded shortly.</p>
+
+<p>"Better go down there," he said. "Come on, Merry. Tim, stick here and
+keep an eye on the stuff. And don't start another war while we're gone."</p>
+
+<p>"Right, Cap." Tim deftly swung his rifle to his right shoulder. "I'll
+walk me post in a military manner, keepin' always on the alert and
+observin' everything that takes place within sight or hearin', accordin'
+to Gin'ral Order Number Two. There won't be no war unless somebody
+starts somethin'. Hey, there, buddy, would ye smoke a God's-country
+cigarette if I give ye one?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si</i>," grinned the soldier-policeman, all animosity gone. And as the
+other two men tramped away through the mud they also grinned, looking
+back at the North and the South American pacing side by side in
+sentry-go, blowing smoke and conversing like brothers in arms.</p>
+
+<p>"Tim likes to remember his 'general orders,' but he's forgotten Number
+Five," laughed the blond man.</p>
+
+<p>"Five? 'To talk to no one except in line of duty.' Don't need it here,
+Merry."</p>
+
+<p>"Nope. The <i>entente cordiale</i> is the thing. Here's hoping nobody makes
+Tim remember his 'Gin'ral Order Number Thirteen' while we're gone, Rod."</p>
+
+<p>He of the black hair smiled again as his mate, mimicking Tim's gruff
+voice, quoted:</p>
+
+<p>"'Gin'ral Order Number Thirteen: In case o' doubt, bust the other guy
+quick.'"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<h3>AT SUNDOWN</h3>
+
+
+<p>Past the loungers in the street, past others in the doorways, past
+children and dogs and goats, the pair marched briskly to the faded blue
+house whence the federal superintendent ruled the town with tropic
+indolence. There they found a thin, fever-worn, gravely courteous
+gentleman awaiting them.</p>
+
+<p>"Sit, senhores," he urged, with a languid wave of the hand toward
+chairs. "I am honored by your visit, as is all Remate de Males. In what
+way can I serve you?"</p>
+
+<p>The blond answered:</p>
+
+<p>"We have come, sir, both for the pleasure of making your acquaintance
+and for a little information. First permit me to introduce my friend Mr.
+Roderick McKay, lately a captain in the United States army. I am
+Meredith Knowlton. There is a third member of our party, Mr. Timothy
+Ryan, who remained on the river bank to talk with&mdash;er&mdash;a soldier of
+Brazil."</p>
+
+<p>The federal official nodded, a slight smile in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"We are here ostensibly for exploration," Knowlton continued, candidly,
+"but actually to find a certain man. I think it quite probable that we
+shall have to do considerable exploring before finding him."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," the other murmured, shrewdly. "It is a matter of police work,
+perhaps?"</p>
+
+<p>"No&mdash;and yes. The man we seek is not wanted by the law, and yet he is.
+He has committed no crime, and so cannot be arrested. But the law wants
+him badly because the settlement of a certain big estate hinges upon the
+question of whether he is alive or dead. If alive, he is heir to more
+than a million. If not&mdash;the money goes elsewhere."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," repeated the official, thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"I might add," McKay broke in with a touch of stiffness, "that neither I
+nor either of my companions would profit in any way by this man's death.
+Quite the contrary."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," reiterated the other, his face clearing. "You are commissioned,
+perhaps, to find and produce this man."</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly," Knowlton nodded. "From our own financial standpoint he is
+worth much more alive than dead. On the other hand, any absolute proof
+of his death&mdash;proof which would stand in a court of law&mdash;is worth
+something also. Our task is to produce either the man himself or
+indisputable proof that he no longer lives.</p>
+
+<p>"The man's name is David Dawson Rand. If alive, he now is thirty-three
+years old. Height five feet nine. Weight about one hundred sixty. Hair
+dark, though not black. Eyes grayish green. Chief distinguishing marks
+are the green eyes, a broken nose&mdash;caused by being struck in the face by
+a baseball&mdash;and a patch of snow-white hair the size of a thumb ball, two
+inches above the left ear. Accustomed to having his own way, not at all
+considerate of others. Yet not a bad fellow as men go&mdash;merely a man
+spoiled by too much mothering in boyhood and by the fact that he never
+had to work. This is he."</p>
+
+<p>From a breast pocket he drew a small grain-leather notebook, from which
+he extracted an unmounted photograph. The superintendent looked into the
+pictured face of a full-cheeked, wide-mouthed, square-jawed man with a
+slightly blas&eacute; expression and a half-cynical smile. After studying it a
+minute he nodded and handed it back.</p>
+
+<p>"As you say, senhor, a man who never has had to work."</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly. For five years this man has been regarded as dead. It was his
+habit to start off suddenly for any place where his whims drew him,
+notifying nobody of his departure. But a few days later he would always
+write, cable, or telegraph his relatives, so that his general
+whereabouts would soon become known. On his last trip he sent a radio
+message from a steamer, out at sea, saying he was bound for Rio Janeiro.
+That was the last ever heard from him."</p>
+
+<p>"Rio is far from here," suggested the Brazilian.</p>
+
+<p>"Just so. We look for Rand at the headwaters of the Amazon, instead of
+in Rio, because Rio yields no clew and because of one other thing which
+I shall speak of presently.</p>
+
+<p>"It has been learned that he reached Rio safely, but there his trail
+ended. As he had several thousand dollars on his person, it was
+concluded that he was murdered for his money and his body disposed of.
+This belief has been held until quite recently, when a new book of
+travel was published&mdash;<i>The Mother of Waters</i>, by Dwight Dexter, an
+explorer of considerable reputation."</p>
+
+<p>The Brazilian's brows lifted.</p>
+
+<p>"Senhor Dexter? I remember Senhor Dexter. He stopped here for a short
+time, ill with fever. So he has published a book?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. It deals mainly with his travels and observations in Peru, along
+the Mara&ntilde;on, Huallaga, and Ucayali. But it includes a short chapter
+regarding the Javary, and in that chapter occurs the following, which I
+have copied verbatim."</p>
+
+<p>From the notebook he read:</p>
+
+<p>"'It falls to the lot of the explorer at times to meet not only hitherto
+unclassified species of fauna and flora, but also strange specimens of
+the <i>genus homo</i>. Such a creature came suddenly upon my camp one day
+just before a serious and well-nigh fatal attack of fever compelled me
+to relinquish my intention to proceed farther up the Javary.</p>
+
+<p>"'While my Indian cook was preparing the afternoon meal, out from the
+dense jungle strode a bearded, shaggy-haired, painted white man, totally
+nude save for a narrow breechclout and a quiver containing several long
+hunting arrows. In one hand he carried a strong bow of really excellent
+workmanship. This was his only weapon. He wore no ornament, unless
+streaks of brilliant red paint be considered ornaments. He was wild and
+savage in appearance and manner as any cannibal Indian. Yet he was
+indubitably white.</p>
+
+<p>"'To my somewhat startled greeting he made no response. Neither did he
+speak at any time during his unceremonious visit. Bolt upright, he stood
+beside my crude table until the Indian stolidly brought in my food.
+Then, without a by-your-leave, the wild man rapidly wolfed down the
+entire meal, feeding himself with one hand and holding his bow ready in
+the other. Though I questioned him and sought to draw him into
+conversation, he honored me with not so much as a grunt or a gesture.
+When the table was bare he stalked out again and vanished into the dim
+forest.</p>
+
+<p>"'After he had gone my Indian urged that we leave the place at once. The
+man, he said, was "The Raposa"&mdash;a word which denotes a species of wild
+dog sometimes found on the upper Amazon. He knew nothing of this
+"Raposa" except that he apparently belonged to a wild tribe living far
+back in the forest, perhaps allied with the cannibal Mayorunas, who were
+very fierce; and that he appeared sometimes at Indian settlements,
+where, without ever speaking, he would help himself to the best food and
+then leave. My man seemed to fear that now some great misfortune would
+come to us unless we shifted our base. When the fever came upon me soon
+afterward, the superstitious fellow was convinced that the illness was
+attributable directly to the visit of the human "wild dog."</p>
+
+<p>"'Aside from the nudity and barbarism of the mysterious stranger,
+certain personal peculiarities struck me. One was that his eyes were
+green. Another was a streak of snow-white hair above one ear.
+Furthermore, the red paint on his body outlined his skeleton. His ribs,
+spine, arm- and leg-bones all were portrayed on his tanned skin by those
+brilliant red streaks. In this connection my Indian asserted that in the
+tribe to which "The Raposa" probably belonged it was the custom to
+preserve the bones of the dead and to paint them with this same red dye,
+after which the bones were hung up in the huts of the deceased instead
+of being given burial. Beyond this my informant knew nothing of the "Red
+Bone" people, except that to enter their country was death.'"</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton returned the book to his pocket and carefully buttoned the
+flap.</p>
+
+<p>"When that appeared," he continued, "efforts were made to get hold of
+Dexter, with the idea of showing him the photograph of the missing man
+and learning any additional details. Unfortunately, by the time the book
+was published Dexter had gone to Africa to seek a race of dwarfs said to
+exist in the Igidi Desert, and thus was totally out of reach. Then we
+were called upon to follow up this clew and find the Raposa if possible.
+Men with green eyes and patches of white hair above one ear are not
+common. So, though our knowledge of this strange wild man is confined to
+those few words of Dexter's, we are here to learn more of him and to get
+him if we can."</p>
+
+<p>He looked expectantly at the official. The latter, after staring out
+through the doorway for a time, shook his head slightly.</p>
+
+<p>"Something of this Raposa and of those red-streaked people has come to
+my ears, senhores, but only as rumors," he said, slowly. "And one does
+not place great faith in rumors. Yet I have repeatedly been surprised to
+learn, after dismissing a story as an empty Indian tale, that the tale
+was true.</p>
+
+<p>"Of the Mayorunas more is known. They are eaters of human flesh,
+inhabiting both sides of the Javary, deadly when angered, and very
+easily angered. Their country is not many days distant from here, but as
+they never attack us we do not attack them. It is an armed neutrality,
+as you senhores would say. True, we have to be careful in drinking
+water, for they sometimes poison the streams against real or imaginary
+enemies, and the poisoned waters flow down to us, causing those who
+drink it to die of a fever like the typhoid. Yet," and he smiled, "there
+is a saying, is there not, that water is made not to drink, but to bathe
+in?"</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton laughed. McKay's eyes twinkled.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry to say that water's about all a fellow can get to drink in
+the States now," the blond man said, ruefully. "That is, of course,
+unless a man knows where to go."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i> It is a pity. But here in Brazil one need not drink water unless
+he wishes, and often it is better not to. Of the Mayorunas, senhor&mdash;you
+do not intend to go among them, seeking this wild man of the red bones?
+If you should do so it would be a matter of regret to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Meaning that we should not come out again? That's a risk we have to
+face. We go wherever it is necessary."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry. I regret also that I can give you no definite information.
+Yet I wish you all success, senhores, and a safe return. This much I can
+do and gladly will do: I can send word to another white man who now is
+in the town and who knows much of the upper river. He may be able to
+assist you, and without doubt will be eager to do so. He is staying at
+the hotel, just below here&mdash;Senhor Schwandorf."</p>
+
+<p>The eyes of the two Americans narrowed. The official coughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Senhor McKay has been a soldier. And Senhor Knowlton&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I was a lieutenant."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! But the war has passed, senhores. Senhor Schwandorf was not a
+soldier of Germany&mdash;he has been in Brazil for more than six years."</p>
+
+<p>"War's over. That's right," McKay agreed. "But don't bother to send
+word. We'll find him if he's at the hotel. Going there ourselves. Glad
+to have met you, sir. Good luck!"</p>
+
+<p>"And to you also luck, Capitao and Tenente," smiled the official. McKay
+and Knowlton strode out.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess this is the hotel," hazarded McKay, glancing at a house which
+rose slightly above the others. "I'll go in and charter rooms. You get
+Tim and have somebody rustle our impedimenta up here."</p>
+
+<p>He turned aside. Knowlton trudged on through the glare of sunset to the
+river bank where Tim and the army of Remate de Males still loafed up and
+down, the admired of all beholders.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, Tim. We're moving to the hotel. No more war, I see."</p>
+
+<p>"Lord love ye, no," grinned Tim. "Me and this feller are gittin' on
+fine. He's Joey&mdash;I forgit the rest of his names; he's got about a dozen
+more and they sound like stones rattlin' around inside a can. But Joey's
+a right guy. After me tour o' duty ends he's goin' to buy me a drink and
+maybe introjuce me to a lady friend o' his. Want to join the party,
+Looey?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not unless the ladies are better looking than these," laughed the
+ex-lieutenant, moving his head toward the pipe-smoking females.</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, I was thinkin' that same meself. Unless he can dig up somethin'
+fancier 'n what I see so far, I'd as soon have Mademoiselle."</p>
+
+<p>"Who?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mademoiselle of Armenti&egrave;res. Sure, ye know that one, Looey. Goes to the
+tune o' 'Parley-Voo.'"</p>
+
+<p>Wherewith he lifted up a foghorn voice and, much to the edification of
+"Joey" (whose name really was Joao) and the rest of Remate de Males,
+burst into song:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Mademoiselle of Armenteers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Pa-a-arley-voo!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">She smoked our butts and bummed our beers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Pa-a-arley-voo!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">She had cockeyes and jackass ears<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And she hadn't been kissed for forty years,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Rinkydinky-parley-voo!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>As his musical effort ended, out from the dense jungle hemming in the
+town burst a hideous roaring howl. Again and again it sounded in a
+horrible crash of noise.</p>
+
+<p>"Holy Saint Pat!" gasped Tim, throwing his rifle to port and bracing his
+feet. "Now look what I went and done! Is that the echo, or a couple
+dozen jaggers all fightin' to oncet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Guariba, Senhor Ree-ann," snickered Joao. "Not jaguars&mdash;no. Only one
+little guariba monkey. The howler."</p>
+
+<p>"G'wan! Ye're kiddin'!"</p>
+
+<p>"But no, <i>amigo</i>. It is as I tell you. One monkey. It is sunset, and the
+jungle awakes."</p>
+
+<p>"My gosh! I'll say it does. Sounds like a Sat'day night row in a Second
+Av'noo saloon, except there ain't no shootin'. Guess you boys have some
+night life, too, even if ye are away back in the bush."</p>
+
+<p>"Time for us to move, Tim," laughed Knowlton. "It'll be dark in no time.
+Joao, will you have our baggage moved to the hotel?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si</i>, senhor. <i>Immediatamente.</i> Antonio&mdash;Jorge&mdash;Rosario! And you, too,
+Meldo&mdash;<i>vem c&agrave;</i>! Carry the bundles of the gentlemen to the hotel,
+presto! Proceed, senhores. I, Joao d'Almeida Magalhaes Nabuco Pestana da
+Fonseca, will remain here on guard until all your possessions have been
+transported. Proceed without fear."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE VOICE OF THE WILDS</h3>
+
+
+<p>McKay, eyes twinkling again, awaited them at the top of the hotel's
+street ladder.</p>
+
+<p>"Rooms any good, Rod?" hailed Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"Best in the house, Merry."</p>
+
+<p>"See any insects in the beds?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nary a bug&mdash;in the beds." The twinkle grew. "Didn't look in the bureaus
+or behind the mirrors. Come look 'em over."</p>
+
+<p>Entering a sizable room evidently used for dining&mdash;for its chief
+articles of furniture were two tables made from planed palm
+trunks&mdash;McKay waved a hand toward a row of four doorways on the right.</p>
+
+<p>"First three are ours," he explained. "Only vacancies here. Eight rooms
+in this hotel&mdash;the other four over there." He pointed across the room,
+on the other side of which opened four similar doors. "They're occupied
+by two sick men, one drunk&mdash;hear him snore?&mdash;and one she-goat which is
+kidding."</p>
+
+<p>"Huh?" Tim snorted, suspiciously. "I think ye're the one that's kiddin',
+Cap."</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit. I looked. The last room on this side is the Dutchman's, and
+these are ours. Take your pick. They're all alike."</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton stepped to the nearest and looked in. For a moment he said no
+word. Then he softly muttered:</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll be spread-eagled!"</p>
+
+<p>"Me, too," seconded Tim, who had been craning his neck.</p>
+
+<p>The room was absolutely empty. No bed, no chair, no bureau, no
+rug&mdash;nothing at all was in it except two iron hooks. Its floor consisted
+of split palm logs, round side up, between which opened inch-wide
+spaces. Its walls were rusty corrugated iron, guiltless of mirrors or
+pictures, which did not reach to the roof.</p>
+
+<p>"Observe the excellent ventilation," grinned McKay. "Wind blows up
+through the floor&mdash;if there is any wind&mdash;and then loops over the
+partition into the next fellow's room."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah. And I'll say any guy that drops his collar button is out o' luck.
+It goes plunk into the mud, seven foot down under the house. But say,
+Cap, how the heck do we sleep? Hang ourselves up on them hooks?"</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly."</p>
+
+<p>"Kind o' rough on a feller's shirt, ain't it? And the shirt would likely
+pull off over yer head before mornin'."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, probably would. But the secret is this&mdash;you're supposed to hang
+your hammock on those hooks. You provide the hammock. The hotel provides
+the hooks. What more can you ask of a modern hotel?"</p>
+
+<p>"Huh! And if a guy wants a bath, there's the river, all full o' 'gators
+and cattawampuses and things. And if ye eat, I s'pose ye rustle yer own
+grub and pay for eatin' it off that slab table there. There's jest one
+thing ye can say for this dump&mdash;a feller can spit on the floor. But with
+all them cracks in it he might not hit it, at that. Mother of mine! To
+think Missus Ryan's li'l' boy should ever git caught stayin' in a hole
+like this, along o' drunks and skiddin' she-goats and&mdash;did ye say a
+Dutchman?"</p>
+
+<p>"German. Chap named Schwandorf."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah?" Tim's tone was sinister. "Say, Cap, gimme the room next that
+guy. And if ye hear anybody yowlin' before mornin' don't git worried. It
+won't be me."</p>
+
+<p>"None of that, Tim," warned Knowlton. "The war's over&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Since when? There wasn't no peace treaty signed when we left the
+States."</p>
+
+<p>"Er&mdash;ahum! Well, technically you're right. But this fellow may be useful
+to us. He knows the upper river, they say."</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, well, if ye can use him I'll lay off him. Where is he?"</p>
+
+<p>"Out somewhere," answered McKay. "I haven't seen him yet. Want this
+first room, Merry?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just to play safe, I'll take the one next the German. And if I hear any
+war in the night, Tim, I'm coming over the top with both hands going."</p>
+
+<p>"Grrrumph!" growled Tim.</p>
+
+<p>"That goes, Tim," warned McKay. "I'll take this room and you can have
+the one between us. Here comes the baggage train with our stuff. In
+here, men!"</p>
+
+<p>Puffing and grunting, Antonio and Jorge and Rosario and Meldo shuffled
+in with the boxes and bundles. Under the directions of McKay and
+Knowlton, these were stowed in the bare rooms. Then the four shuffled
+out again, grinning happily over a small roll of Brazilian paper reis
+which McKay had peeled from a much larger roll and handed to them.
+Immediately following their departure, in came a youth carrying three
+new hammocks.</p>
+
+<p>"Our beds," McKay explained. "I sent this lad to a trader's store for
+them. He's the proprietor's son. Thank you, Thomaz. Tell your father to
+put these on our bill, and take for yourself this small token of our
+appreciation."</p>
+
+<p>More reis changed hands. The young Brazilian, with a flash of teeth,
+informed them that the evening meal would soon be ready and disappeared
+through a rear door.</p>
+
+<p>"Do they really feed us at this here, now, hotel?" Tim demanded. "Then
+the goat's safe."</p>
+
+<p>"Meaning?" puzzled Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"Meanin' I didn't know but we had to kill our supper, and I was goin' to
+git the cap'n's goat. That is, the goat the cap'n's kiddin'&mdash;I mean the
+goat that's kiddin' the cap&mdash;the skiddin' she-goat&mdash;Aw, rats! ye know
+what I'm drivin' at. Me tongue so dry it don't work right."</p>
+
+<p>Wherewith Tim retreated in disorder to his room and began wrestling with
+his new hammock and the iron hooks.</p>
+
+<p>Swift darkness filled the rooms. The sun had slid down below the bulge
+of the fast-rolling world. Thomaz re-entered, lit candles stuck in empty
+bottles, and, with a bow, placed one of these crude illuminants at the
+door of each of the strangers. By the flickering lights McKay and
+Knowlton disposed their effects according to their individual desires,
+bearing in mind Tim's observation that any small article dropped on the
+floor would land in the mud under the house, whence sounded the grunts
+of pigs. Their work was soon completed, and they sauntered together to
+the small piazza.</p>
+
+<p>"Nice quiet little place," commented Knowlton. "Make a good sanitarium
+for nervous folks."</p>
+
+<p>The comment was made in a tone which, in the daytime, would carry half a
+mile. McKay nodded to save a similar effort. The outbreak of the howling
+monkey which so startled Tim had been only the first note of the night
+concert of the jungle. Now that the sun was gone the chorus was in full
+swing.</p>
+
+<p>Beasts of the village, the jungle, the river, all hurled their voices
+into the uproar. From the gloom around the houses rose the bellowing of
+cows and calves, the howls and yelps of dogs, the yowling of cats, the
+grunts and squeals of hogs. In the black river, flowing past within a
+stone's throw of the hotel door, sounded the loud snorts of dolphins and
+the hideous night call of the foul beast of the mud&mdash;the alligator. Out
+from the matted tangle of trees and brush and great snakelike vines
+behind the town rolled the appalling roars of guaribas, raucous bird
+calls, dismal hoots, sudden scattered screams. And over all, whelming
+all other sound by the sheer might of its penetrating power, throbbed
+the rapid-fire hammering of millions of frogs.</p>
+
+<p>"Frogs sound like a machine-gun barrage," the blond man added.</p>
+
+<p>"Or thousands of riveting hammers pounding steel."</p>
+
+<p>"Queer how much worse it is when you're right in it. We've heard it all
+the way up two thousand miles of Amazon, but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But you're right beside the orchestra now. Position is everything in
+life."</p>
+
+<p>The double-edged jest made Knowlton glance sidelong at his mate. Of the
+tall, eagle-faced Scot's past he knew little beyond what he had seen of
+him in war, where he had met him and learned to respect him
+whole-heartedly. From occasional remarks he had learned that McKay had
+been in all sorts of places between Buenos Aires and Nome; and from a
+few intangible hints he suspected that his "position in life" had once
+been much higher socially than at present. But he asked no questions.</p>
+
+<p>"Some orchestra, all right," he responded, casually. "Plenty of jazz.
+It'll quiet down after a while."</p>
+
+<p>For a time they stood leaning against the wall, staring abstractedly out
+at the dark. One by one the domestic animals ceased their clamor and
+settled themselves for the night. The jungle din, too, seemed to
+diminish, though perhaps this was because the ears of the men had become
+accustomed to it. At length through the discordant symphony boomed the
+voice of Tim.</p>
+
+<p>"By cripes! I know now what folks mean when they talk about a howlin'
+wilderness. Always thought 'twas one o' them figgers o' speech, but I'll
+tell the world it ain't no joke! Gosh! Think of all the things that's
+layin' out there and bellerin' and waitin' for us pore li'l' fellers to
+come in amongst 'em and git et up."</p>
+
+<p>"You'll find the same things in the cities up home," said Knowlton, a
+bit cynically. "Different bodies and different methods of attack, but
+the same merciless animals under the skin. Snakes in silk
+suits&mdash;foul-mouthed alligators in dinner jackets&mdash;hunting-cats and
+vampires, painted and powdered&mdash;and all the rest of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah. Ye said a mouthful, Looey. But say, Tommy's shovin' some grub on
+the table. Mebbe we better hop to it before the flies git it all."</p>
+
+<p>After a glance at the vicious attack already begun by the aforesaid
+flies, the pair adopted Tim's suggestion and hopped to it. Manfully they
+assailed the rubbery jerked beef, black beans, rice, farinha, and thick,
+black, unsweetened coffee which comprised the meal. All three were
+wrestling with chunks of the meat when Tim, facing the door, stopped
+chewing long enough to mutter:</p>
+
+<p>"Dutchland overalls. Here's the goose stepper."</p>
+
+<p>The heads of the other two involuntarily moved a little. Then their
+necks stiffened and they continued eating. Tim alone stared straight at
+a burly, black-whiskered Teuton who had halted in the outer doorway. And
+Tim alone saw the ugly look crossing the newcomer's visage as he gazed
+at the khaki shirts, the broad shoulders under them, and the
+unmistakably Irish&mdash;and hostile&mdash;face of Tim himself.</p>
+
+<p>Catching the hard stare of the red-haired man, he of the black beard
+advanced at once, his eyes veering to the door of his own room. Straight
+to that room he marched with heavy tread. He opened the door with a
+kick, shut it behind him with a slam. The three at the table glanced at
+one another.</p>
+
+<p>"Say what ye like," grumbled Tim, "but me and that guy don't hold no
+mush party. I don't like his map. I don't like his manners. And he looks
+too much like the Fritz that shot me in the back with a kamerad gun
+after surrenderin'. I was in hospital three months. D'ye mind that time,
+Looey?"</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton nodded. He remembered also that Tim, shot down from behind and
+almost killed, had reeled up to his feet and bayoneted his man before
+falling the second time. Wherefore he replied:</p>
+
+<p>"He isn't the same one, Tim."</p>
+
+<p>"Nope," grimly. "That one won't never come back. All the same, if you
+gents want to chew the fat with this feller I'm goin' slummin' with me
+friend Joey Mouthgargle Nabisco Whoozis. Then I won't be round here to
+make no sour-caustic remarks and gum up yer party."</p>
+
+<p>"Might be a good idea," McKay conceded.</p>
+
+<p>"There he is now, the li'l' darlin'! Hullo, Joey, old sock! Stick around
+a minute while I scoop a few more beans. Be with ye toot
+sweet&mdash;vite&mdash;presto&mdash;P.D.Q."</p>
+
+<p>Wherewith he demolished the rest of his meal with military dispatch,
+proceeded doorward, smote the grinning army of Remate de Males a buffet
+on the shoulder, and vanished into the night. A moment later his
+stentorian voice rolled back through the nocturnal racket in an
+impromptu paraphrase of an old and highly improper army song:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"We're in the jungle now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We ain't behind the plow;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">We'll never git rich,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">We'll die with the itch.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We're in the jungle now!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE GERMAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>The door of the German's room opened. The German came out and marched to
+the table. Two paces away he halted and faced the Americans, ready to
+speak if spoken to, equally ready to sit and ignore them if not greeted.
+McKay and Knowlton rose.</p>
+
+<p>"Herr von Schwandorf?" inquired Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf. Neither Herr nor von. Plain Schwandorf."</p>
+
+<p>The reply came in excellent English, though with a slight throaty
+accent.</p>
+
+<p>"Knowlton is my name. Mr. McKay. The third member of our party, Mr.
+Ryan, has just left."</p>
+
+<p>Schwandorf bowed stiffly from the waist.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a pleasure to meet you. White men are all too few here."</p>
+
+<p>Seating himself at a place beyond that just vacated by Tim, he
+continued, "You stay here for a time?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not long." They reseated themselves. "We go up the river as soon as we
+can arrange transportation."</p>
+
+<p>The black brows lifted slightly.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a dangerous river. You would do well to travel elsewhere unless
+you have some pressing reason to explore this stream."</p>
+
+<p>With an accustomed sweep of the hand he shooed the flies from the bean
+dish and helped himself to a big portion. Over the legumes he poured
+farinha in the Brazilian fashion.</p>
+
+<p>"We have. We are seeking a tribe of people who paint their bones red."</p>
+
+<p>Schwandorf's hand, conveying the first mouthful of beans upward, stopped
+in air. His black eyes fixed the Americans with an astounded stare. He
+lowered the beans, stabbed absently at a chunk of beef, sawed it apart,
+popped a piece of it into his mouth, and sat for a time chewing. When
+the meat was down he spoke bluntly:</p>
+
+<p>"Are there not ways enough to kill yourselves at home instead of
+traveling to this place to do it?"</p>
+
+<p>McKay smiled. The directness of the man amused him.</p>
+
+<p>"As bad as that?" asked Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"As bad as that. Blow your head off if you like. Cut your throat. Take
+poison. Jump into the river among the alligators. Step on a snake. But
+keep away from the Red Bones."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?" shot McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Cannibals&mdash;and worse."</p>
+
+<p>"Worse?"</p>
+
+<p>"Truly. Most of the Brazilian savages do not torture. The Red Bones do."</p>
+
+<p>"Pleasant prospect."</p>
+
+<p>"Very. Nothing to be gained among them, either. If you're hunting gold,
+try the hills over west of the Huallaga. None here."</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton filled and lit a pipe. McKay slowly drank the last of his
+syrupy coffee and rolled a cigarette. Schwandorf continued shoveling
+food into his capacious mouth.</p>
+
+<p>"Know anything about the Raposa?" Knowlton asked.</p>
+
+<p>The Teuton's eyelashes flickered. He ground another chunk of meat
+between his jaws before answering.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," he said then. "Wild dog. Sharp snout, gray hair, bushy
+tail. I've shot a couple of them."</p>
+
+<p>"This one is a man. Green eyes, streak of white hair over the left ear.
+Paints himself like the Red Bones, as you call them, but is a white
+man."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! That one? Heard of him, yes. Wild man of the jungle. Want to catch
+him and put him in a circus?"</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe. We'd like to see him, anyhow. Heard about him awhile ago. Any
+way to get him that you know of?"</p>
+
+<p>"Might try a steel trap," the German suggested, callously. "But I don't
+know where you'd set it. Best way to get a wild dog is to shoot him, and
+he isn't much good dead. Or would this one be worth something&mdash;dead?" A
+swift sidelong glance accompanied the question.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a cent!" snapped McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"And perhaps he'd be worth nothing alive," added Knowlton. "But we have
+a healthy curiosity to look him over. Guess the Red Bone country would
+be the likeliest place. How far is it from here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Keep out of it," was the stubborn reply.</p>
+
+<p>The Americans rose.</p>
+
+<p>"We are not going to keep out of it," Knowlton declared, coldly. "We are
+going straight into it. Thank you for your assistance."</p>
+
+<p>"Not so fast," Schwandorf protested. "If you are determined to go I will
+help you if I can. Shall we sit on the piazza with a small bottle to aid
+digestion? So! Thomaz! Bring from my stock the k&uuml;mmel. Or would you
+prefer whisky, gentlemen?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ginger-ale highballs are my favorite fruit," admitted Knowlton. "Can
+ginger ale be bought here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed yes. At one milrei a bottle."</p>
+
+<p>"Cheap enough. Thomaz, three bottles of ginger ale and one of North
+American whisky&mdash;the best. Cigars also. Out on the piazza."</p>
+
+<p>"Si, senhores."</p>
+
+<p>Schwandorf got up.</p>
+
+<p>"If you will pardon me, I will drink my k&uuml;mmel. Frankly, I do not like
+whisky."</p>
+
+<p>"And frankly, we do not like k&uuml;mmel. All a matter of taste."</p>
+
+<p>"Truly. So let each of us drink his own preference. I will join you in a
+moment."</p>
+
+<p>The Americans sauntered to the door, while the German strode into his
+room.</p>
+
+<p>"Blunt sort of cuss," Knowlton commented.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, blunt. But not candid. Knows more than he's telling."</p>
+
+<p>Disposing themselves comfortably, they sat watching the lights of the
+town and the jungle&mdash;the first pouring from windows and open doors, the
+latter streaking across the darkness where the big fire beetles of the
+tropics winged their way. As Knowlton had predicted, the night noise of
+forest and stream had diminished; but now from the village itself rose a
+new discord&mdash;a babel of vocal and instrumental efforts at music
+emanating from the badly worn records of dozens of cheap phonographs
+grinding away in the stilt-poled huts.</p>
+
+<p>"Good Lord!" groaned McKay. "Even here at the end of the world one can't
+get away from those beastly instruments."</p>
+
+<p>A throaty chuckle from the doorway followed the words. Schwandorf
+emerged, carrying a big bottle.</p>
+
+<p>"Yet there is one thing to be thankful for, gentlemen," he said. "In all
+this town there is not one man who attempts to play a trombone."</p>
+
+<p>The others laughed. Thomaz appeared with bottles and thick cups. Corks
+were drawn, liquids gurgled, matches flared, cigars glowed. Without
+warning Schwandorf shot a question through the gloom:</p>
+
+<p>"Have you seen Cabral&mdash;the superintendent?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Ask him about the wild man?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Get any information?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing definite. He suggested that we see you."</p>
+
+<p>"So."</p>
+
+<p>A pause, while Schwandorf's cigar end glowed like a flaming eye.</p>
+
+<p>"The Red Bones live well up the river," he began, abruptly. "Twenty-four
+days by canoe, five days through the bush on the east shore. That would
+bring you to their main settlement&mdash;if you were not wiped out before
+then. They're a big tribe, as tribes go. Ever been here before?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. Not here," Knowlton told him. "I've been in Rio, and McKay here has
+knocked around in&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>A stealthy kick from McKay halted him an instant. Then, deftly shifting
+the sentence, he concluded, "&mdash;in a number of places."</p>
+
+<p>"So." Another pause. "Then I should explain about tribes. Tribes here
+generally consist of from fifty to five hundred or more persons living
+in big houses called '<i>malocas</i>.' Unless the tribe is very big, one
+house holds them all. There may be any number of <i>malocas</i>, the
+inhabitants of which are all of the same racial stock; yet each <i>maloca</i>
+is, as far as government is concerned, a tribe to itself, controlled by
+a chief. No <i>maloca</i> owes any duty to any other <i>maloca</i>. There is no
+supreme ruler over all, nor even a federation among them. They live
+merely as neighbors&mdash;distant neighbors. At times they fight like
+neighbors. You understand."</p>
+
+<p>"'When Greek meets Greek&mdash;'" quoted McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Just so. When I say, then, that the Red Bones are a big tribe, I mean
+that there are about five hundred&mdash;maybe more&mdash;individuals in their main
+settlement. They live in huts, not in one big tribe-house like the
+Mayorunas. They are not Mayorunas, in fact; they paint differently, are
+darker of skin, and more cruel.</p>
+
+<p>"The Mayorunas, by the way, are not so debased as you might think.
+Though cannibals, they do not kill for the sake of eating 'long pig,'
+like the cannibals of the South Seas. Neither do they eat the whole
+body. Only the hands and feet of their dead enemies are devoured. These
+are carefully cooked and eaten as delicacies along with monkey meat,
+birds, fish, and other things prepared for a feast in honor of a
+victory. The eating of human flesh seems to be symbolism rather than
+savagery. Furthermore, they do not range the jungle hunting for victims.
+They eat only those who come against them as enemies.</p>
+
+<p>"So it is quite possible, you see, that strangers might go among them
+and escape death. It would depend largely on the ability of the
+strangers to convince the savages that they were friends. The difficulty
+is that the savages consider all strangers to be enemies until
+friendship is proved."</p>
+
+<p>"A sizable difficulty," McKay remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"Almost insurmountable. Yet it might be done. Mind, I speak now of the
+Mayorunas, not of the Red Bones. I tell you again that the Red Bone
+country is closed."</p>
+
+<p>"And where is the Mayoruna region?"</p>
+
+<p>"In the same general section. The Mayorunas are much more widely
+distributed. They are on both banks of the Javary and extend as far west
+as the Ucayali.</p>
+
+<p>"Now if I sought to enter the Red Bone region&mdash;and again I say I would
+not&mdash;this would be my way of going at it. I would go first among the
+Mayorunas near the Red Bones and seek to convince them that I was their
+friend. I would make the Mayoruna chief as friendly to me as possible. I
+might even take a Mayoruna woman for a time&mdash;some of them are handsome,
+and such a step would make me almost a Mayoruna myself in their eyes.
+Then I would persuade the chief to send messengers to the Red Bones with
+word of me and a request that I be allowed to visit their settlement.
+The request, coming from the Mayoruna chief, probably would be granted.
+I would then go in with a bodyguard of Mayorunas, do my business, and
+come out via the Mayoruna route."</p>
+
+<p>A thoughtful silence ensued. Bottle necks clinked against the cups.</p>
+
+<p>"Something in that idea," conceded Knowlton. "A good deal in it. Barring
+the woman part, of course."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," spoke McKay, his tone casual as ever. "When you came out what
+would you do with your woman, <i>mein Herr</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>Schwandorf, tongue loosened a bit by his k&uuml;mmel, chuckled.</p>
+
+<p>"Ho-ho! The woman? Leave her, of course, when she had served my purpose.
+Why bother about a woman here and there?"</p>
+
+<p>"I see." McKay's face, indistinct in the gloom, was unreadable, but his
+tone had a caustic edge.</p>
+
+<p>Schwandorf laughed again. "You are fresh from the woman-worshiping
+United States and you disapprove. But this is the jungle, and all is
+different. '<i>Cada terra com seu uso</i>,' as these Brazilians say&mdash;each
+land with its own ways. Perhaps when you have met the Mayoruna women,
+looked on their handsome faces and shapely forms&mdash;they wear no clothing,
+by the way&mdash;you will change your ideas. More than one man along this
+border has risked his life to win one of those women. But that rests
+with you. And now if you will excuse me, gentlemen, I have an engagement
+with a man at the other end of town."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly. We are indebted to you for your interest."</p>
+
+<p>"It is nothing. Remember that I strongly advise you not to go. But if
+you will go, I shall gladly do whatever lies in my power to aid you in
+preparing for the trip. Do not hesitate to call on me."</p>
+
+<p>He passed into the house, returning almost at once.</p>
+
+<p>"By the way," he added, "one of you has the room next mine?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have it," said Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Are you a good sleeper? I sometimes snore most atrociously, I am
+told. So perhaps&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't worry. I can sleep in the middle of a bombardment."</p>
+
+<p>"You are fortunate. Good evening, gentlemen."</p>
+
+<p>When he was gone they sat for a time smoking, sipping now and then at
+their highballs. At length McKay said, "Humph!"</p>
+
+<p>"Amen. Pretty square sort of chap, though, don't you think?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not saying," was the Scot's cautious answer. "Seems to be trying to
+discourage us and egg us on at the same time. Something up his sleeve,
+perhaps."</p>
+
+<p>"Can't tell. But his line of talk rings true so far. Checks up all right
+with what we've heard about the Mayorunas and so on. And that scheme of
+working in through the Mayoruna country sounds about as sensible as
+anything. Desperate chance and all that, but it might work. Say, why did
+you kick me when I was going to tell him you'd been in British Guiana?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't know exactly. Had a hunch. Seems to me I've seen that fellow
+before somewhere, but I can't place him. None of his business where I've
+been, anyhow. We're boobs from the States hunting for a wild man. That's
+all he needs to know."</p>
+
+<p>But it was not enough for Schwandorf to know. At that very moment he was
+on his way to the home of Superintendent Cabral, with whom he had no
+engagement whatever, to learn all he could concerning the business of
+these military-appearing strangers; also to impress on that official the
+fact that he had sought to dissuade them from starting on their mad
+quest.</p>
+
+<p>And much later that night, when Knowlton was making good his boast that
+he was a sound sleeper, a black-bearded face rose silently above the
+iron partition between his room and that of the German. A hand gripping
+a small electric flashlight followed. A white ray searched the room,
+halting on the khaki shirt lying over a box. A tough withe with a barb
+at one end came over like a slender tentacle, hooked the shirt neatly,
+drew it stealthily up to the top. Shirt, stick, lamp, hand, face all
+dissolved into darkness.</p>
+
+<p>After a time they reappeared. The shirt came down, swung slowly back and
+forth, was dropped deftly where it had previously lain. The breast
+pocket holding the grain-leather notebook and the photograph of David
+Dawson Rand was buttoned as it had been, and the notebook bulged the
+cloth slightly as before. But the contents of that book and the pictured
+face of Rand now were stamped on the brain of Schwandorf. A sneering,
+snarling smile curled the heavy mouth of Schwandorf. And softly, so
+softly that none could hear it but himself, sounded the ironical
+benediction of Schwandorf:</p>
+
+<p>"Sleep well, <i>offizier americanisch</i>! Dream on, poor fool! In time you
+will wake up. <i>Ja</i>, you will wake up!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<h3>INTO THE BUSH</h3>
+
+
+<p>Sleepy eyed and frowzy haired, with shirt unbuttoned and breeches and
+boots unlaced, Tim emerged from his iron-walled cell into the
+cool-shadowed main room, blinked at McKay and Knowlton lounging over
+their morning coffee and cigarettes, stretched his hairy arms, and
+advanced sluggishly to the table.</p>
+
+<p>"Yow-oo-hum!" he yawned. "Ain't they cute! All dressed and shaved like
+they was goin' to visit the C. O. And here's pore Timmy Ryan lookin'
+like a 'drunk and dirty' jest throwed into the guardhouse, and feelin'
+worse. Top o' the mornin' to ye, gents!"</p>
+
+<p>"Same to you, Tim," McKay nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Who hit you?" asked Knowlton, squinting at bumps and scratches on Tim's
+forehead.</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody. Couple fellers tried to, but they was out o' luck. Oh, I see
+what ye mean! I done that meself while I was gittin' to bed."</p>
+
+<p>"Waves must have been running high on the ocean last night. Better drink
+some coffee. Thomaz, another cup&mdash;big and black."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, Looey. 'Twas kind of an active night, at that."</p>
+
+<p>"I heard you come in," vouchsafed McKay. "Were you trying some high
+diving in your room?"</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, I done some divin' without tryin', but 'twas ragged work&mdash;I
+pulled a belly smacker every time. I got to tame that hammick o' mine.
+It throwed me four times hand-running and the only way I could hold it
+down was to unhook it and lay it on the floor."</p>
+
+<p>"Sleep well then?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did not. Cap, I thought I knowed somethin' about cooties, but I take
+it back&mdash;I never knowed nothin' about them insecks till last night.
+Where they come from I dunno, but I'll tell the world they come, and if
+they wasn't half an inch long I'll eat 'em. They darn near dragged me
+off whole, and all the sleep I got ye could stick in a flea's eye.
+Lookit here."</p>
+
+<p>He extended an arm dotted with swollen red spots.</p>
+
+<p>"Ants!" said McKay, after one glance. "Ants, not cooties. They're
+everywhere. Especially under the floor. That's one reason why folks
+sleep in hammocks down here. Even then they're likely to come down the
+hammock cords and drive you out."</p>
+
+<p>"Ants, hey? Never thought o' that. And I'd sooner spend another night
+fightin' all the man-eatin' jaggers in the jungle than them bugs. It's
+the little things that count, as the feller said when his wife give him
+his fourteenth baby."</p>
+
+<p>He downed the thick coffee brought by Thomaz, demanded another cup,
+accepted cigarette and light from Knowlton, and sighed heavily.</p>
+
+<p>"Who tried to hit you?" Knowlton persisted.</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, I dunno. Two-three fellers took swipes at me with bottles and
+things. Me and Joey went to a place where they's card games and so
+on&mdash;only place in town where the village sports can git action. Joey
+offers to buy, and does. Stuff tastes kind o' moldy to me, so I asks
+have they got any American beer. They have. It's bottled and warm, but
+it's beer and tastes like home. It goes down so slick I buy another
+round, and then one more, lettin' in a thirsty-lookin' stranger on the
+third round. That makes seven bottles altogether. Then I think mebbe I
+better pay up now before I lose track. Looey, guess what them seven
+bottles o' suds come to in American money."</p>
+
+<p>"M-m-m! Well, say about three and a half or four dollars."</p>
+
+<p>"That's what I figgered," mourned Tim. "But them highbinders want
+thirty-two dollars and twenty cents, American gold."</p>
+
+<p>"What!"</p>
+
+<p>"Sad but true. Seems the stuff sells here for four bucks and sixty cents
+a bottle. Thinkin' I'm gittin' rooked because I'm a tenderfoot, I raise
+a row to oncet and start to climb the guy. Other folks mix in and things
+git lively right off. But after I've dropped a couple o' fellers Joey
+winds himself round me and begs me not to make him arrest me, and also
+tells me I'm all wrong&mdash;that's the regular price. So o'course that makes
+me out a cheap skate unless I come acrost, and I do the right thing."</p>
+
+<p>"Lucky you had the money on you," said McKay, eying him a bit oddly.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't," chuckled Tim. "All the dough I had was one pore lonesome
+ten-spot&mdash;the one I got from ye yesterday, Cap. But I don't tell 'em
+that. I jest wave my hand like thirty-two plunks wasn't nothin' in my
+young life, and start to work meself out o' the hole. After the two guys
+on the floor are brought back to their senses I order up drinks for all
+hands and git popular again. Then I git out the bones."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! I see!" McKay laughed silently.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure. Remember they told us on the boat that these guys will gamble on
+anything? And that a feller without shoes on may be some rubber worker
+packin' a roll that would choke a horse? Wal, I make a few passes with
+them dice o' mine and their eyes light up like somebody had switched on
+the current. Then I scrabble me hand around in me pants pocket, like I
+was peelin' a bill off a roll so big I didn't want to flash the whole
+wad, and haul out that pore li'l' ten and ask would anybody like to play
+a man's game.</p>
+
+<p>"They would. I'll say they would. And they got the coin to back up their
+play, too. Before I come home I was buyin' beer by the case instead o'
+the bottle. And it's all paid for, and I got more 'n a hundred dollars
+left, besides givin' Joey a fistful o' money jest for bein' a good
+feller. This ain't a bad town at all, gents. Outside o' that
+buckin'-broncho hammick and the man-eatin' ants I had a lovely evenin'."</p>
+
+<p>"How about Joao's lady friend?" quizzed Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"Huh? Oh, I didn't git to see her. When bones and beer are rollin' high
+and handsome I got no time for women. Besides, I found out she was
+mostly Injun and fat as a hog. Nothin' like that for li'l' Timmy Ryan.
+Oh, say, before I forgit it&mdash;I asked Joey about this Dutchman here, and
+he says&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>McKay scowled, shook his head, pointed toward the closed door of
+Schwandorf. Tim lifted his brows, winked understanding, and went on with
+a break: "&mdash;that this guy Sworn-off is a reg'lar feller and knows this
+river like a book. Says he's one fine guy and a man from hair to heels."</p>
+
+<p>Following which he grimaced as if something smelled bad, adding in a
+barely audible whisper, "And that's the worst lie I ever told."</p>
+
+<p>"We met Mr. Schwandorf last night after you went," Knowlton said,
+easily, drawing down one eyelid. "Very likable sort of chap. He's going
+to help us get started upriver."</p>
+
+<p>"Uh-huh. When do we go? To-day?"</p>
+
+<p>"If possible."</p>
+
+<p>"Glad of it. This big-town sportin' life would be the ruination of a
+simple country kid like me. Yo-hum! Wonder how all our neighbors are
+this mornin'&mdash;the goat and the drunk and the two sick fellers. Kind o'
+quiet over that side o' the room."</p>
+
+<p>Thomaz entered just then with more coffee. Knowlton turned to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Are the sick men better to-day, Thomaz?"</p>
+
+<p>"Much better, senhor," the lad said, carelessly. "They are dead."</p>
+
+<p>"Huh?" Tim grunted, explosively.</p>
+
+<p>"Dead," the youth repeated. "They were taken out at dawn. Do not be
+alarmed. It was the swamp fever, which is not&mdash;what you say?&mdash;catching."</p>
+
+<p>"Humph! Sort of a reg'lar thing to die of fever here, hey?"</p>
+
+<p>Thomaz shrugged as if hearing a foolish question.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i> Swamp fever, yellow fever, smallpox, beriberi&mdash;to-day we live,
+to-morrow we are dead."</p>
+
+<p>"True for ye. They's allays somethin' hidin' round the corner waitin' to
+jump ye, no matter where ye are. If 'tain't one thing, it's another."</p>
+
+<p>Despite his philosophical answer, however, Tim fell silent, his eyes
+going to the doors of the rooms where Death had stalked last night while
+he was gambling. Like most men in whose veins red blood runs bold and
+free, he had no fear of the sort of death befitting a fighter&mdash;sudden
+and violent&mdash;but a deep repugnance for those two assassins against which
+a victim could not fight back&mdash;disease and poison. The Brazilian youth's
+nonchalant fatalism aroused him to the fact that here both those forms
+of death were very near him; the one in the air, the other on the
+ground&mdash;fever and snakes.</p>
+
+<p>For the moment he was depressed. Then curiosity awoke.</p>
+
+<p>"If this here, now, Javary fever ain't catchin', how does a feller git
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mosquitoes," McKay enlightened him. "The <i>anopheles</i>. It bites a man
+who has fever, then bites a well man and leaves the fever in him. Inside
+of ten days he's sick, unless he takes a huge dose of quinine right
+away. Mosquito attacks perpendicular to the skin. That is, it stands on
+its head. If you ever notice one of them biting that way get busy with
+the quinine."</p>
+
+<p>"Huh! Fat chance a feller's got o' seein' just how all these bugs bite
+him. And one muskeeter standin' on its head does all that, hey?"</p>
+
+<p>"So they say. Also they say it's only the female that bites."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah. I believe it. I been stung more 'n once by females before now.
+How about the yeller fever? Git that the same way?"</p>
+
+<p>"Same way, only a different mosquito&mdash;the <i>stegomyia</i>. When you begin to
+vomit black you're gone. And if you get beriberi you're gone, too. First
+symptoms of that are numbness of the fingers and toes. Muscular
+paralysis goes on until your heart stops."</p>
+
+<p>"Uh-huh. Nice cheerful place to die in, this Ammyzon jungle. Aw well,
+what's the odds?"</p>
+
+<p>Wherewith he inhaled more coffee, flipped his cigarette butt at a small
+lizard on the floor not far away, yawned once more, and swaggered out to
+the piazza, bawling:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"And when I die<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Don't bury me a-tall,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But pickle me bones<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In alky-hawl&mdash;"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>When his roar had subsided and the two former officers had sat silent a
+moment, smiling over his nocturnal adventures, the door of Schwandorf's
+room opened abruptly and the German stepped out.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Morgen</i>," he grunted, striding to the table. "Thomaz!"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si</i>, Senhor Sssondoff." The youth faded away into the kitchen
+quarters.</p>
+
+<p>"Always feel grumpy until I eat," grumbled the blackbeard. "None of this
+coffee-cigarette breakfast for me. A real meal, coffee with gin in it, a
+cigar&mdash;then I feel human. Sleep well?"</p>
+
+<p>His bold gaze never flickered as it encountered Knowlton's.</p>
+
+<p>"Fine. If you snored I didn't know it. Didn't hear the bodies taken out
+this morning, either."</p>
+
+<p>"Bodies! Oh! Those fellows dead?" He tilted his head toward the doors
+behind which the sick men had lain. "Glad of it. Best for them and
+everybody else. Hate to have sick people in the place."</p>
+
+<p>The Americans said nothing. They lit new cigarettes and waited for the
+other to become "human." And when his substantial breakfast was down,
+his gin-flavored coffee had disappeared, and his big cigar was aglow, he
+did.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, gentlemen, have you decided to take good advice and let your
+Raposa alone?" he asked, affably.</p>
+
+<p>"Who ever follows good advice?" Knowlton countered. Schwandorf chuckled.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Niemand.</i> Nobody. So you will go." He shook his head solemnly. "I have
+said all I can without offense. But if you persist I can only help you
+to start. If possible I should like to go with you up the river to the
+place where you will take to the bush; but I must go to Iquitos, in
+Peru, on the monthly launch which is due in a day or two, so all my
+business is in the other direction. If now I can aid in the matter of a
+crew&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That is what we were about to ask of you."</p>
+
+<p>"So. Then let us be about it. I have been thinking, since you showed
+your determination last night, and have made inquiries about men. There
+are now in Nazareth, the little Peruvian town across the river, several
+men from whom you can pick an excellent crew. Men of the river and the
+bush, not worthless loafers like these townsmen here. Men who are not
+afraid of hell or high water, as the saying is. Not remarkable for
+either beauty or brains, but good men for your work&mdash;by far the best you
+can obtain. I would suggest a large canoe and six or eight of those men
+as crew."</p>
+
+<p>The others smoked thoughtfully. Then McKay said, "We should prefer
+Brazilians."</p>
+
+<p>"Not if you knew the people hereabouts as well as I. It, of course,
+makes no personal difference to me what sort of crew you get, but I tell
+you that these men are best. What does it matter which side of the river
+they come from? Men are men."</p>
+
+<p>"True," McKay conceded.</p>
+
+<p>"Can't be too fussy here," Knowlton added. "Let's see the men."</p>
+
+<p>All rose. But then Schwandorf suggested:</p>
+
+<p>"No need of your going to Nazareth. Better stay here, unless you want to
+go through a great deal of ceremonious foolishness over there. It's
+Peruvian ground and the barefooted ignoramuses of officials may insist
+on showing their importance by demanding your papers and all that. I can
+go across, get the men, and be back here before you'd be half through
+the preliminaries. Saves time."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, if it's not too much trouble."</p>
+
+<p>"A good deal less trouble than if you went, to be frank. I'm known, and
+I can go straight about the business. So sit down and wait. Thomaz! My
+hat!"</p>
+
+<p>Out he tramped to the piazza, where he paused a moment to run a swift
+eye over the disheveled figure of Tim, who had fallen sound asleep in a
+chair. Then, without a further word or glance, he descended the ladder
+and swung away down the street. The Americans, watching him from the
+doorway, observed that children in his path hastened to get out of it,
+and that he spoke to nobody.</p>
+
+<p>"Prussian," rasped McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"M-hm! Done time in the Kaiser's army, too, even if he has been here
+since before the war. But he's treating us pretty white."</p>
+
+<p>The captain made no answer. Their eyes followed the big figure until
+they saw it go sliding away toward Peru in a canoe propelled by two
+languid townsmen. Then McKay dropped a hand on Tim's shoulder. The
+red-lashed eyes flew open instantly.</p>
+
+<p>Briefly, quietly, Knowlton told of what had passed while he napped, then
+asked what information he had gleaned from Joao.</p>
+
+<p>"He says," answered Tim, "this guy is a queer duck. Been around here
+quite a while, but Joey don't know what's his game. He goes off on trips
+upriver, stays quite a while, comes back unexpected, and nobody knows
+where he's been or why. He don't use Brazilian boatmen&mdash;gits his men on
+the other side. And the Peru boys themselves dunno where he goes, or,
+anyways, they say they don't.</p>
+
+<p>"Two of 'em come over here awhile back and got drunk, and Joey tried to
+pump 'em, but all the dope he got was that this here Fritz goes away
+upstream to a li'l' camp, and from there he goes off into the bush
+alone, and the Peru guys jest hang around the camp till he gits back.
+Sounds kind o' fishy to me, and Joey says it does to him, too, but he
+couldn't work nothin' more out o' the drunks because about that time
+Sworn-off himself comes buttin' in and asks these guys what they think
+they're doin' on this side the river, and they beat it back to Peru toot
+sweet. He's got their goat, all right, and I wouldn't wonder if he's got
+Joey's, too. Anyways, Joey tells me he's off this geezer and advises me
+to lay off him, too, though he can't name a thing against him."</p>
+
+<p>"Queer," said Knowlton, looking again at the canoe out on the water.</p>
+
+<p>"Gun running?" suggested McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Nope," Tim contradicted. "I thought o' that, but Joey says they's
+nothin' to it; they watched this sourkrout close, and he don't never git
+no guns from nowheres. Besides, they's nobody up there to run guns to
+but Injuns, and them Injuns are so wild they don't want no guns; they
+stick to the bow and arrer and such stuff, which they sure know how to
+use. Whatever his game is, he plays a lone hand as far's this town
+knows. Got no pals here, and nobody wants to walk on his corns."</p>
+
+<p>"May be perfectly all right, too," mused Knowlton. "A little gold cache
+or something&mdash;though he said there was none in this region. Oh, well,
+what do we care? We have our hands full with our own business, and all
+assistance is appreciated."</p>
+
+<p>An hour drifted past. Men of the town lounged by, looking curiously at
+the strangers, some nodding and voicing a friendly, "<i>Boa dia.</i>" Women,
+too, watched them from windows and doors, and children slyly peeped
+around corners until something more important&mdash;such as a cat, a goat, or
+a gorgeous butterfly&mdash;came their way. Tim went inside and slicked up a
+bit by buttoning and lacing his clothes and combing his rebellious hair.
+At length a long boat put out from the farther shore and came surging
+across the sun-gleaming river.</p>
+
+<p>"Handle themselves well," McKay approved, noting the easy grace of the
+crew. In the bow a tall, slender fellow stood with arms folded,
+balancing himself to the sway of the rather clumsy craft and watching
+the water ahead. In the stern, on a little platform whence he could look
+over the heads of the others and catch any signal from the lookout, a
+squat, dark-faced steersman lounged against his crude rudder. Between
+these two the paddlers stood, each with one foot on the bottom of the
+long dugout and the other on the gunwale, swinging in nonchalant unison
+as their blades moved fore and aft. Under the curving roof of a
+rough-and-ready cabin, open at the sides to allow free play of air,
+Schwandorf lolled like some old-time barbarian king.</p>
+
+<p>Down to the landing place trudged the three Americans, and there the
+employers and the prospective employees looked one another over with
+interest. Eight men had come with Schwandorf, and a hard gang they were.
+The bowman, hawk nosed, slant eyed, black mustached, with hairy chest
+showing under his unbuttoned cotton shirt, had the face and bearing of a
+buccaneer chieftain; and the effect was intensified by a flaring red
+handkerchief around his head and the haft of a knife protruding from his
+waistband. The rowers behind him, though of varying degrees of
+swarthiness and height, all had the same sinewy build, the same bold
+stare, the same devil-may-care insolence of manner; and though none but
+the lookout wore the piratical red around his brow, more than one knife
+hilt showed at their waists. The steersman, whose copper-brown skin and
+flat face betokened a heavy strain of Indian blood, gazed stolidly at
+the Americans with the unwinking, expressionless eyes of a snake. Back
+into the minds of McKay and Knowlton came Schwandorf's words, "Men not
+afraid of hell or high water." They looked it.</p>
+
+<p>"Here they are," announced the German, stepping ashore deliberately.
+"Jos&eacute;, the <i>puntero</i>"&mdash;his hand indicated the lookout&mdash;"Francisco, the
+<i>popero</i>"&mdash;pointing to the steersman&mdash;"and six <i>bogas</i>. Good men."</p>
+
+<p>McKay ran a cold eye along the line of faces, his gaze plumbing each.
+Under that chill scrutiny the third man's stare wavered and dropped.
+That of the next also veered aside. The rest fronted him eye to eye.</p>
+
+<p>"Two of them will not do," he asserted, in the brusque tone of a captain
+inspecting his company. "Numbers Three and Four&mdash;fall out!"</p>
+
+<p>Literal obedience would have put Three and Four into the river,
+wherefore they stood fast. But, though they did not quite understand the
+meaning of the words, they grasped the fact that they were not wanted.
+One laughed impudently, the other slid a poisonous glance at the
+bleak-faced officer. The squat Francisco scowled. So did Schwandorf.</p>
+
+<p>"No man who cannot look me in the eye is needed on this trip," McKay
+declared. "Also, six men are enough. If necessary we will bear a hand at
+the paddles ourselves. Jos&eacute;, you have been told by Senhor Schwandorf
+what we want?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"You can start at once?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"What pay?"</p>
+
+<p>"We leave that to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Um! A dollar a day for each man?"</p>
+
+<p>"Money or goods?"</p>
+
+<p>"American gold."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si. Bueno.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"Very well. Take those two men back to Nazareth, get what belongings you
+need, return here, and report to me at the hotel. I am captain.
+Understand?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si</i>&mdash;Capitan."</p>
+
+<p>"All right. On your way!"</p>
+
+<p>As the boat drew out the two rejected men bade the Americans an ironical
+"<i>adios</i>," and one spat in the stream. In the faces of the others,
+however, showed something like respect for the crisp-spoken captain, and
+Jos&eacute; snarled something at the ill-mannered Three and Four.</p>
+
+<p>"You might need those men," mumbled Schwandorf.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess not," McKay answered, serenely, turning toward the hotel. "Come
+on, boys. Let's get our stuff ready to ride."</p>
+
+<p>Less than two hours later their rooms were vacant, their duffle was
+stowed in the long dugout, the Peruvian crew stood arrogantly eying the
+Brazilians who had gathered to witness the departure, and the Americans
+were bidding good-by to Remate de Males in general and its German
+resident in particular.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Schwandorf, we thank you for your efficient aid," said Knowlton,
+extending a hearty hand. "You have helped us to get going with all
+dispatch, and we trust that we can repay the favor soon."</p>
+
+<p>"You owe me no thanks," was the curt reply. "I would expect you to do as
+much for me if our positions were reversed. I wish you luck."</p>
+
+<p>"Get aboard, Tim!" McKay ordered, setting the example himself. Tim
+obeyed, first giving the important Joao d'Almeida Magalhaes Nabuco
+Pestana da Fonseca a real American handgrip and getting in return a
+double embrace from that worthy official. Whereafter he winked and
+grinned expansively at several women garbed in violent hues of red,
+yellow, and green, frowned slightly at Schwandorf, lit the last cigar he
+was to smoke for many a long day, and, as the dugout began to move,
+erupted into a more or less musical farewell to the females of the
+species:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"The Yanks are goin' away,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Pa-a-arley-voo!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">They're movin' on to-day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Pa-a-arley-voo!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Yanks are goin' away, they say,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Leavin' the girls in a heartless way,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Rinkydinky-parley-voo!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>With one final wave of his cigar to the gesticulating Joao and the
+grinning women he turned his back on the town and faced the little-known
+river and the inscrutable jungle. But neither his eyes nor his thoughts
+traveled beyond the bow of the boat. Through narrowed lids he studied
+the swaying paddlers and the piratical Jos&eacute;. And in his mind echoed the
+whispered warning of Joao, delivered during the effusive embrace at
+parting:</p>
+
+<p>"Comrade, watch those <i>bastardos Peruanos</i>."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<h3>IN THE NIGHT WATCH</h3>
+
+
+<p>Day by day the long canoe crawled into the vast unknown. Day by day the
+down-flowing jungle river pushed steadily, sullenly against its prow, as
+if striving to repel the invasion of its secret places by the
+fair-skinned men of another continent. Day by day it slid past in
+resentful impotence, conquered by the swinging blades of the Peruvian
+<i>bogas</i>. And day by day the close companionship of canoe and camp seemed
+to weld the voyagers into one compact unit.</p>
+
+<p>Through hours of blazing sun, when the mercury of the thermometer which
+Knowlton had hung inside the shady <i>toldo</i> cabin fluctuated well above
+100 degrees, the hardy crew forged on. Through drenching rains they
+still hung doggedly to their work, suspending it only when the water
+fell in such drowning quantities that they were forced to tie up hastily
+to shore and seek cover in order to breathe. When sunset neared they
+picked with unerring eye a spot fit for camping, attacked the bush with
+whirling machetes, cleared a space, threw up pole frameworks, swiftly
+thatched them with great palm leaves, and thus created from the jungle
+two crude but efficient huts&mdash;one for themselves and one for their
+<i>patrones</i>. When night had shut down and all hands squatted around the
+fire in a nightly smoke talk they regaled their employers with wild
+tales of adventures in bush and town, some of which were not at all
+polite, but all of which were mightily interesting. And despite all
+discomforts, fatigue, and the minor incidents and accidents which often
+lead fellow travelers in the wilderness to bickering and bitterness, no
+friction developed between the men of the north and the men of the
+south.</p>
+
+<p>Not that the Peruvians were at all obsequious or servile. They were a
+reckless, lawless, Godless gang, perpetually bearing themselves with the
+careless insolence which had characterized them at first, blasphemous of
+speech toward one another&mdash;but never toward the North Americans.
+Disputes arose among them with volcanic suddenness, and more than once
+knives were half drawn, only to be slipped back under the tongue-lashing
+of the hawk-nosed <i>puntero</i>, Jos&eacute;, who damned the disputants completely
+and promised to cut out the bowels of any man daring to lift his
+blade clear of its sheath. Five minutes afterward the fire eaters
+would be on as good terms as ever, shrugging and grinning at their
+passengers&mdash;particularly Tim, who, shaking his head disgustedly, would
+grumble:</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, pickles! Another frog fight gone bust!"</p>
+
+<p>Yet Tim, for all his disparagement of these abortive spats, knew full
+well that any one of them held the makings of a deadly duel and that
+Jos&eacute;'s lurid threats were no mere Latin hyperbole. He realized that the
+red-crowned bowman ruled his crew exactly as any of the old-time
+buccaneers whom he resembled had governed their free-booting gangs&mdash;by
+the iron hand; and that, though these men sailed no Spanish Main and
+flew no black flag, the iron-hand government was needed. He saw also
+that the rough-and-ready courtesy of this crowd toward their passengers
+was due largely to the attitude of Captain McKay, who had enforced their
+respect at the start by his soldierly bearing and retained it ever since
+by his military management.</p>
+
+<p>For the captain, experienced in directing men, conducted himself at all
+times as a commanding officer should: he saw all, said little, treated
+Jos&eacute; as a subordinate officer, and left the handling of the crew
+entirely to him. His aloofness forestalled any of that familiarity
+which, with such a gang, would have led to contempt. On the other hand,
+his avoidance of any assumption of meddlesome authority prevented the
+irritation and dislike which free men inevitably feel for the
+self-important type of leader. Thus he cannily steered himself and his
+mates between the two rocks which might have wrecked the expedition
+before it was well started. And Knowlton, ex-lieutenant, and Tim,
+ex-sergeant, seeing and understanding, followed his example.</p>
+
+<p>So the days and nights rolled by, the miles of never-ending jungle shore
+fell away behind, and, save for the occasional outbreaks between members
+of the crew, all was serene. To all appearances the Peruvians were
+whole-heartedly interested in serving their employers faithfully, and
+the North Americans were gliding onward with no thought of insecurity.
+Yet appearances frequently are deceptive.</p>
+
+<p>In the heat of the day&mdash;in fact, before the broiling sun neared the
+zenith&mdash;Tim and Knowlton habitually fell asleep inside the <i>toldo</i>, not
+to awake until two hours before sunset, when, according to the routine
+agreed upon, the night's camping place would be sought and two or three
+of the Peruvians would go into the bush with rifles, seeking fresh meat.
+McKay never slept during the day's traverse. Nothing escaped his eye
+from the time when he emerged from his mosquito net in the misty morning
+until he entered it again by firelight. The men in the boat; the
+floating alligators and wading birds of the water; the flashing parrots,
+jacamars, toucans, trogons, and hummers of the air; the yard-long
+lizards and nervous spider monkeys of the tangled tree branches
+alongshore&mdash;all these he watched quietly as the boat forged on. And the
+sinister Francisco, watching him in turn, and the paddlers throwing
+occasional glances his way, came to regard him as the only alert member
+of the trio. Wherein they erred.</p>
+
+<p>The truth was that every one of the three adventurers was on his guard.
+Tim had not forgotten the last words of his boon companion, Joao, and at
+the first opportunity he had quietly passed on that warning. Moreover,
+McKay and Knowlton, without discussing the matter, had meditated on the
+unexpected assistance of Schwandorf, the speed with which the crew had
+been obtained, the promptness of Jos&eacute; to accept the first payment
+offered, and other things. Wherefore it had come about that at no hour
+of the twenty-four was every eye and ear closed. And the real reason why
+red Tim and blond Knowlton slept by day was that they thus made up the
+slumber lost at night.</p>
+
+<p>Not that either of them patrolled the camp in sentry go. So far as the
+Peruvians knew, they slept as soundly as McKay. But, lying in their
+hammocks, they divided the night watches between them on a schedule as
+regular as that of a military camp, though the shifts necessarily were
+longer. As sunset came always at six o'clock and all hands sought their
+hanging beds two hours later, Tim's "tour of duty" lasted until one in
+the morning. When the phosphorescent hands of his watch pointed to that
+hour he stealthily reached out and jabbed Knowlton, sleeping beside him.
+When a barely audible "All right" reached his ears he was officially
+relieved.</p>
+
+<p>Night followed night, became a week, lengthened into a fortnight. Still,
+so far as the crew was concerned, nothing happened. A little rough
+banter among them as they smoked their last cigarettes, then sleep and
+snores; and that was all until morning. Men less experienced in night
+vigils than the ex-soldiers would have abandoned their watches long
+before this&mdash;if, indeed, they had ever adopted them. But these three
+were schooled in patience. Moreover, neither Tim nor Knowlton had ever
+before penetrated the jungle, and at times the light of the waxing moon
+revealed to their eyes strange things which they never would have seen
+by day. So the tedium of the long hours of wakefulness might be broken
+at any moment.</p>
+
+<p>Once they camped close to a conical hillock of compact earth, some four
+feet high and almost stone hard, from which radiated narrow covered
+galleries&mdash;the citadel and viaducts of a community of termites. Tim,
+still harboring vivid recollections of his ant battle at Remate de
+Males&mdash;though by this time he had trained himself to sleep in his
+hammock, where he was comparatively safe&mdash;looked askance at it when told
+what it was, and was only partly reassured by the information that
+termites were eaters of wood rather than of flesh. After sleep had
+embraced the rest of the camp he still was uneasy, lifting his net at
+long intervals and squinting at the moonlit mound as if expecting a
+horde of pincer-jawed insects to erupt from it and charge him. And
+during one of these inspections he saw something totally unexpected.</p>
+
+<p>From the black shadows of the forest had emerged another shadow, so
+grotesque and misshapen that it seemed a figment of indigestion and
+weird dreams&mdash;a thing from whose shaggy body protruded what appeared to
+be only a long tubular snout where a head should be, and which looked to
+be overbalanced at the other end by a great mass of hair. It stood stone
+still, and for the moment Tim could not decide which end of it was head
+and which was tail, or even whether it were not double-tailed and
+headless. Then, slowly, the apparition moved.</p>
+
+<p>Into that hard-packed earth it dug huge hooked claws, and from its
+tapering muzzle a wormlike tongue licked about, gathering the outrushing
+white ants into its gullet. For minutes Tim lay blinking at it,
+wondering if he really saw it.</p>
+
+<p>Then, picking up his rifle, he slipped outside his net and advanced on
+the creature.</p>
+
+<p>The animal turned, sat back on its great tail, lifted its terrible
+claws, and waited. Six feet away, just out of its reach, Tim stopped and
+stared anew. Then he grinned.</p>
+
+<p>"You win, feller," he informed the beast. "What ye are I dunno, but any
+critter that's got the guts to ramble right into camp and offer to gimme
+a battle is too good a sport for me to shoot. Help yourself to all the
+ants in the world, for all o' me. I'm goin' back to bed. Bon sewer,
+monseer."</p>
+
+<p>Wherewith, still grinning, but warily watching, he backed until sure the
+big invader would not spring at him. Knowing nothing of ant bears, he
+did not know it was hardly a springing animal.</p>
+
+<p>Its claws looked sufficiently formidable to disembowel a man&mdash;as,
+indeed, they were, if the man came near enough. But when Tim had
+withdrawn and the sluggish brute had decided that it would not need to
+defend itself, it sank to all-fours and passed stiffly away into the
+shades whence it had come.</p>
+
+<p>On another night, when Tim slept, Knowlton detected a creeping,
+slithering sound which made him slip off the safety catch of his
+heavy-bulleted pistol and peer at the hut where slept the crew. No man
+was moving there. Still the sound persisted. Lifting his net, he spied
+beyond the hut of the Peruvians a moving mass on the ground&mdash;a
+cylindrical bulk which looked to be two feet thick, and which glided
+past like a solid stream of dark water flowing along above the dirt. Its
+beginning and end were hidden in the bush, and not until it tapered into
+nothing and was gone did he realize fully that he had been gazing at an
+enormous anaconda. Then he kicked himself for not shooting it. But
+before long he congratulated himself for letting it go.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps an hour later the startled forest resounded with an agonized
+scream, so piercing and so appallingly human that all the camp sprang
+awake. The outcry came but once, sounding from some place not far off,
+near the water's edge, and in the direction toward which the huge
+serpent had disappeared. Before the watcher had time to tell the others
+of what he had seen, one of the boatmen discovered the rut left in the
+soft ground by the reptile. Thereafter Knowlton kept his own counsel,
+listening to the excited curses of the men and observing their pallor
+and their nervous scanning of the shadows. Jos&eacute; said the screech
+undoubtedly was the death shriek of some animal caught and crushed in
+the snake's tremendous coil. McKay concurred with a nod. And when
+Knowlton casually said it was tough that nobody had been awake to shoot
+the thing as it passed the camp, Jos&eacute; emphatically disagreed.</p>
+
+<p>A bullet fired into that fiendish giant, he averred, would have meant
+death to one or more men; for the serpent's writhing coils and lashing
+tail would have knocked down the sleeping-hut and shattered the spines
+of any men they struck. No, let Se&ntilde;or Knowlton thank the saints that the
+awful master of the swamps had gone its way unmolested. For the rest of
+that night Knowlton kept his watch openly, accompanied by Jos&eacute; and three
+of the paddlers, who refused to sleep again until they should be miles
+away from the vicinity of that dread monster.</p>
+
+<p>Two nights afterward the camp was aroused again. Tim alone saw the start
+of the disturbance, and he kept mum about it because he did not choose
+to let the Peruvians know he had been on the alert. Out from the gloom
+and straight past the huts a thick-bodied, curve-snouted animal came
+charging madly for the river, carrying on its back a ferocious cat
+creature whose fangs were buried deep in its steed's neck&mdash;a tapir
+attacked by a jaguar. With a resounding plunge the elephantine quarry
+struck the water and was gone. The tiger cat, forced to relinquish its
+hold or drown, swam hurriedly back to the bank below the encampment,
+where it roared and spat and squalled in a blood-chilling paroxysm of
+baffled fury. And though every man was awakened, not one left the flimsy
+shelter of his net. Nor did anyone so much as speak until Tim, wearying
+of the noise, announced his intention to "go bust that critter in the
+nose and give him somethin' to yowl about."</p>
+
+<p>The proposal met with instant and peremptory veto.</p>
+
+<p>"As you were!" snapped McKay. "Let him alone! You wouldn't have a
+Chinaman's chance in that black bush. A jaguar is bad all the time, and
+when he's mad he's deadly. Never fool with one of those beasts, Tim.
+I've met them before and I know what they can do."</p>
+
+<p>To which Jos&eacute; agreed with many picturesque oaths, declaring that a
+jaguar was no mere beast&mdash;it was a devil. Tim, grumbling, obeyed orders.
+The jaguar, hearing their voices, stopped its noise and probably
+reconnoitered the camp. But no man saw the brute, and its next roar
+sounded from some spot far off in the jungle.</p>
+
+<p>Other things, too, passed within Tim's range of vision from time to time
+in the moonlit hours: a queer bony creature which he took for some new
+kind of turtle, but which really was an armadillo; a monstrous hairy
+spider which slid like a streak up his net, hung there for a time,
+decided to go elsewhere, and departed with such speed that the man
+inside rubbed his eyes and wondered if he was "seein' things that
+ain't"; a couple of vampires which flitted in from nowhere like ghoulish
+ghosts, wheeled and floated silently on wide wings, seeking an exposed
+foot protruding from the hammocks, found none, rested a moment on the
+roof poles, chirping hoarsely, and veered out again into the night.</p>
+
+<p>To Knowlton's watch came a strange owl-faced little monkey with great
+staring eyes and face ringed with pale fur&mdash;one of those night apes
+seldom seen by man; a small troop of kinkajous, slender, long-tailed
+animals which looked to be monkeys, but were not, and which leaped
+deftly among the branches like frolicsome little devils let loose to
+play under the jungle moon; a big scaly iguana, its back ridged with saw
+teeth and its pendulous throat pouch dangling grotesquely under its jaw;
+and more than one deadly snake and huge alligator, the first gliding
+past with venomous head raised and cold eye glinting, the second lying
+quiescent except for occasional openings of horrific jaws.</p>
+
+<p>To the ears of both the hammock sentinels came the mournful sounds of
+living things unseen. From the depths beyond drifted the weird plaint of
+the sloth, crying in the night, "Oh me, poor sloth, oh-oh-oh-oh!" Goat
+suckers repeated by the hour their monotonous refrains, "Quao quao," or
+"Cho-co-co-cao," while a third earnestly exhorted, "Joao corta pao!"
+("John, cut wood!"). Tree frogs and crickets clacked and drummed and
+hoo-hooed, guaribas poured their awful discord into the air, and on one
+bright breathless night there sounded over and over a call freighted
+with wretchedness and despair&mdash;the wail of that lonely owl known to the
+bushmen as "the mother of the moon," whose dreadful cry portends evil to
+those who hear it.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes the air shook with the thunderous concussion of some great
+falling tree which, long since bled to death by parasitical plant
+growths, now at last toppled crashing back into the dank soil whence it
+had forced its way up into a place in the sun. Other noises, infrequent
+and unexplainable, also drifted at long intervals from the mysterious
+blackness. And in all the medley of night sounds not one was cheerful.
+The burden of the jungle's cacophonic cantanta ever was the
+same&mdash;despair, disaster, death.</p>
+
+<p>Then came the fifteenth day. It dawned red, the sun fighting an
+ensanguined battle with the heavy morning mists and throwing on the
+faces of the early-rising travelers a sinister crimson hue. Before that
+sun should rise again some of those faces were to be stained a deeper
+red.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+<h3>COLD STEEL</h3>
+
+
+<p>Some two hours after the start, while Knowlton and Tim loafed at the
+fore end of the cabin, enjoying the comparative coolness of the early
+day, another boat hove in sight up ahead&mdash;a longish craft manned by
+eight paddlers and without a cabin.</p>
+
+<p>As it came into view its bowman tossed his paddle in greeting. The
+Peruvians ignored the salutation. The bowman, after shading his eyes and
+peering at the flamboyant figure of Jos&eacute;, resumed paddling without
+further ceremony, evidently intending to pass in silence. But then McKay
+arose, waved a hand, and told Jos&eacute; to steer for the newcomers. Jos&eacute;,
+with a slightly sour look, gave the signal to Francisco, and the course
+changed.</p>
+
+<p>The other canoe slowed and waited. Its men watched the tall figure of
+McKay. Tim and Knowlton scanned the bronzed faces of those men and liked
+them at once. The paddlers evidently were Brazilians, but of a different
+type from the sluggish townsmen of Remate de Males&mdash;alert,
+active-looking fellows, steady of eye, honest of face, muscular of
+arm&mdash;in all, a more clean-cut set of men than the Peruvians. All three
+of the Americans noticed that no word was exchanged between the two
+crews.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Boa dia, amigos!</i>" spoke McKay. "Who are you and whence do you come?"</p>
+
+<p>"We are rubber workers of Coronel Nunes, senhor," the bowman answered,
+civilly. "We go to make a new camp. This land is a part of the
+<i>seringel</i> of the coronel, and we left his headquarters yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! Then the headquarters is above here?"</p>
+
+<p>"One more day's journey," the man nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you. Good fortune go with you."</p>
+
+<p>"And with you, senhor. May God protect you."</p>
+
+<p>With the words the Brazilian glanced along the line of Peruvian faces
+and his eyes narrowed. Though his words were only a respectful farewell,
+his expressive face indicated that McKay might be badly in need of
+divine protection at no distant date. As his paddle dipped and his men
+nodded their leave-taking, Francisco, the <i>popero</i>; sneered raucously:</p>
+
+<p>"Hah! Mere <i>caucheros</i>! Workers! Slaves!"</p>
+
+<p>And he spat at the Brazilian boat.</p>
+
+<p>Fire shot into the eyes of the bowman and his comrades. Their muscles
+tensed.</p>
+
+<p>"Better be slaves&mdash;better be dogs&mdash;than Peruvian cutthroats!" one
+retorted. "Go your way, and keep to your own side of the river."</p>
+
+<p>"We go where we will, and no misborn Brazilians can stop us," snarled
+Francisco. To which he added obscene epithets directed against
+Brazilians in general and the men of Coronel Nunes in particular.</p>
+
+<p>The unprovoked insults angered the Americans as well as the Brazilians.
+Knowlton leaped through the <i>toldo</i> and confronted Francisco.</p>
+
+<p>"Shut your dirty mouth!" he blazed.</p>
+
+<p>For reply, the evil-eyed steersman spat at him the vilest name known to
+man.</p>
+
+<p>An instant later, his lips split, he sprawled dazedly on his platform,
+perilously close to the edge. Knowlton, the knuckles of his left fist
+bleeding from impact with the other's teeth, stood over him in white
+fury. Francisco's right hand fumbled for his knife. Knowlton promptly
+stamped on that hand with a heavy boot heel.</p>
+
+<p>"Good eye, Looey!" rumbled Tim's voice at his back. "Boot him some more
+for luck. Hey, you! Back up or I'll drill ye for keeps!" This to a pair
+of the Peruvian paddlers who had come scrambling through the cabin.</p>
+
+<p>After one searching stare into Tim's hard blue eyes and a glance at his
+fist curled around the butt of his belt gun, the <i>bogas</i> backed up. A
+moment later they were thrown boldly into their own part of the boat by
+Jos&eacute;, who blistered them with the profanity of three languages at once.
+Then McKay came through and took charge.</p>
+
+<p>"That'll do, Tim! Same goes for you, Merry! Jos&eacute;, I'll handle this. You,
+Francisco! Get up!"</p>
+
+<p>The curt commands struck like blows. Every man obeyed. And when the
+squat steersman again stood up McKay went after him roughshod. In the
+colloquial Spanish of Mexico and the Argentine, in the man talk of
+American army camps, he flayed that offender alive. Jos&eacute; himself,
+efficient man handler though he was, stared at his captain in awe. And
+Francisco, though not given to cringing, skulked like a beaten dog when
+the verbal flagellation was finished.</p>
+
+<p>Turning then to the Brazilians, McKay formally apologized for the
+insults to them.</p>
+
+<p>"It is nothing, senhor," coolly answered the bowman&mdash;though his glance
+at the Peruvians said plainly that it would have been something but for
+the swift punishment by the Americans. "Again I say&mdash;may God protect
+you! Adeos!"</p>
+
+<p>The Brazilian boat glided away. The Peruvian craft crawled on upstream
+in silence.</p>
+
+<p>When the next camp was made all apparently had forgotten the affair. The
+men badgered one another as usual, though none mentioned Francisco's
+split mouth; and Francisco, himself, albeit sulky, betrayed no sign of
+enmity. After nightfall the regular camp-fire meeting was held and at
+the usual time all turned in. One more night of listening to the sounds
+of the tropical wilderness seemed all that lay ahead of the secret
+sentinels.</p>
+
+<p>Sleep enveloped the huts. Snores and gurgles rose and fell. Tim himself,
+for the sake of effect, snored heartily at intervals, though his eyes
+never closed. Through his mosquito bar he could see only vaguely, but he
+knew any man walking from the crew's quarters must cast a very visible
+shadow across that net, and to him the shadow would be as good a warning
+as a clear view of the substance. But the hours crept on and no shadow
+came.</p>
+
+<p>At length, however, a small sound reached his alert ear&mdash;a sound
+different from the regular noises of the bush&mdash;a stealthy, creeping
+noise like that of a big snake or a huge lizard. It came from the ground
+a few feet away, and it seemed to be gradually advancing toward his own
+hammock. Whatever the creature was that made it, its method of progress
+was not human, but reptilian. Puzzled, suspicious, yet doubtful, Tim
+lifted the rear side of his net, on which no moonlight fell. Head out,
+he watched for the crawling thing to come close.</p>
+
+<p>It came, and for an instant he was in doubt as to its character, for
+around it lay the deep shadow of some treetops which at that point
+blocked off the moon. It inched along on its stomach, its black head
+seeming round and minus a face, its body broad but flat&mdash;a thing that
+looked to be a man but not a man. Then, pausing, it raised its head and
+peered toward the hammock of Knowlton. With that movement Tim's doubts
+vanished. The lifting of the head showed the face&mdash;the face of
+Francisco, the face of murder. In its teeth was clamped a bare knife.</p>
+
+<p>Forthwith Tim applied General Order Number Thirteen.</p>
+
+<p>In one bound he was outside his net, colliding with Knowlton, who awoke
+instantly. In another he was beside the assassin, who, with a lightning
+grab at the knife in his mouth, had started to spring up. Tim wasted no
+time in grappling or clinching. He kicked.</p>
+
+<p>His heavy boot, backed by the power of a hundred and ninety pounds of
+brawn, thudded into the Indian's chest. Francisco was hurled over
+sidewise on his back. Another kick crashed against his head above the
+ear. He went limp.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye lousy snake!" grated Tim. "Crawlin' on yer belly to knife a sleepin'
+man, hey? Blast yer rotten heart&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"What's up?" barked McKay from his hammock.</p>
+
+<p>"Night attack, Cap. If ye're comin' out bring along yer gat. Hey, Looey,
+got yer gun on? Some o' these other guys might git gay. They're comin'
+now."</p>
+
+<p>True enough, the Peruvian gang was jumping from its hut. With another
+glance at the prostrate Francisco to make sure he was unconscious, Tim
+whirled to meet them, fist on gun.</p>
+
+<p>"Halt!" he roared. "First guy passin' this corner post gits shot. Back
+up!"</p>
+
+<p>The impact of his voice, the menace of his ready gun hand, the sight of
+Knowlton and McKay leaping out with pistols drawn, stopped the rush at
+the designated post. But swift hands dropped, and when they rose again
+the moonlight glinted on cold steel.</p>
+
+<p>"Capitan, what happens here?" demanded Jos&eacute;, ominously quiet.</p>
+
+<p>"Knife work," McKay replied, curtly. "Your man Francisco attempted to
+creep in and murder Se&ntilde;or Knowlton. If you and the rest have similar
+intentions, now's your time to try. If not, put away those knives."</p>
+
+<p>"Knives! <i>Por Dios</i>, what do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Look behind you."</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; looked. At once he snarled curses and commands. Slowly the knives
+slipped out of sight. The paddlers edged backward to their own shack,
+leaving their <i>puntero</i> alone.</p>
+
+<p>"The capitan has it wrong," asserted Jos&eacute;. "We awake to find our
+<i>popero</i> being kicked in the head. We want to know why. If Francisco has
+done what you say I will deal with him. That I may be sure, allow me to
+look."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well. Look."</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; advanced, stooped, studied the ground, the position of Francisco's
+body, the knife still clutched in the nerveless hand. Tim growlingly
+vouchsafed a brief explanation of the incident. When Jos&eacute; straightened
+up, his mouth was a hard line and his eyes hot coals.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si. Es verdad.</i> To-morrow we shall have a new <i>popero</i>."</p>
+
+<p>With which he stooped again, grasped the prone man by the hair, dragged
+him into the moonlit space between the huts, and flung him down. "Juan,
+bring water!" he ordered.</p>
+
+<p>One of the paddlers, looking queerly at him, did so. Jos&eacute; deluged the
+senseless man. Francisco, reviving, sat up and scowled about him. His
+eyes rested on the three Americans standing grimly ready, shoulder to
+shoulder, before their hut; veered to his mates bunched in sinister
+silence beside their own quarters; shifted again to meet the baleful
+glare of Jos&eacute;. His hand stole to his empty sheath.</p>
+
+<p>"Your knife, Francisco <i>mio</i>?" queried Jos&eacute;, a menacing purr in his
+tone. "I have it. It seems that you are in haste to use it. Too much
+haste, Francisco. But if you will stand instead of crawling as before,
+you may have your knife again&mdash;and use it, too."</p>
+
+<p>Francisco, staring sullenly up, seemed to read in the words more than
+was evident to the Americans. He lurched to his feet, staggered, caught
+his balance, braced himself, stood waiting.</p>
+
+<p>"You know who commands here," Jos&eacute; went on. "You disobey. You seek to
+stab in the night&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Now or later&mdash;what is the difference?"</p>
+
+<p>"&mdash;and now the boat is too small for both of us." Jos&eacute; ignored the
+interruption. "Here is your knife. Now use it!"</p>
+
+<p>He flipped the weapon at the other, who caught it deftly. Jos&eacute; dropped
+his right hand to his waist. An instant later naked steel licked out at
+Francisco's throat.</p>
+
+<p>The steersman's knife flashed up, caught the reaching blade, knocked it
+with a scraping clink. For a few seconds the two weapons seemed welded
+together, their owners each striving to bear down the other's wrist.
+Then they parted as the combatants sprang back.</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; side-stepped twice to his right. Francisco, turning to preserve his
+guard, now had the light full in his face. But the moon rode so high
+that the steersman's disadvantage was negligible, and the next assault
+of the <i>puntero</i> was blocked as before. And this time the wrist of the
+<i>popero</i> proved a bit the better; he threw the attacking steel aside and
+struck in a slashing sweep at his antagonist's stomach.</p>
+
+<p>A convulsive inward movement of the bowman's middle, coupled with a
+swift back-step, made the slash miss by a hair's breadth. With the
+quickness of light Jos&eacute; was in again. His knife hand, still outstretched
+sidewise, stopped with a light smack of flesh on flesh. Then it jerked
+outward. His steel now was red to the hilt.</p>
+
+<p>One more rapid step back, a keen glance at his opponent, and Jos&eacute; stood
+at ease. From Francisco burst a bubbling groan. He staggered. His knife
+dropped. His hands rose fumblingly toward his neck. Suddenly his knees
+gave way and he toppled backward to the ground. The silvery moonlight
+disclosed a dark flood welling from his severed jugular.</p>
+
+<p>With the utmost coolness Jos&eacute; ran two fingers down his wet blade,
+snapped the fingers in air, and spoke to his crew:</p>
+
+<p>"As I said, we shall have a new <i>popero</i>. To-morrow, Julio, you will
+take the platform."</p>
+
+<p>A rumble ran among the men. Their eyes lifted from Francisco to the
+Americans, and in them shone a wolfish gleam. The bowman turned sharply
+and faced them.</p>
+
+<p>"Who growls?" he rasped. "You, Julio?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si, yo soy</i>," Julio answered, harshly, fingering his knife. "I will be
+steersman, but I steer downstream, not up. Francisco spoke the truth.
+Now or later&mdash;what is the difference? Let it be now!"</p>
+
+<p>A louder growl from the others followed his words. One stepped back into
+the shadow of the hut.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Perros amarillos!</i> Yellow dogs! You go upstream, fools! The Americans
+must be taken&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>A raucous sneer from Julio interrupted him. Simultaneously the paddler's
+hand leaped upward, poising a knife.</p>
+
+<p>"The gringos stay here&mdash;and you, too, you Yanqui cur!"</p>
+
+<p>The poised knife hissed through the air at Jos&eacute;.</p>
+
+<p>Out from the crew house shot a streak of fire and a smashing rifle
+report.</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; dodged, staggered, screeched in feline fury, the knife buried in
+his left arm.</p>
+
+<p>McKay grunted suddenly, fell, lay still.</p>
+
+<p>"God!" yelled Tim. "Cap's gone! Clean 'em, Looey!"</p>
+
+<p>With the words he leaped aside and pulled his pistol, just as another
+rifle flare stabbed out from the other hut and a bullet whisked through
+the space where he had stood. An instant later he was pouring a stream
+of lead at the spot whence the burning powder had leaped.</p>
+
+<p>Knives flashing, teeth gleaming, the other paddlers charged across the
+ten-foot space between the huts.</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute;, his left arm helpless, but his deadly right hand still gripping
+his knife, hurled himself on Julio, who had seized a machete from
+somewhere.</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton slammed a bullet between the eyes of the foremost <i>boga</i>, who
+pitched headlong. He swung the muzzle to the other man's chest&mdash;yanked
+at the trigger&mdash;got no response. The gun was jammed.</p>
+
+<p>With a triumphant snarl the blood-crazed Peruvian closed in, slashing
+for the throat. Knowlton slipped aside, evaded the thrust, swung the
+pistol down hard on his assailant's head. The man reeled, thrust again
+blindly, missed. Knowlton crashed his dumb gun down again. It struck
+fair on the temple. The man collapsed.</p>
+
+<p>Tim was charging across the open at the crew house. Jos&eacute; and Julio were
+locked in a death grapple. No other living man, except Knowlton, still
+stood upright. Stooping, he peered into the red-dyed face of McKay. Then
+he laid a hand on the captain's chest. Faint but regular, he felt the
+heart beating.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God!" he breathed. With a wary eye on the battling Peruvians he
+swiftly raised the captain and put him into Tim's hammock. As he turned
+back to the fight Tim emerged from the other hut, carrying a body, which
+he dropped and swiftly inspected. At the same moment the fight of Jos&eacute;
+and Julio ended.</p>
+
+<p>With a choked scream Julio dropped, writhed, doubled up. Then he lay
+still. Jos&eacute;, his face ghastly, stared around him. His mouth stretched in
+a terrible smile.</p>
+
+<p>"So this ends it," he croaked, his gaze dropping to Julio. "<i>Adios</i>,
+Julio! The machete is not&mdash;so good as the knife&mdash;unless one has&mdash;room
+to&mdash;swing it&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He chuckled hoarsely and sank down.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant Knowlton hesitated, his glance going back and forth
+between McKay and Jos&eacute;. Swiftly then he ran his finger tips over McKay's
+head. With a murmur of satisfaction he turned from his comrade and
+hurried to the motionless bowman, over whom Tim now bent.</p>
+
+<p>"Bleedin' to death, Looey," informed Tim. "Ain't cut bad excep' that
+arm. That flyin' knife must have got an artery. Can we pull him through?
+He's a good skate."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll try. You look after Cap. He's only knocked out&mdash;bullet creased
+him&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Glory be! He's all right, huh? Sure I'll fix him up. Everybody else
+dead? I got that guy in the bunk house&mdash;drilled him three times."</p>
+
+<p>"Look out for that fellow over there. Maybe I brained him, but I'm not
+sure."</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton was already down on his knees beside Jos&eacute;, working fast to loop
+a tourniquet and stop the flow from the pierced arm. With a handkerchief
+and his pistol barrel he shut off the pulsating stream.</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah, he's done," judged Tim, rising from the man whom Knowlton had
+downed at last. "Skull's caved in. What 'd ye paste him with?"</p>
+
+<p>"Gun. Cursed thing stuck."</p>
+
+<p>"Uh-huh. Them automats are cranky. Say, lookit the mess Hozy made o'
+that guy Hooley-o."</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton glanced at Julio and whistled. Jos&eacute;'s oft-repeated threat to
+disembowel a refractory member of the crew had at last been literally
+fulfilled.</p>
+
+<p>But the lieutenant had seen worse sights in the shell-torn trenches of
+France, and now he kept his mind on his work. Wedging the gun to hold
+the tourniquet tight, he lifted his patient from the red-smeared mud and
+bore him to the nearest hammock in the crew quarters. Striding back, he
+found Tim alternately bathing McKay's head and giving him brandy. In a
+moment the captain's eyes opened.</p>
+
+<p>"Some bean ye got, Cap," congratulated Tim, vastly relieved at sight of
+McKay's gray stare. "Bullet bounced right off. Here, take another
+swaller. Attaboy! Hey, Looey, we better pack this crease o' Cap's, huh?
+She keeps leakin'."</p>
+
+<p>"Yep. Dip up the surgical kit. And give Jos&eacute; a drink. I'll have to tie
+his artery, too. How do you feel, old chap?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dizzy," McKay confessed. "What's happened?"</p>
+
+<p>"Lost our crew," was the laconic answer. "All gone west but Jos&eacute;, and
+he's bled white. We'll have to paddle our own canoe now."</p>
+
+<p>For a time after his head was bandaged McKay lay quiet, staring out at
+the tiny battlefield and at his two mates working silently on the
+wounded arm of Jos&eacute;. When they came back he spoke one word.</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah! He's the nigger in the woodpile, I bet my shirt. But why? What's
+his lay, d'ye s'pose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps Jos&eacute; knows," suggested Knowlton. "But he's in no shape to talk
+now. Let's see. Schwandorf said he was going to Iquitos?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but that doesn't mean anything."</p>
+
+<p>"Probably not. Well, maybe Jos&eacute; can explain."</p>
+
+<p>There were some things, however, which Jos&eacute; could not have told if he
+would, for he himself did not know them. One was that Schwandorf really
+had gone to Iquitos, where was a radio station. Another was that from
+that radio station to Puerto Bermudez, thence over the Andes to the
+coast, and northward to a New York address memorized from Knowlton's
+notebook, already had gone this message:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>McKay expedition killed by Indians. Rand search most dangerous, but
+if empowered I attempt locate him for fifty thousand gold payable
+on safe delivery Rand at Manaos. Reply soon a possible.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Karl Schwandorf.</span></p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE DOUBLE-CROSS</h3>
+
+
+<p>Noon, sweltering hot. A blazing sun pouring vertical rays down on a
+blinding river. A long canoe wearily creeping up the glaring waters,
+minus a lookout, heedless of the ever-present danger of sunken tree
+trunks; propelled by three sun-blistered white men, one of whom wore a
+bandage around his head; steered perfunctorily by a pallid pirate whose
+left arm hung in a sling. Atop the right bank an unbroken, endless
+tangle of jungle growth. Ahead, on the left shore, a gap gouged out of
+the forest and a number of boats at the water's edge.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess that's it," panted Knowlton, shielding his eyes and squinting at
+the clearing. "One more day's journey, the Brazilian chap said. We've
+been two and a half."</p>
+
+<p>"One day's journey for six hardened rivermen, se&ntilde;or," corrected Jos&eacute;.
+"Not for three men doing six men's work and hampered by a cripple."</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, ye're no crip, Hozy," dissented Tim. "Any guy that can steer a tub
+like this here one-handed after losin' a couple gallons o' juice is in
+good shape yet, I'll say. If ye had both legs shot off and yer arms
+broke and yer head stove in, now, ye might call yourself sort o'
+helpless. Ease her over to the left a li'l' more, so's we'll hit the
+bank right at the corner o' that gap. Me, I don't want to take one
+stroke more 'n I have to. Every muscle in me is so sore it squeaks."</p>
+
+<p>"Same here," admitted Knowlton. "I'm one solid ache."</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; nodded. The clumsy craft veered a bit. The three put a little more
+punch into their lagging strokes, noting, as they neared the steep bank,
+that a couple of men had appeared at its top and were staring at them.
+Gradually the long dugout worked in to the muddy shore, where the
+paddlers stabbed their blades into the clay and held it firm.</p>
+
+<p>"Ahoy, up there! This the Nunes <i>seringal</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>From the edge, some thirty feet above, the taller of the two watchers
+answered:</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si</i>, senhor. The headquarters of the coronel. Do you come to visit
+him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Right."</p>
+
+<p>"Then permit me to help you. The path is a little ahead. Pull up and tie
+to this stake."</p>
+
+<p>The tall fellow came dropping swiftly downward. At the same time the
+other Brazilian stepped back and was gone.</p>
+
+<p>With a dexterous twist the man of Nunes moored the boat to the
+designated stake. Then he reached a hand toward Tim to help him out.</p>
+
+<p>"I ain't no old woman, feller," Tim refused, and hopped aground
+unassisted. McKay and Knowlton followed. But Jos&eacute;, after moving
+languidly forward and contemplating the sharp slope, hesitated and then
+shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"I am tired, se&ntilde;ores," he said. "And perhaps it would be well for one to
+stay here and watch."</p>
+
+<p>The tall Brazilian's eyes narrowed.</p>
+
+<p>"There is no danger of loss," he asserted, with dignity. "We men of the
+coronel are not thieves."</p>
+
+<p>The slight emphasis of his last sentence might have been taken as an
+intimation that some one else not far away would bear watching. Jos&eacute;'s
+mouth tightened. For a moment Brazilian and Peruvian eyed each other in
+obvious dislike. Then, with a glance at his crippled arm, Jos&eacute; shrugged
+again.</p>
+
+<p>"Better come along, Jos&eacute;," McKay said. "Stuff's safe enough."</p>
+
+<p>"As you will, Capitan."</p>
+
+<p>He lounged to the edge, hesitated, wavered slightly. At once the
+Brazilian darted out a hand and gave him support. And while the four
+clambered up the slope he retained a grip on the Peruvian's arm, aiding
+him to the top. When they emerged on the level, however, he dropped his
+hand immediately. Jos&eacute; gave him a half-mocking bow of thanks, to which
+he replied with a short nod. Then he stepped back and let the Peruvian
+precede him toward a number of substantial pole-supported houses a
+hundred yards away.</p>
+
+<p>"No love lost between them two," thought Tim, who had watched it all.
+"Good skate, though, this new feller. Ready to help a guy that needs it,
+whether he likes him or not; ready to knock his block off, too, if he
+needs that. Bet he'd be a hellion in a scrap. Dang good-lookin' lad,
+too."</p>
+
+<p>Wherewith he introduced himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't git sore because I growled at ye down below," he said, with a
+friendly grin. "Sounded rough, mebbe, but that's my style. I'm Tim Ryan,
+from the States. I bark more 'n I bite."</p>
+
+<p>The overture met with instant response&mdash;a quick smile and a twinkle in
+the warm eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"It is not words that give offense, senhor, but the way they are
+spoken&mdash;and the man who speaks them. One man may growl, but you like
+him. Another may speak smoothly, but you itch to strike him. Is it not
+so? I am Pedro Andrada, a <i>seringueiro</i> who should be tapping trees
+instead of loafing here. But my partner and I have just come in from a
+long trip into the <i>sertao</i>&mdash;wilderness&mdash;and are resting."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah? Was that yer buddy I seen with ye?"</p>
+
+<p>"My&mdash;ah&mdash;buddee? Partner? Yes, that was he&mdash;Louren&ccedil;o Moraes, the best
+comrade one ever had. He has gone to tell the coronel of your arrival.
+Have you met with an accident downriver?"</p>
+
+<p>He moved a thumb meaningly toward the only remaining member of the crew.</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah," grimly. "Bad accident."</p>
+
+<p>Tim tapped his pistol significently, raised five fingers, winked, and
+twitched his head toward the Peruvian. Pedro lifted his brows, nodded
+quick understanding, pointed to the bad arm of Jos&eacute;, and made motions as
+if pulling a trigger. Tim shook his head and enacted the pantomime of
+drawing and throwing a knife. Whereat the Brazilian, aware that Jos&eacute; was
+not a prisoner and probably knowing that North Americans were not knife
+throwers, looked much puzzled. But their sign manual went no farther,
+for they now approached the house which evidently formed the dwelling
+and office of Coronel Nunes.</p>
+
+<p>At the foot of the ladder stood a broad-shouldered, square-jawed,
+thick-muscled, deeply tanned man, who, without speaking, pointed a thumb
+upward. Above, in the doorway, waited an elderly Brazilian of medium
+height and spare figure, standing with soldierly erectness and garbed in
+white duck of semimilitary cut. He beamed down at McKay and Knowlton,
+but as his black eyes encountered those of Jos&eacute; they seemed suddenly to
+become very sharp. Then his gaze rested on Tim's broad face and he
+smiled again.</p>
+
+<p>"Enter, gentlemen," he invited. "<i>Esta casa e a suas ordenes</i>&mdash;this
+house is at your disposal."</p>
+
+<p>McKay, with a bow, climbed the ladder, followed by Knowlton. Jos&eacute;, with
+a swaggering stare at the wide-shouldered man, who stared straight back
+without facial change, also went up. Tim came fourth and last, for Pedro
+stopped beside his countryman, who evidently was Louren&ccedil;o.</p>
+
+<p>The travelers found themselves in a room which, in view of its distance
+from civilization, seemed palatial. Its floor was tight, its furniture
+modern, its walls decorated with a few excellent pictures, of which the
+largest was a superb view of the rugged harbor of Rio de Janeiro.
+Comfortable chairs were ranged along the walls, and the middle of the
+room was occupied by a massive square-cornered table on which lay a
+jumble of hand-written business papers, a number of books, a high-grade
+violin and bow. Beyond the table stood a swivel chair, evidently the
+usual seat of the coronel. Table and chair were so arranged that the
+master of this house sat always with his back to a wall and his face
+toward the door. And on a couple of hooks on that wall, ready for
+instant service, hung a high-power rifle.</p>
+
+<p>On their way up the river the Americans had passed, at long intervals, a
+few small rubber estates, whose headquarters consisted mainly of a crude
+shack or two, hardly better than the dingy houses of Remate de Males.
+This place was more imposing. They had observed, while crossing the
+cleared space, that it was at least half a mile square; that its
+warehouse for supplies was big and solid; that a goodly number of
+<i>barracaos</i>, or rubber workers' huts, surrounded the house of the master
+at a respectful distance; and that the owner's home was no one-room
+cabin, but big enough to contain six or eight rooms. This well-appointed
+reception room and the formal yet sincere courtesy of its owner showed
+that Coronel Nunes was no mere native of the frontier. Later they were
+to learn that he was a gentleman of Rio who, exiling himself from the
+capital after the death of his wife, had carved from this forbidding
+jungle a fortune in the rubber trade.</p>
+
+<p>With the correct touch of Latin punctilio McKay spoke the introductions
+and stated that they were on their way upriver to explore the
+hinterland. With equal politeness the coronel bowed and begged his
+illustrious guests to be seated. Then he touched a small bell. A door at
+one side opened and a white-suited negro appeared.</p>
+
+<p>"Caf&eacute;," the coronel ordered. As speedily as if these visitors had been
+long expected, the servant brought in a tray bearing cups of syrupy
+coffee. Each of the guests accepted one. Whereafter the decorum of the
+occasion was shattered by Tim, who, at the imminent risk of scalding
+himself, gulped his refreshment and vociferated his satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>"O-o-oh boy! That hits right where I live! Gimme another one, feller,
+and make it man's size!"</p>
+
+<p>The black fellow struggled with his quick mirth and then laughed
+outright&mdash;the throaty, infectious laugh of his race. The coronel's eyes
+twinkled. And when Tim fished a damp cigarette from his shirt,
+nonchalantly scraped a match on his host's table, blew a cloud of smoke,
+and sprawled back with one leg dangling over a chair arm, formality went
+a-glimmering.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>A quem madruga Deus ajuda</i>," laughed the coronel. "Or, as you North
+Americans put it, 'God helps those who help themselves.' Let us not be
+ceremonious, gentlemen. 'Tonio, bring more coffee. And cigars. And&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Down behind his table, where only the servant saw the motion, he
+twitched a finger as if pulling a cork. 'Tonio, his ebony countenance
+split by a grin, ducked his head and vanished into the other room.</p>
+
+<p>"How is the rubber market, sir?" asked Knowlton, seeking to divert
+attention from Tim.</p>
+
+<p>"Not so good," the old gentleman replied, with a deprecatory gesture.
+"In truth, it is very poor since the war&mdash;so poor that soon I shall
+abandon this <i>seringal</i> and go out to spend the rest of my life on the
+coast. With rubber selling at a mere five hundred dollars a ton in New
+York and the artificial plantations of the Far East growing greater
+yearly, there is no longer much profit in bleeding the wild trees of our
+jungle. I really do not know why I stay here now, unless it is because I
+have become so much accustomed to this life."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I understood that there was much money in rubber!"</p>
+
+<p>"You speak truth&mdash;there was. Now there is not. The world moves and times
+change. Years ago foreigners came into Brazil, helped themselves to the
+seed of our wild trees, and planted it in Ceylon and the Malay region.
+That seed now bears such fruit that the world is flooded with rubber.
+Ten years ago, senhores, a ton sold for six thousand five hundred
+dollars. Now, in this year nineteen-twenty, the price is only
+one-thirteenth of what it was in those days. It scarcely pays for the
+gathering. I hope you have not come expecting to make fortunes in
+rubber."</p>
+
+<p>"No. We are here to find a race of men known as Red Bones."</p>
+
+<p>The coronel's brows lifted. They kept on lifting, and he opened his lips
+twice without speaking. After a long stare at Knowlton he looked at
+McKay, at Tim, and finally at Jos&eacute;. A frown grew on his face. And the
+Americans, following his look at the Peruvian, were surprised to see
+that Jos&eacute; himself was staring blankly at the speaker.</p>
+
+<p>"Jos&eacute; Martinez!" snapped the coronel, leveling a finger pistollike at
+the <i>puntero</i>. "What devil's game are you working now?"</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; recovered himself and lifted his coffee cup.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not understand you, Nunes," he replied, languidly. "I am but the
+humble <i>puntero</i> of the crew engaged by these se&ntilde;ores. My only work has
+been to earn my pay. And you may ask <i>el capitan</i> whether I have earned
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, he has," corroborated McKay. "Killed two of his own crew in our
+defense."</p>
+
+<p>The coronel's jaw dropped. He blinked as if disbelieving his ears.</p>
+
+<p>"He&mdash;Jos&eacute;? Not possible!" he stuttered. "Jos&eacute;&mdash;this man&mdash;defended you
+against his companions?"</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly."</p>
+
+<p>The Brazilian slowly shook his head. Then suddenly he nodded as if an
+illuminating thought had crossed his mind.</p>
+
+<p>"I see. Jos&eacute; is very well paid."</p>
+
+<p>"One dollar a day," was McKay's dry retort.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment 'Tonio re-entered with a larger tray than before, bearing
+more coffee, long cigars, and squat glasses in which glowed a golden
+liquid. Tim sat up with a grunt and helped himself with both hands. When
+the coronel's turn came he disregarded the drinks, but lit the cigar as
+if he needed it.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>De noite todos os gatos sao pardos</i>," he said. "At night all cats are
+gray. I am much in the dark, gentlemen. If you would be so good as to
+enlighten me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He paused, looking sidewise again at Jos&eacute; as if the <i>puntero</i> had
+suddenly grown wings or horns.</p>
+
+<p>"All right," nodded Knowlton, biting and lighting his cigar. "We are
+somewhat in the dark ourselves as to why Jos&eacute; has been so zealous, for
+he has been very taciturn since the recent fight at our camp. Perhaps
+Jos&eacute; also is a bit hazy about our expedition&mdash;he looked rather surprised
+just now. So here is the situation."</p>
+
+<p>Briefly then he outlined the object of the search, stating that the
+identity of the mysterious Raposa was a matter of some concern to
+certain persons in the United States and that the expedition had been
+formed with the view of settling the question. From the time of the
+landing at Remate de Males, however, he narrated events more fully,
+giving complete details of Schwandorf's activities, Francisco's offense,
+and the final attack by the crew. While he talked the coronel's frown
+deepened. Also, Jos&eacute; gradually assumed the expression of a thundercloud.
+And when the tale was done the <i>puntero</i> exploded.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Sangre de Cristo!</i>" he yelled. "<i>El Aleman</i>&mdash;the German&mdash;he told you
+we would go among the cannibals? We? Peruvians? <i>Madre de Dios!</i> If ever
+I get within knife length of him! Nunes, you see, do you not?"</p>
+
+<p>The coronel nodded grimly.</p>
+
+<p>"I see that he planned to have all of you destroyed. Senhor Knowlton,
+that black-bearded and black-hearted man suggested that you take
+Mayoruna women? He told you they were shapely of body and tried to put
+into your minds the thought of making them your paramours? The snake!</p>
+
+<p>"He did not tell you, then, that the Mayoruna men allow no trifling with
+their women; that any alien man attempting to embrace one of them would
+be killed. But it is true. If you should succeed in establishing
+friendly relations with the men&mdash;which is not at all likely&mdash;you would
+forfeit all friendship, and your lives as well, by the slightest
+dalliance with any of the women.</p>
+
+<p>"He told you that more than one man has risked his life to win a
+Mayoruna woman? That is true. But he gave you a false impression as to
+the way in which the risk was incurred. He did not tell you that
+Peruvian <i>caucheros</i> have sometimes raided small isolated <i>melocas</i> of
+the Mayorunas, shooting down the men and carrying off the girls to be
+victims of their bestial lust. He did not tell you that for this reason
+any Peruvian is considered their enemy and is killed without mercy
+wherever found. Yet he tried to send you with Peruvian guides into their
+country. He knew the Peruvians would be killed on sight&mdash;and you with
+them."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+<h3>FIDDLERS THREE</h3>
+
+
+<p>Black looks passed among the men as the duplicity of Schwandorf lay
+plain before their eyes. Tim growled. Jos&eacute; hissed curses. The coronel
+whirled to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Jos&eacute;! What was his object in trying to destroy you and your crew? You
+have been his man. You know much about him. He wanted to stop your
+mouth, yes? Dead men tell no tales."</p>
+
+<p>The <i>puntero's</i> eyes glittered. For a moment the others thought he was
+about to reveal important secrets. Then his face changed.</p>
+
+<p>"I know no reason why we should be killed," he declared.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not believe you," the coronel declared, bluntly.</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; shrugged, calmly drank the coronel's wine, lighted the coronel's
+cigar, leaned back in the coronel's chair, and eyed the coronel with
+imperturbable insolence.</p>
+
+<p>"See here, Jos&eacute;," demanded McKay, "you've had something up your sleeve
+all along. Now come clean! What is it?"</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; puffed airily at the cigar, saying nothing.</p>
+
+<p>"What orders did Schwandorf give you?"</p>
+
+<p>This time the reply came readily enough.</p>
+
+<p>"To take you twenty-four days up the river and put you ashore. To
+prevent any trouble before that time."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! And after that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing. At least, nothing to me. What may have been said to the other
+men I do not know. Schwandorf came to me last, after he had picked all
+the others."</p>
+
+<p>"And what do you know about Schwandorf?"</p>
+
+<p>"What is between me and Schwandorf will be settled between me and
+Schwandorf. My duty to you se&ntilde;ores lies only in handling the crew. Now
+that there is no crew my duty ends. Also, Capitan, I would like my pay
+now."</p>
+
+<p>"You quit?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why not? I have done my best. I can do no more. I am crippled. I am of
+no further use to you. Give me my pay, a little food, a small canoe, and
+I go."</p>
+
+<p>"It is possible, Senhor Jos&eacute;," spoke the coronel, with ironic
+politeness, "that you may not go so soon. You have killed two men
+recently. You refuse to reveal some things which should be known about
+the German. Perhaps the law&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; burst into a jeering laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Law? You speak of law? There is no law up the river but the law of the
+gun and the knife. And if there were, se&ntilde;or, what then? I killed in a
+fair fight. I killed men who would do murder. I killed on the west bank
+of the river&mdash;Peru. Neither you nor any other Brazilian can lay hand on
+me. And though I now have only one good arm, it will not be well for
+anyone to try to hold me. My knife and my right hand still are ready."</p>
+
+<p>"By cripes! the lad's right!" Tim blurted, impulsively. "And I'll tell
+the world I'm for him. He's got a right to keep his mouth shut if he
+wants to. He don't owe us nothin'. Mebbe he's got somethin' up his
+sleeve, at that; but he stuck with us in the pinch, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And we'll give him a square deal, of course," Knowlton cut in. "Jos&eacute;,
+your own wages to this point, at a dollar a day, are eighteen dollars.
+The wages of the five other men to the place where they&mdash;quit&mdash;would
+aggregate seventy-five dollars. Grand total, ninety-three. The others
+chose to take their pay in lead instead of gold, so their account is
+closed. Therefore I suggest that their pay go to you as <i>puntero</i>,
+<i>popero</i>, and good sport. What say, Rod?"</p>
+
+<p>"Make it a hundred flat," McKay agreed.</p>
+
+<p>"Right. A hundred in gold. Satisfy you, Jos&eacute;?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed yes, se&ntilde;or. I did not expect such generosity."</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right, then. We'll fix you up before we move on, and&mdash;Say!
+Are you in Schwandorf's pay, too?"</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; hesitated. Then he replied:</p>
+
+<p>"Since you mention it, I will admit that <i>el Aleman</i> offered me certain
+inducements to make this journey. I now see that he had no intention of
+meeting his promises. But you can leave it to me to collect from him
+whatever may be due."</p>
+
+<p>Even the coronel nodded at this. The gleam in the Peruvian's eyes
+presaged unpleasantness for Schwandorf.</p>
+
+<p>"You gentlemen, of course, will not attempt to continue your journey for
+the present," the coronel suggested. "You are fatigued and I shall
+greatly appreciate the pleasure of your companionship. New arrangements
+also will be necessary in the matter of a boat and men."</p>
+
+<p>"We've been wondering about getting another boat and a new crew,"
+Knowlton said, frankly. "The canoe we have is too big for three men to
+handle, and I'll admit we're tired. Jos&eacute;, too, is in no shape to travel
+yet&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Jos&eacute;, of course, is my guest also," the old gentleman interrupted. "The
+question of new men can be solved. But there is time for everything, and
+now is the time for all of you to rest. As our proverb has it, '<i>Devagar
+se vae ao longe</i>'&mdash;he goes far who goes slowly."</p>
+
+<p>McKay arose, glass in hand.</p>
+
+<p>"To our host," he bowed. The toast was drunk standing. Whereafter the
+host tapped the bell twice and 'Tonio reappeared with a tray of fresh
+glasses. A toast to the United States by the coronel followed, and as
+soon as the black man arrived with a third round the Republic of Brazil
+was pledged. Then the coronel directed the servant:</p>
+
+<p>"'Tonio, if Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o are outside, ask them to move the
+belongings of the gentlemen from the canoe. And make ready rooms for the
+guests."</p>
+
+<p>'Tonio disappeared down the ladder. The coronel raised the violin,
+tendered it to the others, accepted their pleas to play it himself, and
+for the next half hour acquitted himself with no mean ability. Snatches
+of long-forgotten operas and improvisations of his own flowed from the
+strings in smooth harmony, hinting at bygone years amid far different
+surroundings for which his soul now hungered and to which he would
+return. Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o, transporting the equipment, passed in and
+out soft-footed and almost unnoticed. At length the player, with a
+deprecatory smile and a half apology for "boring his guests," extended
+the instrument again toward the visitors. And McKay, silent McKay, took
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Sweet and low, out welled the haunting melody of "Annie Laurie." Tim,
+who had listened with casual interest to the coronel's music, now
+grinned happily. And when the plaintive Scotch song became "Kathleen
+Mavourneen" he closed his eyes and lay back in pure enjoyment. "The
+River Shannon" flowed into "The Suwanee River," and this in turn blended
+into other heart-tugging airs of Dixieland. When the last strain died
+and the captain reached for his half-smoked cigar the room was silent
+for minutes.</p>
+
+<p>Then, to the astonishment of all, Jos&eacute; spoke:</p>
+
+<p>"Se&ntilde;ores, there was a time when I, too, could draw music from the
+violin. If I may&mdash;" His eyes rested longingly on the instrument.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Certamente</i>, if you can use the arm," the coronel acquiesced. With a
+little difficulty Jos&eacute; drew his arm from the sling, balanced his left
+elbow on the chair arm, and poised the violin. A half smile showed in
+the eyes of the coronel as he glanced at his guests. He, and they as
+well, expected a discordant, uncouth attempt to scrape out some obscene
+ditty of the frontier.</p>
+
+<p>But as Jos&eacute;, after jockeying a bit, began drifting the bow across the
+strings, the suppressed smiles faded and eyes opened. Here was a man
+who, as he said, once could play. And he wasted no time on airs composed
+by others and known to half the world. Under his touch the mellow wood
+began to talk, and in the minds of the listeners grew pictures.</p>
+
+<p>City streets, blank-walled houses, patios, the rattle of the hoofs of
+burros over cobbles, the shuffle of human feet, the toll of bells from a
+convent tower. Gay little bits of music, laughter, flashing eyes, a
+voluptuous love song repeated over and over. A sudden wild outbreak,
+fighting men, shots, the clash of steel&mdash;again a tolling bell and a
+requiem for the dead. A horse galloping in the night. Mountain winds
+crooning mournfully, rising to the scream of tempest and the crash of
+thunder. Dreary uplands, the hiss of rain, the sough of drifting snow,
+the patient plod of a mule along a perilous trail. And then the jungle:
+its discordant uproar, its hammering of frogs, its hoots and howls, the
+dismal swash of flood waters. A monotonous ebb and flow of life,
+punctuated by sudden flares of fight. Then a long, mournful wail&mdash;and
+silence.</p>
+
+<p>His bow still on the strings, Jos&eacute; sat for a minute like a stone image,
+his eyes straight ahead, his pale face drawn, his red kerchief glowing
+dully in the semishadow like a cap of blood. For once his face was empty
+of all insolence, changed by a pathetic wistfulness that made it tragic.
+Then, wordless, he lowered the violin, held it out to the coronel,
+fumbled absently at his sling, and slowly incased his wounded arm. When
+he looked up his old mocking expression had come back and he once more
+looked the reckless buccaneer.</p>
+
+<p>For a time no one spoke. Each felt that he had glimpsed something of
+this man's past; felt, too, that he who now was a bloody-handed borderer
+had once been a <i>caballero</i>, moving in a much higher circle. Certainly
+he could not play like this unless he had been of the upper class in his
+youth. The coronel's face was thoughtful as he took back the violin.
+When at length he began to talk, however, it was on a topic as remote as
+possible from music and present personalities&mdash;the reconstruction of
+Europe as the result of the World War.</p>
+
+<p>With this and kindred subjects, aided by the attentive ministrations of
+'Tonio, the afternoon passed swiftly. Dinner proved a feast, the <i>pi&egrave;ce
+de r&eacute;sistance</i> being tender, well-cooked meat which the Americans took
+for roast beef, but which really was roast tapir. More cigars, coupled
+with the fatigue of the past two days of paddling, eventually caused the
+visitors to seek their rooms, where McKay and Knowlton paired off and
+Tim took Jos&eacute; as his "bunkie."</p>
+
+<p>When Tim awoke the next morning he found himself deserted.</p>
+
+<p>To Knowlton, who drew from the small gold-chest the hundred dollars
+allotted to Jos&eacute; and handed it to him before redressing his wound, the
+<i>puntero</i> quietly revealed his intention to go before sunrise.</p>
+
+<p>"Say nothing, se&ntilde;or," he requested. "You need know nothing of it, if you
+like. I am here to-night&mdash;I am gone to-morrow&mdash;that is all. I am of no
+further use to you, I am unwelcome in this house of Nunes, and I go. Oh,
+have no fear for me! I have my gun, my knife, and my good right arm, and
+I can take care of myself very well. No doubt the coronel will be
+astonished to find that on leaving to-night I have neither cut anyone's
+throat nor stolen anything&mdash;ha! I have a black name on this river, and
+it is well earned, perhaps. Yet few men are as bad as those who dislike
+them think they are. I may borrow a small canoe, but any Indian would do
+the same. An unoccupied canoe is any man's property.</p>
+
+<p>"Before our ways part, se&ntilde;or, let me say that as Jos&eacute; Martinez never
+forgets his enemies, so he never forgets friends. Where some men would
+have turned me loose like a sick dog with my eighteen dollars, you and
+Se&ntilde;or McKay give me a hundred. And far more than that, you saved my life
+at a time when many men would have said, 'Bah! let the bloody one die!
+He is nothing but scum of the border and leader of that murdering crew.'
+You had only to let me lie a few minutes longer and you would be rid of
+me. No, Jos&eacute; does not forget.</p>
+
+<p>"That is all, except&mdash;if you will, in parting, take the hand of a man
+known as a killer and other things&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton gripped that hand with swift heartiness. He would have
+protested against such a departure, but the other's steady gaze
+betokened inflexible purpose. So he merely said:</p>
+
+<p>"Then good luck, old chap! And if you meet Schwandorf give him our
+affectionate regards."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si</i>, se&ntilde;or," was the sardonic answer. "I will do that thing. And here
+is something that may be of interest to you. I happen to know that
+before we left Remate de Males a swift one-man canoe left Nazareth, and
+that the man in it was an Indian who is in the German's control. It went
+upstream while we were loading your supplies, and it has not returned.
+By this time it must be many hours above this place. I do not know what
+message that Indian carries, nor where he goes. But he is a short man,
+and his left leg is crooked. If you meet such a one make him talk.
+Good-by, se&ntilde;or."</p>
+
+<p>Just how and when the <i>puntero</i> cat-footed his way out that night none
+ever knew but himself. But before the next dawn he had vanished from the
+Brazilian shore.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+
+<h3>BY THE LIGHT OF STORM</h3>
+
+
+<p>"One thing I can't understand," Knowlton said, toying with his coffee
+cup the next morning, "is why Schwandorf should double-cross us. We
+never did anything to him. Another thing I don't quite get is how he
+expected to have the Peruvians wiped out when he knew blamed well they
+were aware of the enmity of the cannibals. They'd hardly be likely to go
+into the bush with us under those circumstances."</p>
+
+<p>"My guess is this," McKay replied. "He set a trap. He is on a friendly
+footing with some of the savages above here, no doubt. He dispatched
+that Indian messenger to stir them up with some false tale and bring
+them to some place where they'd be pretty sure to get us. He primed the
+crew to jump us at the same place, perhaps. Then the crew would kill us
+or we'd kill them, and whichever side won would be smeared by the
+Indians. Sort of a trap within a trap. Why he did it doesn't matter
+much. He double-crossed us, he double-crossed the crew, he
+double-crossed Jos&eacute;. First thing he knows he'll find he's double-crossed
+himself."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah," Tim grunted. "He better beat it before we git back!"</p>
+
+<p>"He wanted no killing before we reached the cannibal country," McKay
+went on, "because then it would all be blamed on the savages and he
+could show clean hands. Francisco's vengefulness tipped over his cart."</p>
+
+<p>"Still, he might have known we'd stop here for a call on the coronel,
+and that there was a big chance for us to be warned here about the feud
+between Mayorunas and Peruvians."</p>
+
+<p>"That probably was provided for. Crew doubtless had orders to prevent
+any such visit, by lying to us or in other ways. We probably would have
+gone surging past here at top speed."</p>
+
+<p>"Wal, it don't git us nothin' to talk about things that 'ain't
+happened," interposed the practical Tim. "Question is, where do we go
+from here? And how?"</p>
+
+<p>All eyes went to the coronel, who sat languidly smoking his morning
+cigar.</p>
+
+<p>"Coronel, we are in your hands," McKay said, bluntly. "Your men, I
+presume, are all out at work in various parts of the bush. We want a
+crew and, if possible, guides. Can you help us?"</p>
+
+<p>The coronel flicked off an ash and spoke slowly:</p>
+
+<p>"I have two men, senhores, who have no peers as bushmen. They are the
+two whom you saw yesterday. Frankly, they are most valuable to me, and I
+hesitate about sending them on so dangerous a mission as yours. Yet they
+might succeed where most men would fail, for they have repeatedly gone
+into the bush on risky journeys and returned unharmed. Their adventures
+would fill books.</p>
+
+<p>"The older of these two, Louren&ccedil;o Moraes, has been more than once among
+the cannibals of this region, and so he knows something of them.
+Naturally he did not live long among them; he left them as soon as he
+could. But he has the faculty of extricating himself from hopeless
+positions&mdash;or perhaps it would be better to say that his cool head and
+good fortune together have preserved him thus far. '<i>Tanta vez vae o
+cantaro a fonte ate gue um dia la fica</i>'&mdash;the pitcher may go often to
+the spring, but some day it remains there.</p>
+
+<p>"Pedro Andrada, the younger, is not so steady and cool-headed as
+Louren&ccedil;o. Yet he is a most capable man, and the two together&mdash;they are
+always together&mdash;make a very efficient team."</p>
+
+<p>"I bet they do," Tim concurred, heartily. "I like that Pedro lad fine."</p>
+
+<p>"So do I," the coronel smiled. "Now, gentlemen, I will not order these
+men to go with you. If they go it must be of their own choice. They have
+only recently returned from a hazardous mission and they are entitled to
+rest. Yet I have little doubt that they will jump at the chance to risk
+their lives in a new venture. If they choose to go, I suggest that you
+place yourselves entirely in their hands and give them free rein. You
+would look far for better men."</p>
+
+<p>"And we're lucky to get them," Knowlton acquiesced. "To them and to you
+we shall be greatly indebted."</p>
+
+<p>"Not to me, senhor," the coronel demurred "I do nothing but bring you
+men together. Theirs is the risk. 'Tonio! Find Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o. Shall
+we go into the office, gentlemen?"</p>
+
+<p>Chairs scraped back and an exodus from the dining room ensued. Outside,
+the lusty voice of the negro bawled. Soon he was back, and at his heels
+strode the lithe Pedro and the quiet Louren&ccedil;o. They ran their eyes over
+the group, then stood looking inquiringly at their employer.</p>
+
+<p>"Be seated, men. Roll cigarettes if you like," said the coronel. Coolly
+they did both. Pedro, catching Tim's friendly grin, flashed a quick
+smile in return. Louren&ccedil;o, unsmiling, looked squarely into each man's
+face in turn and seemed satisfied with what he saw. Both then glanced
+around as if missing some one.</p>
+
+<p>"Your friend Jos&eacute; has left us," the coronel informed them, dryly,
+interpreting the look. "He disappeared in the night."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! That is why one of our canoes is gone," said Pedro. "We are ready
+to start."</p>
+
+<p>"You mistake," the old gentleman laughed. "We do not want him back.
+Nothing else is missing."</p>
+
+<p>Whereat Pedro looked slightly surprised. Louren&ccedil;o's lips curved in a
+faint grin. Neither made any further comment.</p>
+
+<p>The coronel plunged at once into the business for which they had been
+summoned. Succinctly he stated the purpose of the North Americans in
+coming here, pointed out their need of guides&mdash;and stopped there. He
+said nothing of the dangers ahead, mentioned no reward, did not even ask
+the men whether they would go. He merely lit a fresh cigar and leaned
+back in his chair.</p>
+
+<p>A silence followed. Again Louren&ccedil;o looked searchingly into the face of
+each American. Pedro contemplated the opposite wall, taking occasional
+puffs from his cigarette. At length Knowlton suggested, tentatively:</p>
+
+<p>"We will pay well&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Both the bushmen frowned. The coronel spoke in a tone of mild reproof:</p>
+
+<p>"Senhor, it is not a matter of pay. These men can make plenty of money
+as <i>seringueiros</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon," said Knowlton, and thereafter held his tongue.</p>
+
+<p>Deliberately Louren&ccedil;o finished his smoke, pinched the coal between a
+hard thumb and forefinger, and spoke for the first time.</p>
+
+<p>"May I ask, senhor, if you are the commander?" His gaze rested on McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"I am."</p>
+
+<p>"And do I understand that we shall at all times be subject to your
+orders?"</p>
+
+<p>"In case any orders are necessary&mdash;yes. But I assume that you will not
+need commands."</p>
+
+<p>A quiet smile showed in the bushman's eyes. He glanced at Pedro. The
+latter met the look from the corner of his eye, without wink, nod, or
+other sign. But when Louren&ccedil;o turned again to McKay he spoke as if all
+were arranged.</p>
+
+<p>"When do we start, Capitao?"</p>
+
+<p>Tim slapped his leg and cackled.</p>
+
+<p>"By cripes! there ain't no lost motion with these guys. Hey, Cap?"</p>
+
+<p>McKay smiled approvingly.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall get on together" he said. "Louren&ccedil;o and Pedro, this is not a
+one-man party. We are three comrades, who now become five. If at any
+time one man needs to command, I, as senior officer, will take that
+command. Otherwise we are all on an equal footing."</p>
+
+<p>"Just so," Louren&ccedil;o agreed. "If it were otherwise you would still be
+three men&mdash;not five. Since that is plain, let me say frankly that your
+big canoe had best stay here, also everything you do not need in the
+bush. Two light canoes are faster, easier to handle and to hide. Pedro
+and I have our own canoe and will provide our own supplies. We will pick
+out a three-man boat for you and load it with what you select from your
+equipment. After that every man swings his own paddle."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Cada qual por si e Deus por todos.</i> Each for himself and God for us
+all," Pedro summarized.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the dope," applauded Tim. "Now say, Renzo, old feller, what d'ye
+know about these here, now, Red Bones up above here? And have ye got
+anything on that Raposy guy?"</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"I know little of the Red Bone people, for I have never met them. That
+is one reason why I now should like to meet them. I have heard of them,
+yes; and the things I have heard are not pleasant. Yet it may be that
+the tales are worse than the people. I have also heard terrible stories
+of the light-skinned cannibals, the Mayorunas; yet I have been among the
+cannibals and found them not so bad&mdash;though it is true that they eat the
+flesh of their enemies; I have seen it done. But it makes a very great
+difference how they are approached and who the men are who approach
+them. It is possible that we may go unharmed among even <i>los Ossos
+Vermelhos</i>&mdash;the Red Bones. We shall see.</p>
+
+<p>"Of the Raposa I think I do know something. I have seen him."</p>
+
+<p>Everyone except Pedro sat up with a start.</p>
+
+<p>"You have seen him?" exclaimed the coronel. "When? Where? How? Why have
+you not spoken of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because, Coronel, I forgot it until now. It meant nothing to us&mdash;yes,
+Pedro was with me&mdash;except that it was one more queer thing in the bush.
+In time I might have remembered it and told you. But you know we have
+been busy."</p>
+
+<p>"True. But go on."</p>
+
+<p>"It was only a little time ago. We were returning from the scouting trip
+on which you sent us to locate new rubber trees. We were
+seven&mdash;eight&mdash;seven&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Eight days' journey from here," prompted Pedro.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i> We were in our canoe when a sudden storm broke and we got
+ashore to wait until it was over. The place was on an <i>ygarap&eacute;</i>&mdash;a
+creek&mdash;about two days away from the river. The trees were large and the
+ground free from bush. In a flash of lightning we saw a man peering out
+at us from a hollow tree.</p>
+
+<p>"He was naked and streaked with paint&mdash;that was all we saw in the
+flashes that came and went. The rain was heavy, and we stayed where we
+were until it ended. Then we ordered that man to come out.</p>
+
+<p>"He came, and he held bow and arrow ready to shoot. We, too, were ready
+to shoot, but we held back our bullets and he held back his arrow. We
+saw that his paint was red and that it traced his bones; that his skin
+was that of a tanned white man and his hair was dark with a white streak
+over one ear. No, we did not notice the color of his eyes&mdash;the light was
+not good and he stood well away from us.</p>
+
+<p>"We looked around for other men, but saw none. We asked him who he was
+and what he wanted, but he gave no answer. He looked at us for a long
+time, and we at him. Then he began walking away sidewise, watching us
+steadily, holding his arrow always ready. Finally he disappeared among
+the trees and we saw him no more. But we heard him, senhores; twice
+before we lost sight of him he spoke out in a queer voice like that of a
+parrot. And the thing he said was, 'Poor Davey!'"</p>
+
+<p>McKay thumped a fist on his chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Davey! David Rand!"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps so, Capitao. I do not know. But he spoke English."</p>
+
+<p>"By thunder! David Rand! Merry, where's that picture?"</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton was already unbuttoning his pocket flap. Quickly he produced
+the photograph.</p>
+
+<p>"That the fellow?"</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o studied the face. The eagerly anticipated affirmative did not
+come.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot say surely. This is a full-faced, clean-shaven man with hair
+close trimmed. That one's face was gaunt, covered partly with beard and
+partly by long hair, and we were not close to him, as I have said. I
+would not say the two were the same until I could have a better look at
+the wild man."</p>
+
+<p>"You didn't follow him?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. Why should we? He had done nothing to us and we let him go his way.
+We did look at his hollow tree, though. But it was only an empty tree,
+not his home; a place where he had stepped in out of the storm. We had
+other things to do, so we got into our canoe again and paddled off."</p>
+
+<p>"You can find the place again?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. But I much doubt if we shall find him there."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind. We've something to start with now, and that's worth a lot.
+Get busy with your boats and supplies, boys, right away. Tim and Merry,
+let's dig out our essentials and start. We're on a hot trail at last.
+Let's go!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+
+<h3>OUT OF THE AIR</h3>
+
+
+<p>Again the sun fought the mists of a new day, casting a pallid, watery
+light on the livid green roof of the limitless jungle. High up under
+that roof, more than a hundred feet above the ground, the morning alarm
+clock went off with a scream, the sudden chorus of monkeys and macaws
+awaking after a few hours of silence. Down on the eastern shore of the
+river, in a little natural port where the shadows still lay thick, men
+stirred under their black mosquito nets, yawned, and waited for more
+light before starting another day's journey.</p>
+
+<p>To three of the five men housed under those flimsy coverings the somber
+hue of their nets was new. On leaving Remate de Males the insect bars
+had been clean white; and though they had grown somewhat soiled from
+daily handling, they never had approached the drab dinginess of the
+barriers draping the hammocks of the Peruvian rivermen. In fact, their
+owners had been at some pains to keep them as clean as possible, folding
+them each morning with military precision and stowing them carefully.
+Wherefore they were somewhat taken aback when informed that nice white
+nets were decidedly not the thing in this part of the world.</p>
+
+<p>"Up to this place, senhores, they have done no harm," Pedro said, before
+leaving the coronel's grounds. "But from here on they will not do at
+all. The weakest moonlight&mdash;yes, even starlight&mdash;would make them stand
+out in the darkness like tombstones. A few days more and we shall be in
+the cannibal country. And it is an old trick of those eaters of men to
+skulk along the shore by night, watching a camp until all are asleep,
+and then sneak up with spears ready. A rush and a swift stab of the
+spears into those white nets, and you are dead or dying from the
+poisoned points. I would no more sleep under a white net than I would
+lie in my hammock and blow a horn to show where I was. Your light nets
+must stay here. We will find dark ones for you."</p>
+
+<p>Thus the voyagers learned another of those little things on which
+sometimes hinges life or death. Even McKay, with his experience of other
+jungles, had never thought it necessary to drape himself in invisibility
+at night. But when his attention was called to it he recognized its
+value at once, and the white nets were forthwith abandoned.</p>
+
+<p>Now, on the first morning out from the Nunes place, the three Americans
+stretched themselves in lazy enjoyment after a night passed without a
+sentinel. The stretching evoked sundry grunts due to the discovery that
+their muscles still were lame. The long steamer journey from their own
+land, followed by the daily confinement of the Peruvian canoe, had
+afforded scant opportunity for keeping themselves fit, and the sudden
+necessity for doing their own paddling had found every man soft. But
+they now were hardening fast, and the steady swing of the paddles was
+proving a physical joy. These were men ill accustomed to sitting in
+enforced idleness for weeks on end.</p>
+
+<p>Matches flared under the nets and cigarette smoke drifted into the air,
+rousing to fresh activity the mosquitoes humming hungrily outside.
+Gradually the shadows paled and the weak light reflecting from the
+fog-shrouded water beyond grew into day. The nets lifted and the
+bloodthirsty insects swooped in vicious triumph on the emerging men. But
+again matches blazed, flame licked up among kindlings, a fire grew, and
+in its smoke screen the voyagers found some surcease from the bug
+hordes. Soon the fragrance of coffee floated into the air.</p>
+
+<p>Tim yawned, coughed explosively, and swore.</p>
+
+<p>"Fellers can't even take a gape for himself without gittin' these cussed
+bugs down his throat," he complained, and coughed again. "Gimme some
+coffee! I got one skeeter the size of a devil's darnin' needle stuck in
+me windpipe."</p>
+
+<p>"A devil's darning needle? What is that, Senhor Tim?" inquired Pedro,
+passing him a cup of hot coffee. When the liquid&mdash;and the "skeeter"&mdash;had
+passed into Tim's stomach he enlightened the inquirer.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye dunno what's a devil's darnin' needle? Gosh! I'm s'prised at ye. I
+seen lots of 'em right on this here river. He's a bug about so long"&mdash;he
+stuck out a finger&mdash;"and he's got jaws like a crab and a long limber
+tail a with reg'lar needle in the end, and inside him is a roll o' tough
+silk&mdash;tough as spider web. And he's death on liars. Any time a feller
+tells a lie he's got to look out, or all to oncet one o' them bugs'll
+come scootin' at him and grab him by the nose with them jaws. Then he'll
+curl up his tail&mdash;the bug, I mean&mdash;and run his needle and thread right
+through the feller's lips and sew his mouth up tight. Then he flies off
+lookin' for another liar."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Por Deus!</i> And the liar starves to death?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wal, no. O' course he can git somebody to cut the stitches. But the
+needle is a good thick one and it leaves a row o' holes all along the
+feller's lips. Any time ye see a guy with li'l' round scars around his
+mouth, Pedro, ye'll know he's such an awful liar the devil bug got him."</p>
+
+<p>McKay coughed. Knowlton blew his nose into a big handkerchief. Louren&ccedil;o
+squinted sidewise at Tim, who was solemn as an owl. Pedro, his eyes
+twinkling, bent forward and scrutinized Tim's mouth.</p>
+
+<p>"You have been fortunate, senhor," he said, simply&mdash;and stepped around
+to the other side of the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"Huh? Say, lookit here, ye long-legged gorilla&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton exploded. McKay and Louren&ccedil;o snickered.</p>
+
+<p>"It's on you, Tim!" vociferated Knowlton. "You dug the hole yourself.
+Now crawl in and pull it in after you."</p>
+
+<p>Tim snorted wrathfully, but his eyes laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, what's the use o' trying to educate you guys?"</p>
+
+<p>"You swallowed a mosquito just now, but I cannot swallow that devil
+bug," Pedro grinned.</p>
+
+<p>Tim rumbled something, solaced himself with a cigarette, then squatted
+and joined the others in their frugal breakfast of coffee and
+<i>chibeh</i>&mdash;a handful of farinha mixed with water in a gourd. When it was
+finished McKay, who never smoked in the morning until he had eaten,
+filled a pipe and suggested:</p>
+
+<p>"Guess we'd better plan our campaign. We didn't take time yesterday. In
+case we find no trace of the Raposa at the place where you fellows saw
+him, what's your idea?"</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o, puffing thoughtfully, stared into the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"There will be time enough to decide that, Capitao, after we have
+visited that place," he said, slowly. "Still, perhaps it is best to make
+some plan; it can be changed at any time."</p>
+
+<p>For a moment longer he looked at the dying flame. Then, dropping his
+cigarette stub into it, he continued:</p>
+
+<p>"If I were going alone to find a man among the Red Bones, I should go
+first to the Mayorunas and work through them to make sure of a friendly
+reception by the other people. I would&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, that's the very thing Schwandorf suggested!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes? I have not heard what he said. Tell me."</p>
+
+<p>McKay did so. Louren&ccedil;o smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Sometimes, Capitao, the devil puts into the hands of men a weapon which
+is turned against himself. So it is now. That <i>Allemao</i>, Schwandorf,
+never expected you to reach the people you seek, but the plan is good.
+It would not be good if you followed it exactly as he laid it out, but
+things have changed; and what you could not do with Peruvian companions,
+or alone, you perhaps can do with us. I will show you.</p>
+
+<p>"It happens that I have been twice among the cannibals living in a
+certain <i>maloca</i> which I can find again. Perhaps you know that those
+people live in scattered <i>malocas</i>, each ruled by its own chief&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, we know about that."</p>
+
+<p>"Good. Now if we went to any <i>maloca</i> where we were not known we might
+be killed at once. But at that <i>maloca</i> of which I speak I am known to
+the chief and all his fighting men, for I once led them on a raid into
+Peru. So they will remember me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"What's that?" Knowlton interrupted, in amazement. "You led a cannibal
+tribe on the warpath?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just so, senhor. It is a long story, but these are the facts:</p>
+
+<p>"There was in Peru a gang of killers, robbers&mdash;and worse&mdash;who called
+themselves the Peccaries. They raided one of the coronel's camps where I
+was in charge, killed all my gang except myself and one other, and used
+us two as slaves and beasts of burden.</p>
+
+<p>"The other man died from poison. I lived only to revenge myself on those
+foul outlaws. There was much rubber of the coronel's, worth much money
+at that time, in the camp they had raided. So, after driving me like a
+beast to their stronghold in the hills of Peru, they came back with
+boats and Indian porters to get out that rubber.</p>
+
+<p>"On that return journey I tried to kill the leader, who was called El
+Amarillo&mdash;yellow-skinned. I failed, and he had me nailed with long
+thorns to a tree where I might hang in torment for days, dying slowly.
+See. Here are the marks."</p>
+
+<p>All three of the Americans had noticed on the previous day that each of
+Louren&ccedil;o's hands was disfigured by a scar which looked as if a spike had
+been driven through. Now he held those hands forward for their
+inspection. Then he pulled off his loose shirt and rolled up his
+trousers. They saw other scars in the big muscles before the armpits, in
+the soft flesh under the ribs, in the thighs and calves.</p>
+
+<p>"The dirty Hun!" Tim grated.</p>
+
+<p>"That was not all, Senhor Tim. They also put fire ants on me, which bit
+so cruelly that I nearly lost my mind from pain. Then they went on,
+intending to have more sport with me when they came back with the
+rubber. But after they left me two hunters of the cannibal tribe who had
+been following a tapir's track found me and took me down from the tree.</p>
+
+<p>"Now the Peccaries before this had stolen some women from a Mayoruna
+<i>maloca</i> and were treating them like dogs&mdash;I saw one of those women
+brutally murdered while I was captive in the outlaw camp. I managed to
+tell the two hunters I could lead them to the Peccary stronghold and
+give them revenge. They carried me to their <i>maloca</i>&mdash;I could not
+walk&mdash;and told their chief what I had said. The chief caused my hurts to
+be cured, and then I kept my promise.</p>
+
+<p>"I guided the savages to the outlaw camp; they surrounded it, and in the
+fight that followed every Peccary was killed except their leader. Now
+that cannibal chief has not forgotten me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Wait a minute," protested Knowlton. "Did that Peccary leader escape?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. He was kept alive until a big herd of peccaries was met. Then,
+because he called himself 'King of the Peccaries,' he was nailed to a
+tree, as I had been, and told to make the peccaries take out the thorns.
+The wild pigs tore him into ribbons with their tusks."</p>
+
+<p>Calmly he donned his shirt again. Tim, staring at him, twitched his
+shoulders as if a chill had gone down his back.</p>
+
+<p>"Ugh!" muttered Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"So now," Louren&ccedil;o resumed, "if I can find that chief again&mdash;he may have
+been killed in some tribal fight before now&mdash;he may be friendly to all
+of us. Or he may not. Savages cannot be relied on with much certainty.
+But if any of the Mayorunas will help us, he will. It is worth trying."</p>
+
+<p>"And if he is not friendly&mdash;" Knowlton paused.</p>
+
+<p>"We do not come back," Pedro finished. "Have you a better plan?"</p>
+
+<p>All shook their heads.</p>
+
+<p>"Laurenco's idea is excellent," said McKay. "I was thinking along the
+same line, though I did not know he had any such friendly relations with
+a chief. That makes it all the more advisable to try it, unless we find
+the Raposa first. We, of course, will not land at the place where
+Schwandorf told us to go ashore, seven days from here."</p>
+
+<p>"By no means," Louren&ccedil;o concurred. "In five days we leave the river and
+travel along the <i>ygarap&eacute;</i>. If we go to the <i>maloca</i> it will be from
+another direction than the river."</p>
+
+<p>He began preparing to travel. The others also went about the work of
+breaking camp. By the time the canoes were loaded the mists had lifted
+and the river lay open and empty before them. In the bush around and
+beyond, gloom still lay thick and the forest life yelped, howled,
+clattered, and wailed. But out on the water it was broad day, and far
+overhead sounded the harsh cries of unseen parrots flying two by two in
+the sunlight above the matted branches. The world of the pathless tropic
+wilderness, ever dying, ever living, was about its daily business. The
+five invaders were about theirs.</p>
+
+<p>As the paddlers dipped, however, Knowlton held back.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, Rod, we didn't tell these fellows about Schwandorf's Indian. Hold
+up a second, men."</p>
+
+<p>While all rested on their paddles he spoke of the mysterious messenger
+dispatched from Nazareth. Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o contemplated the river,
+then frowned.</p>
+
+<p>"That may be of importance, senhores," said Louren&ccedil;o. "It may change
+everything for us. We saw a lone Indian go past the coronel's place,
+traveling fast, three days before you came. I would give much to know
+where he is now and what word he carries. A short man with a bad left
+leg, you say. We shall keep watch for such a man. Perhaps we may meet
+him."</p>
+
+<p>Wherein he predicted more accurately than he knew.</p>
+
+<p>The canoes swung out and the paddlers settled into the steady stroke to
+which they were growing accustomed. Hour after hour they forged on, the
+Brazilians adjusting their speed to that of the Americans, who had not
+yet attained the muscular ease of habitual canoemen. The miles flowed
+slowly but surely behind them, the sun rolled higher and hotter, the
+silence of approaching noon crept over the jungle on either side. Then,
+as the time drew near when they would land for a more hearty meal than
+that of the morning, Pedro pointed ahead.</p>
+
+<p>Up out of the bush on the Peruvian shore rose a vulture. It flapped
+sullenly away as if disappointed. The bushmen, quick to note anything
+that might be a sign, paid no attention to the bird's flight, but marked
+with unerring eye the spot whence it had taken wing.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us cross, comrades, and see what we may see," Pedro called. "If
+nothing is there, we can eat."</p>
+
+<p>But something was there. All saw it before they landed&mdash;the stern of a
+small, speedy canoe almost concealed in a narrow rift at the bottom of
+the bank. In the soil of the rising slope were the prints of bare feet.
+And Pedro, scanning the tracks narrowly after he and the others reached
+shore, asserted, "These were not made to-day."</p>
+
+<p>Up the bank they climbed, silent and watchful. At the top Louren&ccedil;o took
+the lead. In under big trees the five passed in file. A short distance
+from the edge Louren&ccedil;o stopped, looking at the ground. The others spread
+out and stared at the thing he had found.</p>
+
+<p>Between the buttress roots of a tall tree was a crude shelter of palm
+leaves. Before this lay the scattered bones of a man. The skull had been
+crushed by a mighty blow.</p>
+
+<p>The bones were picked clean&mdash;had been stripped and torn asunder days
+before, and the vulture which had just left had gotten nothing for its
+belated visit. Among them were remnants of cloth, a belt and a machete,
+and strands of coarse black hair. A few feet away lay a cheap "trade"
+gun. Louren&ccedil;o inspected the weapon and laid it back.</p>
+
+<p>"Did he shoot before he was downed?" asked Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"No. The gun is loaded. His death came from above." The bushman ran his
+eye up the towering tree, then pointed to a large dark object on the
+ground near by.</p>
+
+<p>"Castanha&mdash;Brazil-nut tree," he explained. "That heavy nut fell and
+smashed the Indian's skull like an egg. Indian, yes. His gun, his
+shelter, and his hair show that. And"&mdash;stooping and pointing at one of
+the bones&mdash;"that bone shows who he was. See, Capitao."</p>
+
+<p>McKay looked down on a leg bone. At some time the leg had been broken
+and badly set, if set at all. The bone was crooked.</p>
+
+<p>"A short Indian with a crooked leg. Schwandorf's messenger!"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i> No man will ever receive the message he bore. He camped here days
+ago. Now he camps here forever."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE ARROW</h3>
+
+
+<p>Slowly, silently, two canoes glided along the still, dark water of a
+gloomy creek over-arched by the interlaced limbs of lofty trees.</p>
+
+<p>The first, propelled by the slow-dipping blades of two Brazilian
+bushmen, seemed to be seeking something; for it nosed along with
+frequent pauses of the paddles, during which it drifted almost to a stop
+while its crew searched the solemn jungle depths reaching away from the
+right-hand shore. The second, carrying three bronzed and bearded men of
+another continent, was only trailing the leader. It moved and paused
+like the first, but the recurrent scrutiny of the farther gloom by its
+paddlers was that of men who saw only a meaningless, monotonous bulk of
+buttresses and trunks and tangle of looping lianas. In this dimness and
+bewildering chaos the trio might as well have been blind. The eyes of
+the tiny fleet were in the first boat.</p>
+
+<p>The progress of the dugouts was almost stealthy. Not a paddle thumped or
+splashed, not a voice spoke. They moved with the alert caution born not
+of fear, but of wary readiness for any sudden event&mdash;like prowling
+jungle creatures which, themselves seeking quarry, must be ever on guard
+lest they become the hunted instead of the hunters.</p>
+
+<p>For the past two days they had moved thus. The last fresh meat had been
+shot miles down the river, where a well-placed bullet from the rifle of
+McKay had downed a fat swamp deer. Since that day not a gun had been
+fired. The rations now were tough jerked beef and monkey meat, slabs of
+salt pirarucu fish, and farinha, varied by tinned delicacies from the
+stores of the Americans. Henceforth gunfire was taboo unless it should
+become necessary in self-defense.</p>
+
+<p>At length the fore canoe halted with an abruptness that told of back
+strokes of the blades hidden under water. McKay, bowman of the trailing
+craft, also backed water, while his mates held their paddles rigid. The
+two boats drifted together.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the place," Louren&ccedil;o said, speaking low.</p>
+
+<p>The Americans, scanning the shore, saw nothing to differentiate the spot
+from the rest of the wilderness growth. Yet Louren&ccedil;o's tone was sure.
+Pedro's face also showed recognition of his surroundings. With no
+apparent motion of the paddles&mdash;though the wrists of the paddlers moved
+almost imperceptibly&mdash;the canoe of the bushmen floated to the bank. They
+picked up their rifles, twitched their bow up on land, and turned their
+faces to the forest.</p>
+
+<p>"Stay here," was Pedro's subdued command, "until you hear the bird-call
+which we taught you down the river."</p>
+
+<p>He and Louren&ccedil;o faded into the dimness and were gone.</p>
+
+<p>"Beats me how them guys find their way 'round," muttered Tim. "I could
+land here twenty times hand-runnin', but if I went away and then come
+back I'd never know the place."</p>
+
+<p>"It's all in the feel of it," was McKay's low-toned explanation. "They
+find places and travel the bush as an Indian does&mdash;by a sixth sense.
+Take them to New York City, guide them around, then turn them loose&mdash;and
+they'd be hopelessly lost in ten minutes."</p>
+
+<p>The others nodded agreement and sat watching. In the shadows no creature
+moved. Afar off some bird cried mournfully like a lost soul condemned to
+wander forever alone in the grim green solitudes. No other sound came to
+the listeners save the ever-present hum of the big forest mosquitoes, to
+which they now had become indifferent. For all they could see or hear of
+their two guides, they might as well have been alone. Yet they knew the
+Brazilians were not far away, threading the maze with sure step and
+scouting hawk-eyed for any sign of danger.</p>
+
+<p>At length a long soft whistle sounded in the bush ahead. Any Indian
+hunter hearing that sound would straightway have begun scanning the high
+branches, for the liquid call was that of the mutum, or curassow turkey.
+But the waiting trio knew it for Pedro's signal that all was clear. At
+once they slid their canoe to shore, lifted its bow to a firm grip on
+the clay, and, after plumbing the shadows, quietly advanced in squad
+column.</p>
+
+<p>A few steps, and they halted suddenly and whirled. A voice had spoken
+just behind them. There, squatting leisurely between the root buttresses
+of a huge tree, Louren&ccedil;o looked up at them in amusement. They had passed
+within rifle length of him without seeing him.</p>
+
+<p>"Of what use are your eyes, comrades?" he chaffed. "In the bush one
+should see in all directions at once. You were looking at that patch of
+sunlight just ahead, yes? But danger lurks in the shadows, not in the
+glaring light."</p>
+
+<p>Without awaiting an answer, he arose and took the lead. At the edge of
+the small sunlit space beyond he halted.</p>
+
+<p>"You were heading for the right place," he added then. "Look around. Do
+you see anything?"</p>
+
+<p>Swiftly they scrutinized the gap left by the fall of a great tree whose
+gigantic trunk had bludgeoned weaker trees away in its crushing descent.
+Seeing nothing unusual, they then peered around them. Tim suddenly
+snapped up his rifle.</p>
+
+<p>"Holler tree there&mdash;and a man in it! Hey! come out o' there!"</p>
+
+<p>"Your eyes improve," Louren&ccedil;o complimented. "But the man is Pedro."</p>
+
+<p>Tim lowered the gun as Pedro, grinning, came out of his concealment.</p>
+
+<p>"That is the tree of the Raposa," Louren&ccedil;o went on. "The lightning
+flashing in from above showed us the man. But now, senhores, I think we
+must tramp the bush for some time before we find that Raposa again.
+There is no trace of him here."</p>
+
+<p>"Hm!" said Knowlton. Striding to the hollow tree, he peered about inside
+it. The cavity was almost big enough to sling a hammock in, but it was
+empty of any indication of habitation, human or otherwise. A temporary
+refuge&mdash;that was all.</p>
+
+<p>"No sign anywhere around here, eh?" queried McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"We have found none. We shall look farther, but I have small hope. If
+you senhores will make the camp this time we shall start at once and
+stay out until dark. Build no fire until we return. And if you hear the
+call of the mutum, pay no attention to it; we may use it to locate each
+other if we separate, and also perhaps as a decoy. Any wild man, red or
+white, hearing that call would seek the bird making it, for a fine fat
+mutum is well worth killing. Keep quiet and be on guard."</p>
+
+<p>"Right. Go ahead."</p>
+
+<p>The bushmen turned at once and stole away. The others returned to the
+canoes, transported the necessary duffle to the base of the hollow tree,
+made camp with a few poles, and squatted against the trunk to smoke,
+watch, and wait. Several times they heard mutum calls receding in the
+distance. Then came silence.</p>
+
+<p>The sun-thrown shadows in the gap crawled steadily eastward. Knowlton
+tested the feed of his automatic, which, since its balkiness in the
+fight with the Peruvians, he had kept carefully oiled and free from the
+slightest speck of rust. Tim arose at intervals and paced up and down in
+sentry go, eyes and ears alert&mdash;a useless activity, but one which
+provided an outlet for his restless energy. McKay let his gaze rove over
+the small area visible from their post, studying the contours of the
+towering trunks, the prone giant whose fall had opened the hole in the
+leafy roof, the parasitical vines twined about other trees, the thin,
+outflung buttresses supporting the mighty columns&mdash;all familiar sights
+to him, but the only things to occupy his vision. So limned on his brain
+did the scene become that after a time he could close his eyes and see
+it in every important detail.</p>
+
+<p>It might have been two hours after Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o had departed&mdash;the
+shadows had grown much longer&mdash;when over McKay stole the feeling that he
+was being watched. He glanced at his companions and found that neither
+of them was looking at him. Knowlton, sitting with hands clasped around
+updrawn knees, was dozing. Tim, though wide awake, was staring absently
+at a fungus. The captain's eyes searched the short vistas all about,
+spying nothing new. Still the feeling persisted. Then all at once his
+roaming gaze stopped, became fixed on a point some forty feet away.</p>
+
+<p>There rose a rough-barked red-brown tree, and from it, near the ground,
+projected a blackish bole. McKay was very sure the protuberance had not
+been there before. He had stared steadily at that tree more than once,
+and its shape was quite clear in his mind. Was that bump an insensate
+wood growth now revealed for the first time by the changing sun slant,
+or&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>For minutes he watched it. It did not move. Then Tim, restless again,
+rose directly in McKay's line of sight, yawned silently, swung his gun
+to his shoulder, and began another slow parade of his self-appointed
+post. When he had stepped aside McKay looked again for the puzzling
+bole.</p>
+
+<p>It was gone.</p>
+
+<p>With a bound the captain was up and dashing toward the tree, drawing his
+pistol as he ran. But within three strides he went down. A tough vine,
+unnoticed on the ground, looped snakily around one ankle and threw him
+hard. His gun flew from his hand. As he fell a tiny whispering sound
+flitted past, followed by a small blow somewhere behind him. Ensued a
+gruff grunt from Tim and the swift clatter of a breech bolt.</p>
+
+<p>Raging, McKay kicked his foot loose and heaved himself up. Empty handed,
+he continued his rush for the tree. But when he reached it he found
+nothing behind it. If anything had been there it now was gone, and the
+vacant shadows beyond were as inscrutable as ever.</p>
+
+<p>Feet padded behind him and Tim and Knowlton halted on either side. A
+moment of silent searching, and Tim broke into reproach.</p>
+
+<p>"Cap, don't never do that again! If ye take a tumble in my line o' fire,
+for the love o' Mike stay down till I shoot! I come so near drillin' ye
+when ye hopped up that I'm sweatin' blood right now."</p>
+
+<p>In truth, the veteran was pale around the mouth and his broad face was
+beaded with cold drops.</p>
+
+<p>"I seen more 'n one time in France when I felt like shootin' my s'perior
+officer, but I never come so near doin' it as jest now. I had finger to
+trigger and had took up the slack, and a hair's weight more pull would
+have spattered yer head all around. And besides givin' me heart failure
+ye let that guy git away. We'll never find him&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You saw him?" McKay cut in.</p>
+
+<p>"I seen somethin' beyond ye&mdash;couldn't make out what 'twas, but from the
+way ye was goin' over the top I knowed it must be a man. And then when
+the arrer come&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Arrow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure. Missed ye when ye took that flop, and stuck in the tree over
+yonder. What'd ye rush the guy for, anyways? Whyn't ye drill him from
+where ye was?"</p>
+
+<p>In the reaction from his sudden fright Tim was as wrathfully ready to
+"bawl out" his captain as if he were some raw rookie. McKay, with a cool
+smile, explained his abrupt action, meanwhile reconnoitering the dimness
+for any further sign of the vanished assailant. None showed.</p>
+
+<p>While Tim stood vigilant guard the other two stooped and moved around
+the base of the tree, narrowly examining the ground. Beyond it they
+paused at one spot, fingered the soil lightly, and lit a match or two.</p>
+
+<p>"No ghost," said Knowlton. "Barefoot man. Didn't leave much trace, but
+enough to show he was here. Let's look at that arrow."</p>
+
+<p>Back to the hollow tree they went, retrieving McKay's pistol on the way.
+About a yard above the earth a long shaft projected from the bark.
+Knowlton reached for it, but McKay held him back and drew it out.</p>
+
+<p>"M-hm! Thought so!" he muttered. "Poisoned."</p>
+
+<p>"Oof! Nice, gentle sort of a cuss," rumbled Tim. "That smear on the
+point&mdash;is that poison?"</p>
+
+<p>"Poison. Quickest and deadliest kind of poison. Mixes instantly with
+blood. Paralysis&mdash;convulsions&mdash;death. The least scratch and you're gone.
+Wicked head on this thing, too: looks like a piece of serrated bone. See
+all those little barbs along the edges? War arrow, all right."</p>
+
+<p>"Meanin' that we'll be jumped pretty soon by more Injuns. If that guy's
+on the warpath he ain't alone."</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't be a bad idea to take cover," nodded McKay. Turning the
+five-foot shaft downward, he plunged its head into the soft ground and
+left it sticking there, harmless.</p>
+
+<p>"Tim, go down and guard the canoes. Merry, lie in between these roots
+and keep watch off that way. I'll go over to that tree where the spy
+hid."</p>
+
+<p>For another hour the camp was silent. Each in his covert, finger on
+trigger, the trio watched with ceaseless vigilance, expecting each
+instant to detect dusky forms crawling up from tree to tree. Yet nothing
+of the sort came. Nor did any hostile sound reach them. Somewhere
+parrots squawked, somewhere else the puppylike yapping of toucans
+disturbed the solitude; nothing else.</p>
+
+<p>The wan light faded. The sun crawled up the trees, leaving all the
+ground in shadow. Then, not far off, sounded the soft whistle of the
+mutum. Suspicious, the watchers held their places until, with another
+whistle, Pedro came into view, followed by Louren&ccedil;o.</p>
+
+<p>McKay arose, met them, and briefly explained the situation. They nodded,
+but seemed undisturbed.</p>
+
+<p>"We can start a fire now, Capitao," Louren&ccedil;o said. "Night comes and we
+are hungry. There will be no danger before another dawn."</p>
+
+<p>With which he leaned his rifle against a tree and started immediate
+preparations for a meal. Pedro continued on to the canoes, made sure
+they were drawn up high enough to remain in place in case of any sudden
+rain, and returned with Tim. Around them now resounded the swiftly
+rising roar of the nightly outbreak of animal life. The sun vanished. At
+once blackness whelmed all except the little fire.</p>
+
+<p>"See anything while you were out?" asked McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"We found no trace of the Raposa," Louren&ccedil;o evaded.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you plan to do now?"</p>
+
+<p>"Eat&mdash;smoke&mdash;talk&mdash;sleep."</p>
+
+<p>McKay eyed the bushman keenly, feeling that he was holding something
+back. But, feeling also that this pair knew what they were about, he
+bided his time. When all had eaten and tobacco smoke was blending with
+that of the burning wood, Louren&ccedil;o drew the arrow from the ground and
+studied it. Then he passed it to Pedro, who, after a critical
+examination, held it in the blaze until the deadly head was burned away.</p>
+
+<p>"A big-game arrow of the cannibal Mayorunas," said Louren&ccedil;o. "The point,
+with its sawtooth barbs, is made from the tail bone of the araya, the
+flat devilfish of the swamp lakes. That fish, as you perhaps know, has a
+whiplike tail armed with that bone; and if he strikes the bone into your
+flesh it breaks off and stays in the wound, and you are likely to die."</p>
+
+<p>"But in that case death comes from gangrene," McKay remarked. "This
+point has been dipped in wurali poison."</p>
+
+<p>"You have seen such arrows before, Capitao?"</p>
+
+<p>"Seen the poison before, yes. Over in British Guiana. The Macusi Indians
+make it from the wurali vine, some bitter root or other, a couple of
+bulbous plants, two kinds of ants&mdash;one big and black with a venomous
+bite, the other small and red&mdash;a lot of pepper, and the pounded fangs of
+labarri and couanacouchi snakes. They boil all this stuff down to a
+thick syrup, and that's the poison. The man who makes it is sick for
+days afterward."</p>
+
+<p>"Our cannibals make that poison in much the same way. Yet Guiana is many
+hundreds of miles from here, and our Indians know nothing of those
+Macusi people. Queer, is it not, that the same plan should be used by
+savages thousands of miles apart?"</p>
+
+<p>"Rather odd. Must have started from some common source hundreds of years
+ago and spread around. Queerest thing is, though, that a poison so
+deadly doesn't spoil meat for eating."</p>
+
+<p>"Huh?" exclaimed Tim. "Mean to say them cannibals can kill us by
+scratchin' us with a poison arrer and then stummick us afterwards?"</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly. You'd taste just as sweet as ever, Tim&mdash;maybe more so. Cheer
+up! They say it doesn't hurt much to die that way; you're paralyzed so
+quick you just sort of fade out."</p>
+
+<p>Tim shook his head, his abhorrence of poison strong as ever. Knowlton
+spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"I've heard that this wurali poison is much overrated, that it will kill
+only birds and monkeys, not men."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Por Deus!</i> Whoever said that was a fool trying to appear wise!" Pedro
+snorted. "We have seen the poison death, and we know."</p>
+
+<p>McKay also shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Experiments have been made with the wurali of the Macusis," he stated.
+"It was tried on a hog, a sloth&mdash;and a sloth is mighty hard to
+kill&mdash;also on mules, and on a full-grown ox weighing almost half a ton.
+It killed every one of them."</p>
+
+<p>A momentary silence followed. Tim gazed sourly at the arrow, now
+harmless but still sinister.</p>
+
+<p>"Urrrgh!" he growled. "Cap, ye had a narrer squeak&mdash;come near gittin' it
+from in front, and behind, too. Wisht I could have drilled that guy."</p>
+
+<p>The bushmen grinned. And Louren&ccedil;o's next speech was amazing.</p>
+
+<p>"Be thankful you did not. That bullet might have killed us all."</p>
+
+<p>After enjoying their puzzled expressions a moment he continued.</p>
+
+<p>"We are nearer to a Mayoruna <i>maloca</i> than I thought. Not the one I
+intended to seek, but a smaller one. It is about three days' journey
+from here, and to reach it we must go through the bush. The man who left
+this arrow here to-day is from that <i>maloca</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"A week ago his brother went hunting, and he has not returned. So this
+young savage and three of his comrades now are searching the bush for
+some sign of him. To-day they separated, each going in a different
+direction, agreeing to meet again to-night at a place less than half a
+day's journey from here. This man circled around and worked along this
+creek, knowing his brother would hardly go beyond the water. He spied
+our canoes, then sought the men who had come in them and found you.</p>
+
+<p>"He watched you for some time, and if you had not rushed at him he would
+have slipped away without attacking you, for he was alone and he saw
+your guns. But when you, Capitao, suddenly leaped at him he darted away,
+then stopped long enough to send an arrow at you. After that he dodged
+out of sight and ran to the camp of his three friends. He is there now,
+telling about you."</p>
+
+<p>"Great guns! You chaps are wizards!" cried Knowlton. "How do you know
+all this?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because we met him while on our way back here. He was running hard, and
+we heard him, so we blocked him. After we convinced him that we were
+friendly we talked for some time&mdash;I can speak their tongue&mdash;and he told
+us about you. He was sure you were enemies to him and his people, and
+believed also you had killed his missing brother, and he was going first
+to rejoin his companions and then hasten to the <i>maloca</i> to bring all
+their fighters against you. It was well that we met him in time. It was
+well, too, that you did not shoot him&mdash;or even shoot at him. His
+companions would have learned of it, and then&mdash;death for us all."</p>
+
+<p>"And now what?"</p>
+
+<p>"Now, comrades, we all go to the <i>maloca</i> of that man. We meet him and
+the other three to-morrow at the place where we talked to him to-day. I
+told him we were going to visit that other chief whom I knew, and,
+though he was at first suspicious of a trap, he finally agreed to lead
+us to his own chief. So in the morning we march. Now let us sleep."</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton and McKay glanced at each other and nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Luck's with us so far," said the captain.</p>
+
+<p>"Right. We just march right into Jungle Town with bodyguard and
+everything. Pretty soft! Wonder if they'll turn out the tomtom band to
+drum us in."</p>
+
+<p>Tim said nothing. He squinted again at the headless arrow, then
+inspected the breech bolt of his rifle.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE WAY OF THE JUNGLE</h3>
+
+
+<p>Dawn came, dismal, damp, and chill. Moisture dripped drearily from the
+upper reaches, and under the dense canopy of leaves and limbs the gloom
+and the fog together made a murk wherein the early-rising bushmen were
+scarcely visible to the North Americans ten feet away. Yet day had come,
+or was coming; the noise of the animal world left little doubt of that.</p>
+
+<p>By the light of a sullen smoky fire and oil-smeared torches Pedro and
+Louren&ccedil;o made up their packs, cording them roughly with bark-cloth
+strips brought from headquarters. The Americans, after eating a more
+solid meal than the Brazilians seemed to require, also rolled their
+blankets, hammocks, nets, and other paraphernalia; strapped the outfits
+into the army pack harnesses which they had transported for thousands of
+miles and never yet used; crammed their web belts with cartridges; slung
+their sheathed machetes down their left thighs; looked to their guns;
+and announced themselves ready to go.</p>
+
+<p>While the northerners made these final preparations their guides slipped
+away for a time. Pedro, on his return, announced that the canoes had
+been concealed. Louren&ccedil;o, bringing back the freshly filled canteens of
+the ex-army men, delivered with them the marching orders of the day.</p>
+
+<p>"If you thirst, comrades, drink only from your canteens. If the canteens
+fail, never fill them from flowing water unless the Indians also drink
+from the stream. There are always small pools to be found, and, though
+their water may be warm and stale, it is not likely to be poisoned, as
+the streams may be.</p>
+
+<p>"To-day, and every day after we meet the cannibals, make no suspicious
+moves. Do not speak harshly. Do not laugh or sneer at them. They are
+unreasoning and easily insulted, and lifelong foes when angered. Let me
+do the talking.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not hold a gun in a threatening manner or draw pistols unless you
+must fight. Then kill.</p>
+
+<p>"Above all, pay no attention to their women.</p>
+
+<p>"Now we go. I lead."</p>
+
+<p>He turned and strode away into the fog as easily and surely as if
+cat-eyed and cat-footed. Pedro swung nonchalantly after him. The others
+followed in order, hitching at their backstraps.</p>
+
+<p>The ghostly haze about them now was paler, but through the interstices
+overhead came no glint of sunshine, nor even the glow of a clear dawn.
+The whole sky evidently was overcast, and around the marching men the
+gloom still lay thick. Yet Louren&ccedil;o's eyes seemed to bore through the
+shades and the dark shroud blurring the trunks, for his steady gait did
+not falter. The little file hung close together, for all knew that any
+man straggling would be instantly lost.</p>
+
+<p>Worming around gigantic columns, crawling over rotting trunks long laid
+low, changing direction abruptly when blocked by some great butt too
+high to be scaled, sinking ankle-deep in clinging mud, the venturesome
+band wound along through the wilderness. Repeated glances at his compass
+showed McKay that the general trend of the march was southeast; but the
+impassable obstacles encountered at frequent intervals necessitated not
+only detours, but sometimes actual back-tracking.</p>
+
+<p>"Walk four miles to advance one," was his thought. And for some time it
+seemed that such was the case. But then the ground changed, the light
+improved, the trees thinned, and the undergrowth became more dense&mdash;and,
+paradoxically, the rate of progress improved.</p>
+
+<p>This was because the smaller growth gave the two leaders a chance to cut
+their way straight onward instead of dodging about; and cut they did.
+Their machetes swung with untiring energy, opening a path through what
+seemed an impenetrable tangle. Now every yard of movement was a yard
+gained. But the ground was rising and the struggle up some of the sharp
+slopes winded more than one man.</p>
+
+<p>Then the slope dipped the other way, and they slipped down into a ravine
+where water gleamed darkly. Here a halt was called while the leaders
+sought for a fallen tree. Tim squatted and mopped his face for the
+hundredth time.</p>
+
+<p>"Gosh! This is what I call travelin'!" he panted. "Flounderin' round in
+mud soup, bit to death by skeeters and them what-ye-call-'em
+flies&mdash;piums&mdash;sweatin' yerself bone dry and totin' forty thousand
+pounds, on yer back, not to mention hardware slung all over ye&mdash;this
+ain't no place for a minister's son or a fat guy, I'll tell the world.
+And this is only the start!"</p>
+
+<p>A call from Pedro forestalled any answer. The trio struggled along to
+the spot where the guides waited at the butt of a slanting tree trunk
+spanning the gulf. As they reached it Pedro walked carefully up the
+trunk, carrying a long slender sapling, which he lowered and fixed in
+the bottom of the stream. Then, steadying himself with the upper end of
+this pole, he continued his journey to the other side, where he flipped
+the sapling back to Louren&ccedil;o. One by one the others crossed, slipping,
+almost losing balance, but managing to evade a fall. Tim, walking the
+precarious bridge and looking down, saw that the surface of the water
+was dotted with the heads of venomous snakes.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you following your trail of yesterday?" demanded McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"No, Capitao. Yesterday we circled. To-day we go as nearly straight as
+possible."</p>
+
+<p>"And you can find the appointed place by this new route?" The captain's
+tone was dubious.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly. Else I should go the other way. Come."</p>
+
+<p>Up another bank they toiled, and on through rugged country which seemed
+momentarily to become higher and harder to traverse. In the minds of the
+Americans grew suspicion that, for the first time, the Brazilians were
+bluffing; it seemed impossible for any man to keep his sense of
+direction in such a maze. But they said no word and followed on.</p>
+
+<p>At length the leader paused and sent the long call of the mutum floating
+through the trees. No answer came. After a moment the line moved on,
+each man peering ahead with sharper gaze, each holding a little tighter.
+To the Americans, at least, the thought of possible ambush loomed large.</p>
+
+<p>Four man-eating savages, hidden in this labyrinthine tangle and armed
+with arrows whose slightest scratch meant death, could strike down every
+man of this expedition without even a wound in return; for of what avail
+were high-power guns, automatic pistols, and machetes against invisible
+enemies? Yet there was assurance in Louren&ccedil;o's confident air, and
+reassurance in the thought that these tribemen would be unlikely to
+assail a band avowedly on its way to visit their chief.
+Besides&mdash;Knowlton smiled grimly&mdash;even if the Mayorunas hungered for
+human flesh it would be more economical of labor to let the meat travel
+to the slaughterhouse on its own legs than to kill it here and carry it
+home.</p>
+
+<p>Again the mutum whistle drifted away. Again no answer came. For a short
+distance farther the file continued its march. Then, in a small opening
+where the uptorn roots of a tree rose like a wall at one side, it
+halted.</p>
+
+<p>"The place of meeting," Pedro said. All peered around. None saw anything
+but the upstanding roots, the forest jumble, the misty serpentine
+lianas. None heard any sound but their own hoarse breathing, the solemn
+drip of water, the insect hum, and the occasional melancholy notes of
+birds. The place seemed bare of life. Yet upon McKay came again that
+feeling of being watched.</p>
+
+<p>Slowly, deeply, Louren&ccedil;o spoke. The words meant nothing to his mates.
+They were like no words they knew. His eyes roved about as he talked,
+and it was evident that he saw no more than did the silent men behind
+him. But they guessed that he said he and they were there as agreed,
+with peace in their hearts, and that he was telling the men of the
+wilderness to come forward without fear. And they guessed rightly.</p>
+
+<p>As quietly as a phantom of the mist a man took shape at the edge of the
+tree roots. Tall, straight, slender, symmetrically proportioned, with
+unblemished skin of light-bronze hue, straight black hair, and deep dark
+eyes, he was a splendid type of savage. Face and body were adorned with
+glossy paint&mdash;scarlet and black rings around the eyes, two red stripes
+from temple to chin, wavy lines on arms and chest. He held a bow longer
+than himself, with a five-foot arrow fitted loosely to the string and
+pointed downward, but ready for instant use. Diagonally across his body
+ran a cord supporting a quiver, from which the feathered shafts of
+several arrows projected above his left shoulder. Around his waist
+looped another cord from which dangled a small loin mat. Otherwise he
+was totally nude&mdash;a bronze statue of freedom.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o spoke again in the same quiet tone. The savage stepped warily
+forward. At the same moment three other naked men appeared with equal
+stealth from tree trunks which had seemed barren of all life. Like the
+first, each of these held an arrow ready, but pointing downward; and
+each moved with the slow, velvety step of a hunting jaguar. Their eyes
+searched those of these strange men of another world who, wearing
+useless clothing, carrying heavy weapons of steel, burdening themselves
+with queer weights on their backs, now invaded the wilderness which they
+and their fathers had roamed untrammeled for centuries. The invaders in
+turn studied the faces of the Mayorunas, of whom so many gruesome tales
+were told. For long silent minutes primitive and civilized man probed
+each other for signs of treachery&mdash;and found none.</p>
+
+<p>Tim, forgetting the orders of the day, spoke out abruptly. At the gruff
+jar of his voice the wild men started and raised their weapons.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, are those guys cannibals? I was lookin' to see some ugly mutts
+with underslung jaws and mops o' frizzy hair, like them Feejee Islanders
+ye see pitchers of. Barrin' the paint, I've seen worse-lookin' fellers
+than these back home."</p>
+
+<p>With which he gave the savages a wide, unmistakably approving grin.</p>
+
+<p>"Shut up!" muttered McKay.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o, unruffled, made instant capital of Tim's remarks.</p>
+
+<p>"My comrade of the red hair," he said in the Indian tongue, "has never
+before seen the mighty warriors of the Mayorunas, and is astonished to
+find them such handsome men. He says his own countrymen are not so good
+to look upon."</p>
+
+<p>Slowly the menacing arrows sank. As the savages studied Tim's wholesome
+grin and absorbed the broad flattery of Louren&ccedil;o a slight smile passed
+over their faces. They stood more at ease. The whites sensed at once
+that, for a moment, at least, a friendly footing had been established,
+and relaxed from their own tension.</p>
+
+<p>Once more Louren&ccedil;o spoke, motioning toward the farther distances. The
+Indian who had first appeared now replied briefly. Two of the others
+stepped back to their trees and lifted long, hollow tubes.</p>
+
+<p>"What's them?" demanded Tim.</p>
+
+<p>"Blowguns," Pedro answered. "They use them for small or thin-skinned
+game. See, the two blowgun men carry also short darts in their quivers,
+and small pouches of poison."</p>
+
+<p>"Uh-huh. They like their poison a dang sight better 'n I do. Say, are
+them guys goin' to march behind us? I don't want no poison needles
+slipped into my back, accidental or other ways."</p>
+
+<p>Two of the savages were walking toward the rear of the line. Knowlton,
+exasperated, snapped out:</p>
+
+<p>"They'll walk where they like, and you'll do well to give us more
+marching and less mouth. You nearly spilled the beans just now, and if
+Louren&ccedil;o hadn't said something that pleased these fellows we all might
+be in the soup this minute. Pipe down!"</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, Looey, I only said these guys were good-lookin'. Ain't no fight in
+words like that."</p>
+
+<p>"You heard the orders this morning. Let Louren&ccedil;o do the talking. That
+goes! We're skating on thin ice&mdash;so thin that if it breaks we drop plump
+into hell. Less noise!"</p>
+
+<p>"Right, sir," was the sulky answer. "I'm deaf and dumb."</p>
+
+<p>"March," added McKay. The head of the column already was on the move,
+led by the tallest Indian and a blowgun man, behind whom walked the two
+Brazilians. The whole line took up the step in turn and passed on into
+the unknown.</p>
+
+<p>Again McKay consulted his compass at intervals, finding that now the
+route led more to the south, though there still was an easterly trend.
+After a time, however, the telltale needle informed him that they were
+proceeding almost due east, and glances at the surroundings showed that
+on their right was a densely matted mass of undergrowth. Not long
+afterward another interwoven brush wall blocked the way, and this time
+the leader veered to the west. Not until an opening appeared did he
+resume his southward course. It dawned on McKay that the savages, having
+no bush knives, were accustomed to follow the line of least resistance.
+This obviously increased the distance traveled.</p>
+
+<p>The men of Coronel Nunes, too, perceived this. A halt was called, during
+which Louren&ccedil;o talked with the guide, tapped his machete, and evidently
+protested against needless detours. The leader, with a few words,
+pointed south. Louren&ccedil;o nodded and replied. The march was resumed, and
+when the next impenetrable tangle was encountered the Indians in the van
+stepped aside, the machetes of the Brazilians flashed out, and a way was
+cut straight through. From that time on the long knives came into
+frequent play and a direct course was maintained.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, with a grunt of warning, the tall tribesman stopped. The plan
+of chopping through instead of going around had brought the Indians into
+a part of the forest which they had not heretofore traversed in their
+search for the missing hunter. Now they stood in a small trough between
+the knolls, under good-sized trees around which grew little brush. The
+ground was soft, almost watery. In the damp air, faint but unmistakable,
+hung the odor of death.</p>
+
+<p>The savages at the rear came forward at once. All four of them spread
+out and, sniffing the air, advanced up the trough. A cry broke from one
+of them. The others, and the white men, too, hastened to the spot whence
+the call had come.</p>
+
+<p>Scattered about in the soft muck were bones, two skulls, bits of tawny
+fur, a long bow, several big-game arrows. Around them the ground was
+marked with many tracks. Most of the imprints were of the vultures which
+had stripped the bones, but there were others&mdash;those of a barefoot man,
+of a great cat, and of a couple of wild hogs. The peccary tracks went
+straight on, but those of the man and the cat showed that a fierce
+struggle had occurred. And one of the two grinning skulls was that of a
+jaguar.</p>
+
+<p>The story was plain. The hunter, following fast on the trail of the
+hogs, had suddenly met the jaguar. He had shot it; one arrow, blood
+stained for more than a foot above the barb, proved that. But in the few
+seconds of life left to it the animal had sprung and fatally torn the
+man. Then, as usual, had dropped the black scavengers of the sky to rend
+them both.</p>
+
+<p>Silently the men of the bush and the men of the north looked down at the
+brief history written in the mud&mdash;a story only a week old, yet ancient
+as human life itself&mdash;primitive man and ferocious brute destroying each
+other as in the prehistoric days when saber-toothed tiger and troglodyte
+hunted and slew for the right to live. And as it had been then, so it
+was now. The living read the tale of tragedy and passed on, leaving the
+bones behind them. Only, before they went, the Mayorunas threw the
+remnants of the jaguar aside and piled the bones of their dead comrade
+together in one place. Then, bearing with them his bow and arrows, they
+resumed their way without a word.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+
+<h3>A DUEL WITH DEATH</h3>
+
+
+<p>Rain came and went.</p>
+
+<p>The first night's camp of the strangely assorted company was a wet one,
+for well on in the day the skies poured down the watery weight which had
+been troubling them once morning. Yet even in such miserable weather the
+four tribesmen of the Mayorunas declined to sleep in the same camp with
+the whites. They accepted the food tendered them, but when it was eaten
+they withdrew to some covert of their own to spend the night. Whereby
+the whites knew that, though their guides now could no longer suspect
+them of killing the lone hunter, they still were not accepted as
+friends.</p>
+
+<p>"Did ye say them guys had a trick of jabbin' men in their hammicks at
+night, Renzo?" was Tim's significant question after the Indians had
+departed.</p>
+
+<p>"Have no fear," Louren&ccedil;o assured him. "They have promised to take us
+safely to their chief."</p>
+
+<p>"How much is the word of a cannibal worth?" asked Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"Worth everything, so long as you do nothing to make them forget it,
+senhor. Being uncivilized, they are not liars."</p>
+
+<p>The lieutenant eyed him sharply, half minded to regard the answer as
+insolent. But there was no insolence in the Brazilian's straightforward
+gaze, and McKay laughed approvingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Well spoken!" was the captain's comment.</p>
+
+<p>"Among those people there are but two great crimes," Louren&ccedil;o added.
+"They are, to speak falsely or to be a coward."</p>
+
+<p>"Wherein a goodly portion of the so-called civilized world would fail to
+measure up to the standards of these cannibals," McKay said. "By the
+way, have you asked them about the Raposa?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Capitao. It is as well not to put into their heads the idea that we
+are hunting anyone here. I shall say nothing of that matter until we
+reach the chief who knows me."</p>
+
+<p>"Good idea."</p>
+
+<p>With that the talk ended and all sought their hammocks, dog tired from
+the day's travel. No watch was kept, for, as Pedro quaintly phrased it,
+"We now are in the hands of God and the cannibals." Nor was any watch
+needed.</p>
+
+<p>Daybreak brought sunlight. While the breakfast coffee was being boiled
+the four wild men appeared silently and simultaneously, one bringing a
+red howling monkey and another a large green parrot as their
+contributions to the morning meal. Neither bird nor animal showed any
+wound except a slightly discolored spot surrounding a skin puncture no
+larger than if made by a woman's hatpin&mdash;the marks left by poisoned
+darts from the ten-foot blowguns. When the meat was cooked they offered
+portions to the whites, of whom Tim alone refused.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd as quick eat a rat killed with Paris green," he growled. "No
+poisoned meat gits into my stummick if I know it."</p>
+
+<p>"Bosh!" scoffed McKay. "It's perfectly wholesome&mdash;though it's tough as a
+rubber boot."</p>
+
+<p>"And I might tell you, senhores, that among these people it is an insult
+to refuse any food offered you," added Louren&ccedil;o. "I advise you to forget
+about the poison hereafter and eat what is put before you, even if it
+stinks."</p>
+
+<p>His advice was emphasized by the evident displeasure of the tribesmen,
+who, though saying nothing, looked rather grimly at the man who had
+despised their provisions. But Louren&ccedil;o then smoothed over the matter by
+telling them that the red-haired man was sick at the stomach that
+morning&mdash;which, at that particular moment, was not far from the truth.</p>
+
+<p>Soon the triglot column was once more on its way across the hill
+country, which hourly grew higher and rougher&mdash;a constant succession of
+ridges and ravines. Louren&ccedil;o, pointing out the absence of water marks on
+the trees of the uplands, said that now the land of the great annual
+floods had been left behind; for even the sixty-foot rise of waters in
+the rainy season could not reach to these hilltops. With the entry into
+this terra firma the travelers had also found the sun again, the dank
+mist of yesterday having vanished. Nevertheless, the going was fully as
+hard as on the previous day, because of the density of the bush and of
+the labor of crossing the narrow but deep streams flowing at the bottom
+of nearly every clove. Few words were exchanged, every man needing his
+breath for the work of walking.</p>
+
+<p>As before, the keen machetes of the Brazilians opened a direct route
+through all opposing undergrowth. When a brief halt was called at noon
+the Mayorunas, who seemed to know exactly where they were despite the
+fact that they had never before followed this straight course, informed
+Louren&ccedil;o that much circuitous traveling had already been saved, and that
+by tramping hard until sundown they might succeed in reaching the tribal
+<i>maloca</i> that night. But McKay vetoed the idea of a forced march.</p>
+
+<p>"This gait is fast enough and hard enough," he declared. "No sense in
+exhausting ourselves to save a few hours' time. Also, we don't want to
+go staggering into the Mayoruna village with our tongues hanging out and
+our knees wabbling. First impressions are lasting with such people, and
+they might get an idea we were weaklings."</p>
+
+<p>To which all except the savages, who did not understand the language of
+the white man, assented approvingly.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it was the Mayorunas themselves who delayed arrival at their
+<i>maloca</i>&mdash;the Mayorunas and a monkey. When the sinking sun was still two
+hours high, and while the leader was forcing the pace as if determined
+to reach home that night whether the rest liked it or not, the monkey
+upset any such plan.</p>
+
+<p>He was a big gray monkey, and he was high up in the branches of a tall
+matamata tree, where he deemed himself safe from the many creatures
+laboring along the ground below. Wherefore he chattered impudently down
+at them and, as the tall Indian guide halted, showed his teeth
+derisively. The savage grunted. The man behind him also grunted and
+lifted his blowgun. But the leader growled at him and the blowgun sank.</p>
+
+<p>With a swift sweep of the hand the guide drew from his quiver one of
+those long, poisoned arrows and fitted it to the bow cord, which he had
+laid on the ground. With two toes of each foot he held the cord firmly
+on the soil. His right hand lightly grasped the arrow and aimed it up at
+the insolent primate. His left drew the bow up, up, into an arc.</p>
+
+<p><i>Twang!</i> the cord thrummed as his lifted toes released it. The arrow
+whirred aloft. Then a snarl of chagrin from the marksman blended with
+the grunts of his mates. The arrow had failed to reach the quarry.</p>
+
+<p>It had missed, however, by a mere hand's breadth&mdash;missed only because it
+struck the limb directly under the monkey, where it hung by the tip from
+the bark. Muttering something which may have been a Mayoruna
+malediction, the savage moved aside a step or two, drew another arrow,
+and set it to the cord with more care than before. But while he did this
+the monkey was not idle.</p>
+
+<p>Chattering in rage, the animal leaned down, worked the arrow loose from
+the bark, and threw it aside. The deadly shaft turned in air, then
+plunged aimlessly earthward. At that instant all below were watching the
+guide, who in turn was looking at his toes and placing the new arrow in
+position. Unseen, the other missile hurtled down&mdash;and ripped across the
+back of the marksman's left hand.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant the tall cannibal stood as if petrified, staring at his
+cut hand and the shaft now sticking upright in the ground beside him.
+Then, in simple symbolism, he reversed the new arrow and stabbed it also
+into the dirt. Dropping his bow, he lay down on his back.</p>
+
+<p>"Yuara will draw bow no more. Yuara goes to join the spirits of the
+dead," he said, calmly.</p>
+
+<p>Mechanically Louren&ccedil;o translated the words. McKay sprang forward.</p>
+
+<p>"No!" he disputed. "Not without a try for life, anyhow! Merry, sling a
+tourniquet! Quick!"</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton jumped to the side of Yuara, tied a handkerchief above the
+elbow, twisted it tight. McKay whipped from a pocket a keen-bladed
+knife. In one swift ruthless slash he laid open the arm from elbow to
+knuckles.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep that tourniquet tight!" he snapped. "If the blood once gets past
+it he's gone. Tim, get out the salt bag! Louren&ccedil;o, tell this fellow to
+breathe deep and keep it up!"</p>
+
+<p>While Tim burrowed into his pack for the salt, Louren&ccedil;o spoke, as much
+for the benefit of the other tribesmen as for that of Yuara; for the
+three Mayorunas stood in ominous silence, watching the outrush of blood
+caused by the knife of the white man.</p>
+
+<p>"The white man of the black beard, who is very wise, will save Yuara to
+draw many a good bow if Yuara will do as he says. Let Yuara breathe
+deeply, that the spirit of life remain in him to fight against the demon
+of death. Even now the poison rushes out of the arm of Yuara."</p>
+
+<p>"Yuara cannot live," was Yuara's cool reply. "Where once the poison has
+entered, there follows death."</p>
+
+<p>"Is Yuara then a coward, that he will die without a fight? Then he is no
+Mayoruna, for no Mayoruna is a coward. Let Yuara die if he will. His
+comrades shall carry to their <i>maloca</i> the tale that, although the white
+man would have saved him, he died like an old woman, because he had not
+the will to live!"</p>
+
+<p>Fire shot into the eyes of the prostrate man. He ground his teeth and
+struggled to rise and throttle the insulting Brazilian.</p>
+
+<p>"No, not that way," Louren&ccedil;o went on at once. "Yuara can fight the death
+demon only by drawing into himself the air in which is the spirit of
+life. The wise white man has stopped the poison at the place where the
+cloth is tied, and he knows the air spirits will help Yuara if Yuara
+will breathe deep and long. If he will not, then the white man's
+medicine cannot save him. Yuara's life or death is in his own hands."</p>
+
+<p>In his heart Louren&ccedil;o had faint hope that the injured man would live.
+But he knew the rest of the cannibal tribe must soon hear the tale of
+this incident from the three now present, and he was preparing an
+excellent excuse for the failure of McKay to save him. Whether Yuara
+lived or not, the Mayorunas now would know that the whites had done
+their utmost for him, and that very fact might make a vast difference.</p>
+
+<p>Yuara, though his eyes still flamed, sank back under McKay's restraining
+weight and obeyed orders. After the first couple of breaths he settled
+into his task and his chest rose and fell rhythmically.</p>
+
+<p>"Here's yer salt, Cap. What'll I do with it?"</p>
+
+<p>"You come here and hold this tourniquet. Don't let it slip! Merry, fill
+this chap's mouth with salt. Louren&ccedil;o, tell him to hold it as long as
+possible, then swallow it. Now, Merry, fix up a good strong salt
+poultice. The rest of you make camp. We've got a stiff fight on our
+hands, and we can't go farther until we've either won or lost."</p>
+
+<p>The Brazilians glanced at the sun shadows and remained where they were.
+According to their experience, Yuara should be dead within ten minutes
+at most. Time enough to make camp when they knew how this venture would
+result. The Mayorunas also stood fast and watched for the shadow of
+death to blanch the face of their stricken mate.</p>
+
+<p>But the minutes dragged past and Yuara's eyes did not grow dim. His
+first resignation over and his fighting blood aroused, he was battling
+grimly against fate. At times his deep respirations were broken by
+sudden gasps, and spasmodic quivers shook his whole body. But he
+breathed on, paying no heed to the burning pain of his ripped and salted
+arm.</p>
+
+<p>"By cripes! he's puttin' up a man's scrap!" blurted Tim. "Stay with it,
+old feller. Ye'll win out yet!"</p>
+
+<p>And as more minutes passed and the wounded man still breathed, a murmur
+of wonderment passed among the cannibals and the men of Nunes. Yuara
+should be dead, yet he was not even paralyzed. Such a thing had never
+before been known in this bush.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o touched Pedro's arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Find a spot where we can make camp," he said. "I must stay here to
+speak to the wild men if words are needed."</p>
+
+<p>Reluctantly Pedro went away. Soon he was back with news of a suitable
+place. He found all bending closer over Yuara, whose breathing had
+become stertorous and whose eyes seemed fixed.</p>
+
+<p>"Going!" was the bushman's thought. But the others would not have it so.</p>
+
+<p>"How 'bout a shot o' booze to jolt his heart, Cap?" suggested Tim, whose
+whole soul was in the fight.</p>
+
+<p>McKay nodded. Knowlton quickly produced brandy and poured a stiff dose
+down Yuara's throat. It took hold at once, and light came back into the
+Indian's eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Got a good chance yet," McKay asserted. "Don't loosen that tourniquet.
+Let the arm mortify, if necessary, but hold that blood away from the
+heart at all costs. I'll chop his arm off at the shoulder before I'll
+give in."</p>
+
+<p>His hard-set face showed he meant it.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o spoke to the Mayorunas, urging that camp be made at once. He
+and Pedro strode away, and all three of the Indians followed.</p>
+
+<p>"Really think he'll pull through, Rod?" Knowlton asked, then. "If he
+does you're a miracle worker."</p>
+
+<p>"It's an experiment," McKay confessed, watching Yuara with unswerving
+intentness. "Never saw this done, but it's worth a try&mdash;and I honestly
+believe it will work. I saved an Indian over in Guiana once by cutting
+off his arm as soon as he was hit, but I want to keep this fellow's arm
+for him if possible. Feed him some more salt."</p>
+
+<p>Time passed unheeded. Sounds of labor not far off told that camp was
+being built. Presently the absent five returned, two of the Mayorunas
+carrying a crude but strong litter constructed from saplings and
+giant-fern leaves. McKay rose stiffly on cramped legs.</p>
+
+<p>"All right. You can move him," he consented.</p>
+
+<p>Carefully Yuara was lifted to the litter and transported to the new
+camp. There the Americans found not only the open shed, or <i>tambo</i>,
+usually constructed by the Brazilians, but also a somewhat similar
+shelter erected by the Indians. In the latter stood two stout crotched
+stakes, firmly braced&mdash;the handiwork of Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o. And to
+these, with tough bush rope, the Indians fastened the litter of Yuara,
+thus forming a rude but effective hammock.</p>
+
+<p>While McKay and Knowlton continued their ministrations to the stricken
+man the rest of the camp work was completed, the Mayorunas making
+hanging beds for themselves from withes, leaves, and bush cord, and the
+Brazilians slinging the hammocks of their own party and opening packs.</p>
+
+<p>Night fell and the wounded man lived on. Supper was eaten, pipes smoked,
+the regular activities of the early hours of darkness gone through&mdash;and
+Yuara lived on. His deep breathing had become automatic, and his eyes
+stared straight up in concentration on his battle with the death demon.</p>
+
+<p>At length he was seized with violent nausea which convulsed him for a
+time. But when the spasms passed he lay back more easily, and a faint
+smile flitted over his face as he looked at the white men.</p>
+
+<p>"Been expecting that," said McKay. "Might loosen that ligature now&mdash;just
+a few seconds.... Tighten it! All right." Alter watching the sick man a
+little longer he added: "Now I'm going to eat and smoke. Feel like
+taking a drink, too, but guess I won't. The Indian will pull through
+now, I think."</p>
+
+<p>When he had returned to the Indian hut with pipe aglow, Knowlton asked
+him, "Now tell us how you doped out this cure."</p>
+
+<p>"Combination of various things. Salt is a partial antidote to venom in
+the blood, and I got it into him in three ways&mdash;by mouth absorption, by
+the stomach, and by the salt poultice, which drew out some of the poison
+from the forearm and helped neutralize what remained. Ripping his arm of
+course let out a lot of bad blood. Ligature above the elbow stopped most
+of the rest&mdash;though some sneaked past that point, I'm pretty sure.</p>
+
+<p>"Big thing, though, was the deep breathing. Remember I told you about
+the experiments that killed mules and an ox? Another experiment was
+this&mdash;opening the windpipe of a poisoned mule after the heart stopped,
+inserting a pair of bellows, and starting artificial respiration. After
+four hours of this the mule came to life and stayed alive&mdash;though he was
+a wreck for a year afterward.</p>
+
+<p>"I just put all these together, made the Indian do his own
+breathing&mdash;and here he is. I'm going to sit up awhile longer and watch
+him, but the critical period is over. You chaps can turn in."</p>
+
+<p>But none turned in until midnight, when no doubt remained that
+Louren&ccedil;o's prophecy would come true&mdash;that Yuara would live to draw bow
+again. Then, when the slashed arm had been thoroughly cleansed and
+bound, Louren&ccedil;o spoke once more to the savages.</p>
+
+<p>"The medicine of the wise white man and the air spirits have saved Yuara
+from the death demon. Yuara has fought as a man of his tribe should
+fight, and so has lived when he would have died. To-morrow Yuara shall
+once more see his people, the first man of the Mayorunas to come back
+from the death of poison. And he and his comrades shall tell of the
+white man's wisdom, without which he now would lie cold on the ground."</p>
+
+<p>"So shall it be," Yuara himself faintly answered. "Yuara, son of Rana,
+second chief of the men of Suba, will not forget."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Por Deus!</i>" exclaimed Louren&ccedil;o. "Comrades, this man is no common
+hunter, but son of a subchief. Capitao, you have done good work to-day."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE CANNIBALS</h3>
+
+
+<p>Through the long, dim shadows of early morning the little column passed
+on the last leg of its journey to the <i>maloca</i> of Suba, chief of this
+outlying tribe of the Mayorunas. At its head marched Yuara, his left arm
+incased in bandages, his face drawn and pallid, his stride stiff and
+springless, but still carrying his weapons and stoically setting the
+pace as befitted the son of a subchief. He had had no sleep; he had lain
+in the gates of death; his arm ached cruelly; yet a warm glow shone in
+his hollow eyes as he reflected on the fact that in all the unwritten
+history of his people he was the first man to survive the inexorable
+power of the wurali. As long as he lived this fact would lift him above
+the level of all his fellows. Even the chief could not boast of such a
+superhuman feat.</p>
+
+<p>The undergrowth this morning was not so thick as it had been, and the
+machetes of Louren&ccedil;o and Pedro stayed in their sheaths. The ground, too,
+was more level and the footing more firm. After some three hours of
+walking the Americans found that they had come into a faint path.</p>
+
+<p>Somewhat to the bewilderment of the white men, who expected the Indians
+to increase their speed now that the way home lay under their feet, the
+leading pair slowed their gait. Moreover, they scanned the trail with
+intent care and watched the trees along the way. At length, with a
+warning grunt, Yuara stepped out of the path and began a detour. His
+comrade and the Brazilians followed. The Americans stopped.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the idea?" demanded McKay, looking along the innocent-appearing
+path.</p>
+
+<p>"Probably a man trap, Capitao," answered Pedro. "Follow us."</p>
+
+<p>"Let's see the trap first."</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o called to Yuara, who stopped and grunted two words.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si</i>, it is a trap. A pit, Yuara says."</p>
+
+<p>Yuara spoke again, and Louren&ccedil;o added: "He says we must not touch it. It
+is there just before you, covered so cunningly that it looks exactly
+like the rest of the ground. The cover is a framework of sticks balanced
+on a pole, and the instant a man steps on it it gives way. He falls into
+a nine-foot hole whose sides are dug inward, so that they overhang above
+him. There the cannibals find him and kill him. I fell into one of those
+holes when I first came into this Mayoruna country, so I know just how
+they are made."</p>
+
+<p>"So? How did you get out?"</p>
+
+<p>"There were two of us, and I stood on the other man's shoulders while he
+lifted me high enough to jump out. Then I tied bush rope to a tree and
+he climbed up the rope. Come. Yuara waits."</p>
+
+<p>After a short circuit around the danger point the party returned to the
+path, and as they went on Louren&ccedil;o explained further concerning the pit:</p>
+
+<p>"Every approach to the <i>malocas</i> has this kind of trap hidden in it, and
+others also. The Indians recognize the places by some secret signal
+known only to themselves&mdash;a certain kind of stick or vine or something
+of the kind, placed where it can be seen by those who understand. The
+traps are made to stop any enemies who try to sneak up on the <i>malocas</i>
+and catch these people unawares. Another kind of trap is a spring bow or
+a blowgun shot by a vine stretched across the path. Still another is a
+piece of ground studded with poisoned araya bones which pierce the bare
+feet of anyone walking on them. It is well for us that we now have
+friendly guides."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite so," McKay agreed, dryly.</p>
+
+<p>Some distance farther on the leader again left the path, and this time
+all filed after him without comment. Pedro pointed significantly at a
+thin, tight-drawn bush cord stretched across the path at the height of a
+man's ankle&mdash;the trigger which would discharge hidden death at anything
+touching it. At another point, perhaps a hundred feet farther along, a
+third and last detour was made, and this time the nature of the trap was
+not revealed by anything on the ground. No questions were asked.</p>
+
+<p>With the passing of these three menaces Yuara resumed his former pace
+and abandoned his circumspection. Before long came sounds of communal
+life&mdash;the barking of a dog and shouts of children. Then suddenly the
+forest thinned, and after a few more strides the marchers found
+themselves in a clearing.</p>
+
+<p>Before them rose a big round house, about forty feet high and a hundred
+feet in diameter, its sides composed of palm logs, and its roof a thick
+thatch of palm leaves, whence smoke oozed lazily through an opening at
+the peak. A single low door, not more than four feet high, opened toward
+a creek a few rods away at the right. Near this doorway a couple of
+naked children, boy and girl, were playing with the dog, while beyond
+them a number of women, also nude, were busy at some kind of work.</p>
+
+<p>As Yuara and his fellow-tribesmen entered the open space the boy shouted
+a greeting and started running toward them. Then, seeing the white men
+filing from the bush behind the warriors, the youngster stood as if
+shocked motionless. After one long stare he screamed and bolted for the
+shelter of the <i>maloca</i>. Other screams echoed his as the women also saw
+the bearded outlanders. They, too, dived through the doorway.</p>
+
+<p>Out from behind the house leaped three warriors, two of whom already had
+fitted arrows to their bows, while the third&mdash;a powerful
+fellow&mdash;clutched a four-foot war club. Weapons raised, faces contracted
+into fighting masks, they stared speechless at the spectacle of the
+subchief's son calmly leading gun-bearing whites among them.</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton, though his attention was riveted on the astonished warriors,
+caught the quiet snick of Tim's safe-lock being turned off.</p>
+
+<p>"None of that, Tim!" he warned. "Put that safety on again. And don't
+hold your gun as if you intended to use it."</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, I was jest tryin' her to make sure she was all right."</p>
+
+<p>"Put it on!" snapped the lieutenant. Another tiny click told him the
+order was obeyed.</p>
+
+<p>Out from the doorway darted another warrior, stooping low to avoid
+hitting his head. Others followed instantly, all armed and ready for
+action. The opening was still vomiting tribesmen when Yuara and the rest
+reached it. But none made a hostile move when it was seen that the son
+of the subchief was in command and that the strangers seemed friendly.
+Yuara spoke, briefly but authoritatively, and the weapons sank. Then,
+with a word to his three companions, he ducked through the doorway. The
+other three remained where they were.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall have to wait now, comrades, until Yuara tells his father and
+the chief about us," Louren&ccedil;o said. "So let us take off our packs and
+rest."</p>
+
+<p>He set the example by laying his rifle on the ground, unslinging his
+pack, squatting beside it, and coolly rolling a cigarette. Apparently he
+was paying no attention whatever to the savages, who watched his every
+move. But McKay, glancing at him as he followed suit, saw that, for all
+his seeming unconcern, the Brazilian bush rover was keenly watchful and
+that his gun lay within reach of his hand.</p>
+
+<p>From within the tribal house sounded the monotonous voice of Yuara.
+After listening a moment Louren&ccedil;o quietly addressed the nearest warrior.
+A slightly surprised looked passed over the cannibal's face. He replied,
+and a slow conversation ensued.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the others looked over the array of savage fighting men.
+Except for difference of stature, build, and expression, they were as
+like as brothers. All were light skinned&mdash;hardly darker than the
+river-tanned whites themselves; all had straight-set eyes, with no hint
+of the slant often found among the Indians of the Amazon headwaters; and
+the cheek bones of all were fairly low. Their average stature was a
+little under six feet, and most of them had an athletic symmetry of
+physique. Their feet, McKay noticed, were small and shapely.</p>
+
+<p>All wore tall feather headdresses of parrot and mutum plumes. All had
+the scarlet and black rings around the eyes, the streaks from temple to
+chin, the wavy design on their bodies. And each wore in the cartilage of
+his nose a pair of small feathers slanting outward. At another time and
+under other circumstances the white men might have smiled at those nose
+feathers, which resembled odd mustaches; but as they studied the austere
+faces around them they found no occasion for merriment. Nor was the
+tension lessened by the sight of the weapons grasped in the strong hands
+of the warriors.</p>
+
+<p>Great bows and arrows, such as the hunters had borne, were supplemented
+here by the long clubs of heavy wood and by ugly spears. The clubs
+terminated in balls studded with jaguar teeth. The spears were triple
+pronged, each prong ending in a saw-toothed araya bone and each bone
+darkened by the fatal wurali. Frightful weapons they were&mdash;the one
+designed to smash skulls and tear out brains, the other to stab and
+poison at the same thrust.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o stopped talking, and the others observed that now the wild men
+stood more easily, their holds on their weapons loosened.</p>
+
+<p>"I have shown them, Capitao, that I can speak their tongue, and told
+them we go to visit the chief Monitaya as friend," he explained. "They
+tell me Monitaya has grown great since last I saw him. Another tribe
+which lost its chief and subchiefs by a swift sickness has joined his
+own, and he now rules two big <i>malocas</i> together. He is a powerful
+fighter, and if he is friendly to us we have a good chance of success.
+Ah! here is Yuara."</p>
+
+<p>The son of the subchief came through the doorway as he spoke, followed
+by an older man whose facial resemblance and ornaments indicated that he
+was the subchief himself. His headgear was more elaborate than that of
+his men, and around his shoulders and down his chest hung a brilliant
+feather dress, while a wide belt of green, blue, and black plumes
+encircled his hips. Yuara himself had inserted feathers in his nose and
+donned a headband of tall parrot plumes a trifle more ornate than those
+worn by the ordinary fighters, and somehow the simple addition seemed to
+transform him into a bigger, fiercer man. Also, his eyes now held a
+smoldering light which had not been there before.</p>
+
+<p>The older man, Rana, the subchief, glanced swiftly along the line of new
+faces. Then his gaze returned to McKay. His mouth set and his
+countenance turned hard. He spoke curtly to Yuara, who replied with one
+word. After another long, unpleasant look at McKay, who stared coldly
+back at him, Rana grunted a few words and re-entered the house.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o, nonplussed by the frigidity of the subchief where he had
+expected gratitude or at least hospitality, glanced questioningly at
+Yuara. But the young man stood mute, looking straight ahead.</p>
+
+<p>"The subchief says we shall enter and see the chief. We must leave our
+guns outside."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't like that," muttered McKay. "That subchief looks ugly."</p>
+
+<p>"But we must obey or provoke a fight, Capitao. Besides, our rifles would
+be useless inside, as they would be instantly seized if we lifted them.
+So let us make the best of it. But I think you can carry your pistols
+with you; they are covered by the holsters, and I do not believe these
+people know what they are. And since Rana spoke only of guns, we will
+keep our machetes. Come."</p>
+
+<p>"Wait a second."</p>
+
+<p>McKay dived a hand into his haversack and brought forth a heavy hunting
+knife with a gaudy red-and-white bone handle, sheathed and attached to a
+leather belt.</p>
+
+<p>"Brought this along as a present for some Indian who might do us a good
+turn," he explained. "Been thinking of giving it to Yuara, but now I'll
+pass it to the chief. Might make a difference. All right, let's go."</p>
+
+<p>With confident tread, but with some misgiving, the five advanced,
+leaving guns and packs on the ground. One by one they bent low and got
+through the doorway. Yuara, with a word to a clubman and a motion to the
+equipment, followed the whites, trailed in turn by his three companions
+of the forest. The clubman, after a curious inspection of the packs,
+stood on guard among them, his bludgeon grasped loosely but
+suggestively, ready to prevent any undue inquisitiveness by the rest.
+But soon he found himself alone, for the other tribesmen transferred
+their attention and themselves to the interior of the <i>maloca</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Within the house the soldiers of fortune halted a moment, adjusting
+their vision to the sudden diminution of light. Except for the sunshine
+pouring in at the smoke hole above and at the tiny door behind, the only
+light in the big room came from small cooking fires scattered about the
+place, and for the moment details were withheld from the newcomers'
+sight. Then they found themselves in what seemed a labyrinth of poles
+and hammocks.</p>
+
+<p>Through this confusion Yuara passed with familiar step, and in his wake
+the travelers went to a central fire around which was a comparatively
+clear space. Beyond, in a big hammock dyed with the symbolic scarlet and
+black and tasseled with many squirrel tails, sat a fat, small-eyed,
+heavy-jawed man whose elaborate feather dress and authoritative air
+proclaimed him chief. Beside him stood Rana and another subchief, lean
+and somber-faced. Behind this bulwark of tribal might huddled the women
+and children, staring wide-eyed. As the visitors stopped and returned
+the chief's unwinking regard the warriors packed themselves at their
+backs, blocking all chance of exit.</p>
+
+<p>When the shuffle of feet had died and no sound was audible, Yuara began
+to talk. In his deliberate way he told the complete narrative of his
+journey, which previously he had sketched only in outline. His three
+companions corroborated his tale from time to time by nods, and when the
+discovery of the slain hunter's bones was described one of those three
+stepped forward and laid the dead man's weapons on the ground before the
+chief. As Yuara went on he touched his bandaged arm and pointed to McKay
+and Knowlton. And as he concluded he motioned toward Louren&ccedil;o.</p>
+
+<p>Ignorant of the Indian language, but guessing the nature of his talk
+from his motions, the Americans stood patiently awaiting the next move.
+For a time all three of the chiefs remained silent; but all of them
+studied McKay, standing bolt upright with arms folded and the
+belt-wrapped knife partly concealed in the hollow of one elbow. Though
+it was evident that Yuara had given the captain full credit for saving
+his life, the faces of the head men showed no sign of friendliness. In
+fact, their expressions were distinctly ominous.</p>
+
+<p>At length the chief turned his eyes to Louren&ccedil;o. The veteran bushman
+promptly stepped forward and said his say. At the end he turned, took
+from McKay the knife, unrolled the belt, and dangled the weapon before
+the eyes of the rulers. They stared at it in obvious ignorance of its
+character. Not until the Brazilian drew the blade from its sheath and
+the glint of steel struck their vision did they show recognition. Then
+Chief Suba grunted, his little eyes lit up, and he reached for it.</p>
+
+<p>For a few minutes he sat gloating over the gift, admiring the bone
+handle, hefting the weight of the long blade, while the subchiefs gazed
+in envy. When he looked up his face was beaming. But then the sour-faced
+subchief at his left hand muttered something, and Suba's visage
+darkened. His eyes rested again on McKay, went to the bandaged arm of
+Yuara, dropped to his knife&mdash;the first steel knife ever owned by him or
+any man of the Suba tribe&mdash;and rose again to the black-bearded captain.
+Abruptly then he spoke out.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o stared in blank astonishment. After a puzzled moment he shook
+his head as if unable to believe he had heard aright. Suba, scowling,
+repeated what he had said. Louren&ccedil;o shook his head again, this time in
+vehement denial, and began to talk. But Suba, rising with surprising
+agility for a man of his weight, stopped him imperiously and spoke with
+finality. Slowly the Brazilian nodded and turned to his captain.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not understand this, Capitao. But these are the words of the
+chief:</p>
+
+<p>"'The white man with the black beard tries a trick, but it does not
+deceive the free men of the forest. The thing which he thinks to be
+hidden in his own heart is known to Suba and his chiefs. It is known
+also to the chief Monitaya, and to his chiefs, and to his men also. The
+white man is bold. And now his own boldness shall be his death.</p>
+
+<p>"'Since the white man has said he goes to visit the chief Monitaya, and
+since by some demon's power the white man has saved the life of Yuara,
+who is a man of Suba, the men of Suba will allow him to go in peace from
+this place. But Suba will see that he and his companions go to Monitaya,
+who will know how to deal with his visitors. The men of Suba will take
+the strangers at once to the canoes and carry them to Monitaya.</p>
+
+<p>"'If the white man of the black beard and the black mind thought the men
+of the jungle blind to the foulness he would do here, he is a fool. It
+is useless for him or his men to lie and say they know not what Suba
+means. Let him look into his own heart and he will know well.</p>
+
+<p>"'Suba has spoken.'</p>
+
+<p>"Something is wrong, Capitao, but I do not know what it is. It will do
+no good to argue. Let us go at once."</p>
+
+<p>Suba snarled commands to the warriors. They trooped toward the door.
+Without another word or glance at the three chiefs Louren&ccedil;o stalked
+after the Indians, and his comrades followed with stiff dignity.</p>
+
+<p>Outside, the savages picked up the rifles and packs and carried them to
+the creek, where small canoes lay. The five strangers were allowed to
+crowd themselves together in a four-man canoe, but their guns and packs
+were distributed among four other dugouts, into which armed paddlers
+entered. Other Indians brought provisions to the outgoing craft. In a
+very short time the leading canoe started off downstream, followed by
+the boat of the white men, behind which the other craft pressed close
+and vigilant.</p>
+
+<p>They swung in among the trees, and the <i>maloca</i> of Suba was blotted out.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
+
+<h3>BLACKBEARD</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Well," said Knowlton, after a period of silent paddling, "we have met
+the enemy and we are his'n. No harm done so far, though, and if old man
+Calisaya, or whatever his name is, wants to act nasty we can send him
+and a few others along the road to glory with our gats. We'll travel the
+same road, of course, but we'll take company with us."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si</i>, senhor," Pedro agreed. "And besides your pistols we still have
+our machetes. Yet I believe Louren&ccedil;o's words to the chief Monitaya will
+make all well. But I cannot help wondering&mdash;" He glanced at McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm wondering, too, Pedro," said the captain. "It's hardly possible
+that these people know why we're here, and hardly likely that they have
+any interest in the Raposa. Lord knows I've nothing else up my sleeve.
+It's a riddle to me."</p>
+
+<p>It remained a riddle to the rest, for no explanation could be gleaned
+from the Mayorunas. At the first halt, which did not come until nearly
+sundown, the Americans discovered that one of the men in the fore canoe
+was Yuara, who had been lying in the bottom of the craft and sleeping
+all the afternoon. From him Louren&ccedil;o attempted to get information as to
+the reason for Suba's enmity&mdash;but in vain. The tall fellow spoke not a
+word in reply, and his face remained unreadable.</p>
+
+<p>Camp was made, and by Yuara's direction the packs of the adventurers
+were restored to them. The rifles, however, remained under guard of
+savages appointed by the subchief's son. When the night meal was out of
+the way nothing remained but to seek hammocks and sleep, for further
+attempts at conversation by Louren&ccedil;o met with the same silent rebuff
+from every cannibal addressed. None showed active hostility by either
+look or manner, but it was plain that between wild and civilized men
+stood a wall&mdash;a wall not too high for the jungle dwellers to leap over
+in deadly action if occasion should be given. Wherefore the whites held
+themselves aloof, said little, and slept early.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad Yuara is with us," Louren&ccedil;o said. "As he promised, he does
+not forget what was done for him. He will keep this band in control, and
+unless I am much mistaken he will tell Monitaya all he knows of us,
+which surely will not do us any harm. At any rate, we can sleep in
+safety to-night. And since it does no good to puzzle about what is gone
+by or to worry about what has not yet to come to pass, let us sleep
+now."</p>
+
+<p>"Ho-hum!" yawned Tim. "Renzo, ye spill more solid sense to the square
+inch than any feller I seen in a long time. We're here because we're
+here; to-day's dead and to-morrer ain't born yet, and li'l' Timmy Ryan
+hits the hay right now. Night, gents."</p>
+
+<p>So, surrounded by man eaters, the trailers of the Raposa slept far more
+securely than on any night down the river when their companions had been
+supposedly civilized Peruvians. Whether a watch was kept by their guards
+during the night they neither knew nor cared, since they had no
+intention of attempting escape.</p>
+
+<p>They awoke to find the men of Suba diminished in number by half. Yuara,
+deigning to speak for the first time since leaving the <i>maloca</i>,
+explained that the absent men had gone hunting for their breakfasts.
+Before long the hunters came straggling back, bearing monkeys and birds,
+which were divided among their companions. None of this meat was offered
+to the prisoners, who ate unconcernedly from their pack rations. Tim,
+after watching the Indians sink their sharp-filed teeth into broiled
+monkey haunches and tear the meat from the bones, snorted and turned his
+back to them.</p>
+
+<p>"Look like a gang o' bloody-faced devils gobblin' babies," he muttered.
+"I'll believe now they're cannibals, all right."</p>
+
+<p>So uncomfortably apt was his simile that the others grimaced and turned
+their eyes elsewhere until the savage meal was finished. Then their
+attention became riveted on a queer proceeding at the canoe wherein
+Yuara had journeyed yesterday.</p>
+
+<p>To the gunwales amidships two of the men fastened a couple of small
+crotched posts. In the forks was laid a pole, crosswise of the boat, and
+from this, by slender fiber cords, four slabs of wood were hung.
+Strolling down to the canoe, the travelers found that athwart its bottom
+had been laid a crosspiece supporting two shorter crotched posts,
+between which stretched another transverse pole; and from this pole in
+turn the lower ends of the four slabs had been suspended. Now the
+savages joined the tips of each pair of slabs by carved end sections,
+and the contrivance seemed to be complete&mdash;a sort of grate, its bars
+sloping at an angle of forty-five degrees.</p>
+
+<p>As the Americans eyed the arrangement in perplexity, one of the crew
+picked up from the bow of the canoe a pair of mallets the heads of which
+were wrapped in hide. With these he struck the slabs in rapid
+succession. Out rolled four notes of astonishing volume&mdash;the first four
+notes of the musical scale. Again and again he ran them over, then
+stopped. The deep tones thrummed away along the creek and died.</p>
+
+<p>"By George! a big xylophone!" Knowlton exclaimed, admiringly.</p>
+
+<p>"It sure talks right out loud," said Tim. "Lot o' class to these guys,
+at that. Bet this is their brass band, and we'll go rip-snortin' into
+the next town like we was on parade. Oughter have some flags to hang up
+in the boats, and mebbe a drum corps to help out. Wisht I had a tin
+whistle or somethin' and I'd join the orchester. I can toot a whistle
+fine."</p>
+
+<p>"My favorite instrument is the old-fashioned dinner horn," laughed
+Knowlton. "But I think you're wrong&mdash;this is some kind of signaling
+apparatus."</p>
+
+<p>"You have it right, senhor," Louren&ccedil;o affirmed. "I have heard this sort
+of thing used, though I never before saw the instrument itself. Those
+notes will carry at least five miles, and the cannibals send messages by
+striking the bars in different order. This run which we have just heard
+is always used first, and no message is sent until a reply is received."</p>
+
+<p>"Bush telegraph," nodded McKay. "First call your operator and then shoot
+the message in code. Pretty ingenious for a bunch of absolute savages."</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o turned to Yuara and asked a question. Yuara curtly replied.</p>
+
+<p>"He says, Capitao, that this is to tell Monitaya we come. But we now are
+too far off for Monitaya's men to hear. The bars are made ready before
+starting so that they can be used as soon as we are within hearing. He
+says also that we start now."</p>
+
+<p>The Mayorunas already were entering their canoes. With cool deliberation
+the whites gathered up their equipment and settled themselves for the
+journey at whose end lay either life or death. The boat of Yuara
+started, and once more the flotilla was on its way.</p>
+
+<p>For an hour or more it swung on among the forested hills before the
+telegraph instrument was put to use. Then it paused, and the sonorous
+voice of the xylophone spoke to the jungle. A period of waiting brought
+no reply.</p>
+
+<p>The canoe moved on for a mile. Again the mallets beat the wood in the
+ascending scale of the call. And then, faint, mellow, far off, sounded
+the answer.</p>
+
+<p>While every man sat silent the bars boomed out their fateful news. Slow,
+brief, deep as a bell tolling a dirge, a reply rolled back. And with the
+solemnity of a funeral cort&eacute;ge the canoes once more moved on, unhurried,
+inexorable, the measured swing of the paddles beating like a pulse of
+doom.</p>
+
+<p>At length the crew of Yuara held their paddles. Yuara himself turned
+toward the second canoe and talked a minute. A signal to his men, and
+his boat proceeded. All the others remained where they were.</p>
+
+<p>"He goes to Monitaya to speak of us," said Louren&ccedil;o. "He will return. We
+have only to wait."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah," grunted Tim, disgustedly. "We'll wait till night if he takes as
+long to go through his rigmarole as he done yesterday. If I got to fight
+I want to hop to it, not set round in the shade o' the shelterin' palm
+while them guys are heatin' up the stewpot. This waitin' stuff gits my
+goat."</p>
+
+<p>"You might sing us a song, senhor, to pass the time," Pedro suggested,
+with a tight-lipped smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, I'll do that, jest to show these guys I don't give a rip. And
+while their ears are dazzled by me melody I'm goin' to git me holster
+unbottoned and me masheet kinder limbered up. Git set. Here it comes:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Ol' Hindyburg thought he was swell,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Pa-a-arley-voo!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He made the kids in Belgium yell,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Pa-a-arley-voo!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But the Yanks come over with shot and shell<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And Hindyburg he run like hell,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Rinkydinky-parley-voo!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Under cover of his outbreak, which made the savages clutch their weapons
+and glare at him in mingled suspicion and amazement, there proceeded a
+furtive loosening of pistols and machetes.</p>
+
+<p>"A noble sentiment, and more or less appropriate," grinned Knowlton.
+"But don't give them another spasm for a few minutes, or they may rise
+up and kill us all in self-defense. They're on the ragged edge now."</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, them guys dunno how to appreciate good singin'. But I should worry;
+I got me gat fixed now like I want it."</p>
+
+<p>Time dragged past. The Americans and Brazilians smoked and exchanged
+casual comments on subjects far removed from their present environment.
+The Mayorunas watched them with unceasing vigilance, as if expecting a
+sudden break for life and liberty. Their chief had intimated that
+Monitaya would kill these men; and now was their last chance to try to
+dodge death. But neither the black-bearded McKay nor any of his mates
+manifested the slightest concern. And at last the canoe of Yuara came
+back.</p>
+
+<p>It came, however, without Yuara himself. The son of Rana had remained at
+the <i>malocas</i> ahead, whence he sent the command to advance. Closely
+hemmed in by the men of Suba, the white men's boat surged onward at a
+brisk pace. Around a bend in the creek it went, and at once the domain
+of Monitaya leaped into view.</p>
+
+<p>Two big tribal houses, each considerably larger than the one of Suba,
+rose pompously in a wide cleared space beside the stream. Before them,
+ranged in a semicircle, stood hundreds of Mayorunas&mdash;men, women,
+children&mdash;all silently watching the canoes of the newcomers. In the
+center of the arc, like the hub of a human half wheel, a small knot of
+men waited in aloof dignity, four of them adorned with the ornate
+feather dresses of subchiefs, backed by a dozen tall, muscular savages,
+each armed with a huge war club. Before all stood a powerful,
+magnificently proportioned savage belted with a wide girdle of squirrel
+tails, decked with necklaces of jaguar teeth and ebony nuts, crowned by
+plumes which in loftiness and splendor surpassed all other headgear
+present&mdash;the great chief Monitaya.</p>
+
+<p>At the shore, beside a row of empty canoes, Yuara was waiting. He
+mentioned for his men to bring their dugouts to the regular landing
+place, and when they obeyed he gave commands. Then he turned and walked
+toward Monitaya.</p>
+
+<p>"I go," stated Louren&ccedil;o, rising. "You stay here until called. Yuara has
+told his men to leave all weapons in the canoes."</p>
+
+<p>He walked away after the son of Rana, and if any misgiving was in his
+heart it did not show in his confident step. Halting before the big
+chief, he began talking as coolly as if there were not the least doubt
+of welcome for himself and those with him. Monitaya gave no sign of
+recognition, of friendliness, or of enmity. Proud, statuesque, he stood
+motionless, his deep eyes resting on those of the Brazilian.</p>
+
+<p>"Sultry weather," remarked McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Just so, Capitao," agreed Pedro, narrow eyed. "We shall soon know
+whether we shall have storm."</p>
+
+<p>"Indications are for violent thunder and lightning soon," Knowlton
+contributed. "See those husky clubmen awaiting? Looks as if a public
+execution were about to be pulled off."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah. But say, ain't that chief a reg'lar he-man, though! No
+pot-bellied fathead like that there, now, Suby guy. Hope I don't have to
+drill him. I bet I won't, neither. He looks like he had brains."</p>
+
+<p>Hoping Tim was right, but dubious, all watched the progress of the
+parley. Louren&ccedil;o evidently was stating his case in logical sequence,
+recalling to the chief's mind the time when he had led him to revenge
+against the Peccaries of Peru, then going on to tell of the arrival of
+the strangers and the object of their search. Yuara's sudden, quick
+glance at him showed that the Raposa had been mentioned for the first
+time. A little later his face became slightly sullen, and the watchers
+guessed that Louren&ccedil;o was now referring in somewhat uncomplimentary
+terms to the treatment received in the <i>maloca</i> of Suba. Soon after that
+the Brazilian ended his speech.</p>
+
+<p>In a deep, quiet tone Monitaya spoke first to Louren&ccedil;o, then to one of
+his subchiefs. The bushman beckoned to his waiting companions. At the
+same time the subchief stepped out and called two names. As McKay,
+Knowlton, Tim, and Pedro arose and stepped ashore with the weaponless
+men of Suba, out from the great human arc came two men. All advanced
+toward the chief. And though the Americans were studying the central
+figures as they walked, they also noticed that the pair of Mayorunas who
+had been summoned were lame. One walked with a stiff knee, the other as
+if a whole leg was paralyzed.</p>
+
+<p>"Squad&mdash;halt!" muttered McKay. A step and a half and the four stood
+aligned and alert, two strides from Monitaya.</p>
+
+<p>The eyes of the chief dwelt long on McKay, and they were hard eyes.
+Without shifting his gaze he grunted a few words. The two crippled
+Indians stumped forward and stared into McKay's face. Through a long
+minute the Americans felt a sinister tension grow in the air about them.
+Then, slowly, the cripples turned about and faced their ruler. In the
+tones of men sure of themselves, they spoke one word.</p>
+
+<p>With the utterance of that word the tension broke. Through the long line
+of watching tribesmen ran a murmur. The clubmen relaxed from their ready
+poise. The subchiefs glanced at one another as if disappointed. And the
+stern face of Monitaya himself was transformed by a wide, friendly
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>A sweeping gesture and the cordial timbre of the chief's voice told the
+Americans plainly what Louren&ccedil;o translated a moment later.</p>
+
+<p>"We are welcome, comrades. We shall sleep in the <i>maloca</i> of Monitaya
+himself and a feast shall be made for us. Our lives have just hung on
+one word, but now that the word is spoken we are safe. I cannot tell you
+more now, for I do not wholly understand this matter myself as yet&mdash;but
+I shall learn. Now is the time, Capitao to give presents, if you have
+any for the chief."</p>
+
+<p>"I have. But our packs are in the canoe, and I'll be hanged if I'll make
+a beast of burden of myself at this stage of the game."</p>
+
+<p>"I will have all the packs brought up, Capitao. The men of Suba took
+them from us at their <i>maloca</i>; now they shall restore them before all
+these people."</p>
+
+<p>He addressed Monitaya affably, then spoke more brusquely to Yuara. That
+young man, whose previous austerity now had dissolved into open
+friendliness, uttered four words. Immediately his men returned to the
+canoes and brought up not only the packs, but the rifles.</p>
+
+<p>From his blanket roll McKay brought forth a cloth-wrapped package out of
+which he drew a half-ax, its blade gleaming dully under a protective
+coating of grease, which he swiftly swabbed off. From his haversack he
+produced a heavy chain of ruby-red beads. Under the bright sun the beads
+glowed like living things, and the glittering steel flashed back a
+dazzling beam. The two gifts together had cost considerably less than
+ten dollars in New York, but to the chieftain they were priceless
+treasures; and as McKay, with a formal bow, extended them to him, his
+face shone with delight. Yet he made no such greedy grab for them as had
+been displayed by Suba when tendered the knife. His acceptance was
+achieved with a calm dignity which brought a twinkle of approval to the
+eyes of the white men.</p>
+
+<p>In the same dignified manner he led the way to the <i>maloca</i> which
+evidently was the older of the two and which had always been his home.
+The semicircle of his subjects broke up into a disorderly crowd which
+streamed after him and his guests or surrounded the men of Suba with
+holiday greetings. Within the tribal house the adventurers proceeded to
+the central space where burned the chief's fire. There Monitaya ordered
+certain hammocks removed to make room for those of the visitors. Soon
+the travelers were seated at ease in their hanging beds, their packs and
+rifles lying on the ground beneath them, while near at hand clustered
+groups of Mayorunas, staring at them in na&iuml;ve curiosity.</p>
+
+<p>Pedro drew a long breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Senhores, that was a very close call," he declared. "As Louren&ccedil;o says,
+our lives have hung on one word. What was that word, comrade?"</p>
+
+<p>"The word was, 'No,'" answered Louren&ccedil;o. "Monitaya asked those two
+crippled men, 'Is this the man?' As you saw, they looked at the capitao,
+giving no attention to the rest of us. Then they said, 'No.' You will
+remember that the capitao was the one whom Suba also picked upon. As
+soon as Monitaya finishes talking with those men I shall ask him what
+all this means."</p>
+
+<p>The big chief was giving directions to a score of young fellows, who
+presently scattered to various parts of the house and accoutered
+themselves for hunting. Thereupon Louren&ccedil;o approached Monitaya with the
+familiarity of former acquaintance, being received with a good-humored
+smile. For a time the two conversed. As they talked the smile of the
+ruler faded and his face grew dark, while into the Brazilian's voice
+came a wrathful growl. Finally both nodded. Louren&ccedil;o returned to his
+hammock, frowning.</p>
+
+<p>"Capitao, it is all because of your black hair and beard. Through all
+the <i>malocas</i> of the Mayorunas, far and near, has gone the word to watch
+for a big, black-bearded man who is neither a Brazilian nor a Peruvian,
+but of some country unknown to these people; and when such a man is
+caught, to kill him and his companions without mercy. And the reason for
+such a command is this:</p>
+
+<p>"For many moons the Mayorunas, especially those of the smaller and
+weaker <i>malocas</i>, have been losing women. From time to time sudden raids
+have been made by gangs of gun-carrying Peruvian Indians and
+<i>mesti&ccedil;os</i>&mdash;half-breeds&mdash;who shot down the defenders of the houses
+before they could reach their weapons, and carried off girls. This, of
+course, is nothing new here, for such things have happened occasionally
+for many years. But within the past five years there has been a
+difference in these attacks which has made them much more deadly.</p>
+
+<p>"These raids used to be made always at night, and they were few and far
+between. But of late they have come about also in the day, at times when
+almost all the men of the small <i>malocas</i> were far out in the forest
+hunting meat and the women had little protection. Several chiefs have
+been killed by the raiders, who seemed to be acting according to an
+agreed plan, to be organized for this work, and to know when to strike
+and how to get away quickly. And what is more, the men who did this were
+not chance parties who came only to get women for themselves and then
+stayed away. The same men came back time after time.</p>
+
+<p>"A few of these were killed, but only a few; and all the dead were
+Peruvians. Being dead, they could tell nothing. But the Mayorunas felt
+that all these raids were directed by one mind. And they became sure of
+this when one captured girl escaped by killing a Peruvian with his own
+knife and returned to her own <i>maloca</i>. She said the raiders took her
+and the other girls to the big man with the black beard, who waited at a
+safe place a day's march from the tribal house.</p>
+
+<p>"A few weeks later another small <i>maloca</i> several miles from here was
+attacked at night while two men of Monitaya were there, having stayed
+out too late on a hunting trip and taken refuge with their neighbors
+until day. Both these men were hit and crippled by bullets in the wild
+shooting that opened the attack. One was struck in the knee, the other
+in the lower part of the back. But both caught a glimpse of the leader's
+face and saw that he was the black-bearded man himself.</p>
+
+<p>"So you see, Capitao, why we have been near death. Suba and Monitaya
+both thought you were the man. We were lucky to escape alive from Suba,
+and still more lucky that hero were two men who knew the face of the
+blackbeard."</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf!" barked McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Capitao, it must be the German&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I know it's Schwandorf! And I know his game! He's a slaver!"</p>
+
+<p>"A slaver?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's it. Knew I'd seen that sneak before. He worked the same game in
+British Guiana eight years ago on a small scale. Had a gang of tough
+bush niggers from over in Dutch Guiana to do his dirty work. Stole
+Macusi girls&mdash;they're the best-looking Indians in B. G.&mdash;and sold them
+like cattle to gold miners. Cleaned up quite a pot before the English
+got on to him, but had to get out of the country on the hot foot&mdash;didn't
+have time to take his gold with him. His name wasn't Schwandorf over
+there, and he had no beard; he was thinner, too, and posed as a Russian;
+but he's the man. Must have made his get-away by the back door&mdash;down the
+Branco to the Amazon. Now he's running Mayoruna girls into Peru. He
+could sell them to rubber men or miners and make good money, eh,
+Louren&ccedil;o?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure. And that's why he wanted to kill off his Peruvians&mdash;they knew too
+much; probably were trying to bleed him for hush money. He must have a
+regular slave route and a gang of border cutthroats to do his
+raiding&mdash;men who don't go downriver. Murderer, slaver&mdash;wonder how many
+other crimes are on his soul."</p>
+
+<p>"Them two are enough," growled Tim. "And he 'ain't got no soul."</p>
+
+<p>"No soul," echoed Pedro. "You have said it, Senhor Tim. And if ever
+these people capture him he soon will have no body."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
+
+<h3>FEVER</h3>
+
+
+<p>In the <i>maloca</i> of Monitaya a feast was in the making.</p>
+
+<p>Fires glowed all about the great room. Hunters came in, bearing birds or
+beasts which were placed before the tribal ruler for inspection and
+approval. Fishermen armed with tridents or crude harpoons arrived with
+sizable trophies of their skill. And at length two young bowmen advanced
+proudly with a freshly killed wild hog. After glancing at this the chief
+added to his usual nod a few words of praise which made the huntsmen
+grin with all their pointed teeth.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o, squatting comfortably on a jaguar skin beside the lavishly
+decorated hammock of Monitaya, carried on a lazy-toned monologue which
+probably dealt with his various experiences since his last meeting with
+these people and which appeared to interest and amuse the chief. The
+others, lolling back in mingled fatigue and relief from tension, studied
+the interior of the place and watched the activities around them.</p>
+
+<p>As in the <i>maloca</i> of Suba, the small forest of poles and hammocks
+seemed a higgledy-piggledy maze wherein was neither beginning nor end.
+Yet, as the newcomers took time to observe it, they presently found that
+the confusion was only apparent and that there existed an efficient and
+orderly arrangement. The hammocks, seemingly slung from any available
+pair of poles in utter disregard of one another, really were arranged in
+triangles. On the ground under the hanging beds lay woven grass mats and
+hides of the sloth and the jaguar; and in the space inclosed by each
+trio of hammocks burned a small fire. The hammocks were the beds of men,
+the mats and furs the couches of women and children, and each fire was
+the focal point of the family residing in that triangle.</p>
+
+<p>Above the hammocks, from transverse poles, were suspended the weapons of
+the men: the great bows, the long blowguns, the fighting spears whose
+deadly points now were sheathed in thick scabbards of grass, the
+unpoisoned fish spears and harpoons. From these poles also hung the
+quivers of arrows and darts and the small rubber-covered pouches wherein
+a little fresh poison was carried by warrior or hunter. Thus both the
+ground and the air were utilized, and by the compactness of the
+arrangement an entire family with its worldly goods, was enabled to live
+in a comparatively small space. Looking around the wide room and
+remembering the big half circle of Indians who had stood outside, the
+two ex-officers estimated that in this tribal house and its twin dwelt
+seven hundred people.</p>
+
+<p>Tim and Pedro, less interested in the Mayoruna domestic economy than in
+the Mayorunas themselves, were scanning the figures moving about in the
+reddish haze of smoke. Most of them were women, all nude and na&iuml;vely
+unconscious of any need of clothing. Like the men of the tribe, they
+bore the red and black rings and streaks on face and body; but, unlike
+the males, each wore a facial ornament in the shape of an oval piece of
+wood thrust through the lower lip. From time to time those near by
+glanced up from their work and gave the new men unmistakably friendly
+looks&mdash;particularly several young but well-grown girls who obviously
+were still unmated. In fact, these last smiled openly at the lithe,
+handsome Pedro, and red Tim was by no means overlooked.</p>
+
+<p>"I got me orders," said Tim, <i>sotto voce</i>, "and I'm danged if I crack a
+smile back at them girls. But I sure feel like grinnin'. Watch yourself,
+old-timer; they're tryin' to flirt with ye."</p>
+
+<p>Pedro, mindful of watchful eyes, turned his gaze to Tim's face before
+allowing himself to smile. Then he laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not fear," he said. "My heart is still my own."</p>
+
+<p>"Same here. Specially when I remember these females would grin jest the
+same if them club swingers had spattered our brains all over the front
+yard awhile back. But I wisht sombody'd give the girls a nightie or
+somethin' to wear. I been around some and I seen quite a lot, but I
+ain't used to bein' vamped by a bunch of undressed kids with goo-goo
+eyes the size of a plate o' fish balls. I'm only a bashful country kid
+from N'Yawk."</p>
+
+<p>"Live and learn," chuckled Pedro. "And clothes really have nothing to do
+with modesty."</p>
+
+<p>"True for ye. Clothes is mostly a disguise, anyhow, specially with
+women, and an awful expense, besides. These guys are lucky, I'll say;
+they 'ain't got to buy their wives no fur coats or silk stockin's or
+nothin'. All the same, I got all I can do to hold me face straight when
+I see these li'l owl-eyes givin' us the glad look. I'd oughter stayed
+back in Remate de Males, where a feller can wink at a woman without
+gittin' all his pardners massacreed."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps it would not be fatal, now that we are guests of the chief. But
+it is best to take no chances."</p>
+
+<p>"Safety first. That's us. Grin at one of 'em and another might git sore
+because she missed out, and first thing ye know ye've started somethin'
+without meanin' to. Let's look at somethin' harmless&mdash;one o' them
+poisoned spears, f'r instance."</p>
+
+<p>At that moment Monitaya and Louren&ccedil;o both arose, the chief to inspect in
+person the progress of the arrangements for the feast, the bushman to
+return to his companions with additional news.</p>
+
+<p>"Monitaya tells me," he said, "that his people have lost girls in other
+ways than by the murderous attacks of the gunmen. A number of young
+women who have gone into the bush near their <i>malocas</i> to get urucu and
+genipapa, which they use to make the red and black body dyes, have
+disappeared. So have several who went to the creeks for their daily
+baths. Warriors who tried to trail them have found the footprints of a
+few men, but always lost them at water. The girls had been taken away in
+canoes. Even this tribe of Monitaya, which never has been attacked by
+night raiders because it is too strong, has not been safe from these
+stealthy woman stealings by daylight. Three girls have been taken from
+here within the past two moons, and others have disappeared from other
+<i>malocas</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Hm! And Schwandorf hasn't been here recently," said Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"No. It must be that he has agents who work when he is not here, or else
+this is done without his knowledge. I have told Monitaya what I know of
+Schwandorf, and he agrees that the women are taken as slaves. I have
+also told him that when we return down the river we shall see that
+Schwandorf troubles the Mayorunas no more."</p>
+
+<p>"Excellent," McKay approved. "Have you asked him about the Raposa?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet. It does not pay to hurry business with these people. After the
+feast is out of the way I will talk further with him."</p>
+
+<p>No more was said for a time. The five lounged at ease, sniffing the
+savory odors arising from the reddish clay pots and pans in which fruit,
+fish, or fowl was frying in tapir lard, or meat was stewing. At length a
+number of tall, shapely women, apparently the handsomest of their sex in
+the tribe, laid a number of small mats in a semicircle on the ground
+before the chief, and placed thereon a steaming array of edibles. Furs
+were placed outside the line of mats. From somewhere appeared all four
+of the subchiefs, accompanied by Yuara. Thereupon Monitaya, with a
+smiling nod to his guests, squatted within the arc. Forthwith the
+visitors advanced in a body, disposed themselves comfortably on the
+furs, and assailed the viands with a vigor that brought a delighted grin
+to the face of their barbaric host.</p>
+
+<p>Fried bananas, tender fish, broiled parrot which was not so tender, a
+thick stew of somewhat odorous meat seasoned with tart-tasting herbs,
+roast wild hog, and other things at whose identity the whites could not
+even guess, all were chewed and washed down with generous draughts of a
+rather sour liquid resembling beer. Remembering Louren&ccedil;o's previous
+warning, each man took care not to slight any portion of the meal or to
+show distaste with anything, whether it pleased the palate or not.
+Throughout the feast the tall women hovered near, bringing fresh
+supplies whenever a dearth of any edible appeared to threaten. And when
+at last the feasters were full to repletion Monitaya himself designated
+what he considered titbits to tempt them further.</p>
+
+<p>"Gosh! if I eat any more I'll bust, and I'm danged if I'll bust jest to
+satisfy this guy," asserted Tim. Wherewith he put one hand under his jaw
+and patted his stomach with the other, signifying that he was filled to
+the throat. Pedro lifted his elbows, dropped his jaw, and made motions
+as if gasping for air. The chieftain grinned widely. The grin became a
+chuckling when Tim, after a vain attempt to rise, lay back at full
+length on his rug and begged some one to make a cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess I'll have to follow Tim's example," confessed Knowlton. And he
+too stretched out. Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o also sprawled back. McKay, after
+glancing around, compromised with his dignity by leaning on one elbow.
+The subchiefs and Yuara, with slight smiles, relaxed in various
+postures. Monitaya alone arose&mdash;not without some difficulty&mdash;and got
+into his hammock, where he beamed down at them.</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose this is a compliment to the chief," smiled McKay. "He thinks he
+has eaten us helpless."</p>
+
+<p>"Speakin' for li'l old Tim Ryan, that ain't no joke, neither. Lookit all
+the girls givin' us the laff. Who are them tall ones that's been rushin'
+the grub? Waitresses or somethin'?"</p>
+
+<p>"Those are the chief's wives," Louren&ccedil;o explained.</p>
+
+<p>"Huh? Gosh! he's one brave guy, that feller! Two&mdash;four&mdash;six&mdash;eight&mdash;nine
+of 'em! Swell lookers, too. I s'pose he has his pick o' the whole crowd
+here."</p>
+
+<p>"He does not have to pick them Senhor Tim. They pick him. He and the
+subchiefs are the only ones who can take more than one wife. When a girl
+wishes to become the wife of the great chief or of a subchief, she works
+for months making feather dresses and necklaces and hammocks, and when
+these are done she gives them all to him. If he likes her well enough he
+accepts the gifts and allows her to be a wife to him."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah? And she's flattered to death, I s'pose. Wisht they'd start
+somethin' like that up home, or, anyways, fix it so's a feller could get
+an even break. Way it is now, a feller blows in every dollar he's got,
+and then when he's fixin' to git the ring the girl leaves him flat for
+some other guy that 'ain't spent his dough yet. Yo-ho-hum! I'm goin' to
+take a snooze right there on the table. Wake me up, somebody, when the
+next mess call blows."</p>
+
+<p>And with no further ado he shut his eyes and drowsed.</p>
+
+<p>His companions lolled for some time, smoking and watching the family
+life of the ordinary members of the tribe, nodding now and then to some
+friendly-looking young fellow, but ignoring the mischievous glances of
+the girls. Monitaya himself lay back in his hammock and dozed. His
+wives, stepping nonchalantly among the strangers, cleared away the
+remnants of the feast by the simple process of eating them. Then they
+carried off the clay vessels.</p>
+
+<p>For another hour all hands rested. Then Monitaya sat up, stretched his
+big arms, looked casually around the house to see that all was well, and
+smiled down at his guests. Louren&ccedil;o, rising to a squat, began a new
+conversation. After a while he turned to McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"The Red Bones and the Mayorunas are neither friendly nor hostile toward
+each other, and there is little communication between them," he
+reported. "From those <i>malocas</i> to the town of the Red Bones is a
+journey of five long days, so the men of Monitaya hardly ever go there.</p>
+
+<p>"The Raposa whom we seek is known to the men of Monitaya, but he never
+has come here to the tribal houses. Hunters from this place have met him
+at times roving the wild forests, and some of the younger men fear him
+as the bad spirit of the jungle. The Mayorunas believe in two spirits or
+demons, one good and one bad, and the bad one is said to roam the
+wilderness, seeking lone wanderers, whom he kills and eats; the people
+sometimes hear this demon howling at night in the dark of the moon. So
+the young men have thought the Raposa might be this demon and have
+avoided him&mdash;it would do no good to try to kill a demon, and it would
+only make their own deaths more sure and horrible.</p>
+
+<p>"But the older men do not believe this. They say the wild man is of the
+Red Bone people, and that the reason why his bones are marked in red on
+his living body is that he is neither alive nor dead. If he were dead
+his body would be thrown into the water and left there until his bones
+were stripped by those cannibal fish, the piranhas, and then the bones
+would be dyed red and hung up in his hut, as is the custom among those
+people. If he were alive like other men he would not have those marks on
+his body, but would wear only the tribal face paint. The bone paint on
+him is a sign to all the <i>Ossos Vermelhos</i> that he is alive, but dead,
+and is not to be treated like other men."</p>
+
+<p>"Crazy!" exclaimed Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I think that is it. His body lives, but his mind is dead. Death in
+life."</p>
+
+<p>"Has he been seen lately?"</p>
+
+<p>The Brazilian repeated the question in the Indian tongue. The chief
+looked toward a certain hammock some distance off, called a name, raised
+an imperative hand. A slender savage came forward. To him the chief
+spoke, then to Louren&ccedil;o, who, as usual, relayed his information.</p>
+
+<p>"This young hunter saw him six days ago while following a wild-hog trail
+far out in the bush toward the Red Bone region. He came on the fresh
+track of a man who was following the same hogs, and later he caught up
+with that man. It was the red-boned wild man, and the wild man was very
+lame, having a hurt foot. They stood and looked at each other, and then
+the wild man walked away, watching him closely and ready to shoot with
+his bow. After he disappeared in the forest this hunter heard a long,
+shrill laugh and words that sounded like 'Podavi.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Podavi&mdash;Poor Davy!" ejaculated Knowlton. "That's he, sure enough! Then
+he's near his own town now&mdash;he won't go far with a bad foot. We'd better
+move as soon as we can. Ask about an escort."</p>
+
+<p>Once more the bushman conversed with Monitaya. The ruler's smile
+disappeared. For some time he sat gazing out over the heads of all,
+evidently weighing matters in his mind. When he responded, however, it
+was without hesitation.</p>
+
+<p>"There is neither friendliness nor enmity between the two peoples, as
+has been said," Louren&ccedil;o stated. "Our business among the Red Bones is
+our own affair, not that of Monitaya, and Monitaya will make no requests
+for us. But in order that we may go safely and return without harm he
+will send with us twenty of his best men. These men will have orders to
+protect us at all times, unless fighting is caused by our making a
+needless attack on the Red Bones. In that case the Mayorunas will do
+nothing to help us. They will only defend themselves."</p>
+
+<p>"Fair enough!" nodded McKay. "Tell him we'll start no fight. If any
+trouble comes it will be from the other fellows. We'll leave here
+to-morrow morning."</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o translated the promise into Mayoruna. But the chief seemed not
+to hear. His eyes had narrowed and were fixed on the face of Tim, who
+still lay on his back and was giving no attention to what went on.
+Following his look, the bushman gazed critically at the red-haired man.</p>
+
+<p>Tim's florid face had paled. His mouth was drawn and his eyes stared
+straight up, wide and glassy. Slowly he rolled his head from side to
+side.</p>
+
+<p>"Gee! Cap," he whispered, hoarsely, "I et too much. My head aches so I'm
+fair blind, and I'm burnin' up. Gimme some water."</p>
+
+<p>With a swift, simultaneous movement McKay and Knowlton put their hands
+on his forehead. Louren&ccedil;o and Pedro leaned closer and peered into his
+face. All four glanced at one another. Pedro nodded. His lips silently
+formed one dread word:</p>
+
+<p>"Fever!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>FRUIT OF THE TRAP</h3>
+
+
+<p>Heavy hypodermic doses of quinine, aided by Tim's rugged constitution
+and the fact that this was his first attack of the ravaging sickness of
+the swamp lands, pulled him back to safety within the next two days. To
+safety, but not to strength. Despite his stout-hearted assertions that
+he was ready to hit the trail and "walk the legs off the whole danged
+outfit," he was obviously in no condition to stand up under the grueling
+pack work that lay ahead. Wherefore, McKay, after consultation with the
+others of the party, and, through Louren&ccedil;o, with Monitaya, gave him
+inflexible orders.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll stay here. Stick in your hammock until you're in fighting trim.
+Then watch yourself. Don't pull any bonehead plays that'll get these
+people down on you. Take quinine daily according to Knowlton's
+directions&mdash;he's written them on the box. If we're not back in a
+fortnight Monitaya will send men to find out why. If they find that
+we're&mdash;not coming back&mdash;you will be guided to the river, where you can
+get down to the Nunes place."</p>
+
+<p>"But, Cap&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No argument!"</p>
+
+<p>"But listen here, for the love o' Mike! I ain't no old woman! I can
+stand the gaff! I'm goin' with the gang!"</p>
+
+<p>"You hear the orders!" McKay snapped, with assumed severity. "Think we
+want to be bothered with having you go sick again? You're out of shape
+and we've no room for lame ducks. You'll stay here!"</p>
+
+<p>Tim tried another tack.</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, but listen! Ye ain't goin' to desert a comrade amongst a lot o' man
+eaters&mdash;right in the place where I got sick, too. Soon's I git away from
+here I'll be all right&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That stuff's no good," the captain contradicted, with a tight smile.
+"You didn't get fever here. It's been in your system for days. You got
+it back on the river. These people don't have it, or any other kind of
+sickness. I've looked around and I know. As for the man eaters, they're
+mighty decent folks toward friends. We're friends. You'll be under the
+personal protection of Monitaya, and his word is good as gold. It's all
+arranged, and you're safer here than you would be in New York."</p>
+
+<p>In his heart the stubborn veteran knew McKay was right, but, like any
+other good soldier ordered to remain out of action, he grumbled and
+growled regardless. To which the ex-officers paid about as much
+attention as officers usually do. They went ahead with their own
+preparations.</p>
+
+<p>"Be of good heart, Senhor Tim," Pedro comforted, mischievously. "You
+will not lack for company. The chief has appointed two girls to wait
+upon you at all times."</p>
+
+<p>"Huh? Them two tall ones that's been hangin' round and fetchin' things?
+Are they mine?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. They are quite handsome in their way, and strong enough to help
+you about if your legs remain weak. In that case you will probably be
+allowed to put your arms around them for support. I almost wish I could
+get fever, too."</p>
+
+<p>Tim's voice remained a growl, but his face did not look so doleful as
+before.</p>
+
+<p>"Grrrumph! I always seem to draw big females, and I don't like 'em.
+Gimme somethin' cute like them li'l' frog dolls in Paree&mdash;sort o'
+pee-teet and chick. Still, a feller's got to do the best he can. Mebbe
+I'll live till you guys git back."</p>
+
+<p>With which he availed himself of the prerogative of a sick man and
+grinned openly at the two comely young women who stood near at hand,
+awaiting any demand for services. They were not at all backward in
+reciprocating, and, despite the tribal paint and their labial ornaments,
+the smiles softening their faces made them not half bad to look upon.</p>
+
+<p>"'O death, where is thy sting?'" laughed Knowlton. "Be careful not to
+strain your heart while we're away, Tim."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't worry. It's a tough old heart&mdash;been kicked round so much it's
+growed a shell like a turtle. Besides, I seen wild women before I ever
+come to the jungle."</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding his apparent resignation, however, Tim erupted once more
+when his comrades shouldered their packs, picked up their guns, and
+spoke their thanks and good-by to Monitaya. He arose on shaky legs and
+desperately offered to prove his fitness by a barehanded six-round bout
+with his commanding officer. When McKay, with sympathetic eyes but gruff
+tones, peremptorily squelched him he insisted on at least going to the
+door to watch his comrades start the journey from which they might or
+might not return. Nor did he take advantage of his chance to hug the
+girls on the way.</p>
+
+<p>With one arm slung over the shoulders of a wiry young warrior who
+grinned proudly at the honor of being selected to help a guest of the
+great chief, he followed the departing column out into the sunshine,
+where the entire tribe was assembled. And when the stalwart band had
+filed into the shadows of the trees and vanished he stood for a time
+unseeing and gulping at something in his throat.</p>
+
+<p>Straight away along a vague path beginning at the rear of the <i>malocas</i>
+marched the twenty-four, the two northerners bending under the weight of
+their packs, the pair of Brazilians sweeping the jungle with practiced
+eyes, the score of Mayorunas striding velvet footed, resplendent in
+brilliant new paint and headdresses, armed with the most powerful
+weapons of their tribe, and loftily conscious of the fact that they were
+chosen as Monitaya's best. Savage and civilized, each man was fit,
+alert, formidable. Nowhere in the loosely joined chain was a weak link.</p>
+
+<p>Before the departure the Americans had been at some trouble to rid
+themselves of Yuara, who, with his men, had tarried at the Monitaya
+<i>malocas</i> during Tim's sickness. While Knowlton was giving his ripped
+arm a final dressing he had calmly announced his intention of joining
+the expedition into the Red Bone country, and it had taken some skillful
+argument by Louren&ccedil;o to dissuade him without arousing his anger. All
+four of the adventurers would gladly have taken him along had he not
+been hampered by his injury, but, under the ruthless rule barring all
+men not in possession of all their strength, he had to be left.</p>
+
+<p>Now, as on the previous jungle marches, the way was led by two of the
+tribesmen, followed by the Brazilians and the Americans, after whom the
+main body of the escort strode in column. The leader and guide, one
+Tucu, was a veteran hunter, fighter, and bushranger, who had been more
+than once in the Red Bone region and withal possessed the cool judgment
+of mature years and long experience; a lean, silent man who, though not
+a subchief, might have made a good one if given the opportunity. With
+him Louren&ccedil;o had already arranged that a direct course should be
+followed, and that whenever dense undergrowth blockaded the way the
+machete men should take the lead.</p>
+
+<p>For some time no word was spoken. The path wound on, faintly marked, but
+easy enough to follow with Tucu picking it out. It was not one of the
+frequently used trails of the Monitaya people, but a mere <i>picada</i>, or
+hunter's track; yet even this had its pitfalls to guard the tribal
+house. Soon after leaving the clearing Tucu turned aside, passed between
+trees off the trail, went directly under one tree whose steep-slanting
+roots stood up off the ground like great down-pointing fingers, and
+returned to the path. All followed without comment.</p>
+
+<p>A considerable distance was covered before any further sign of the
+presence of ambushed death was shown by the savages. Then it came with
+tragic suddenness.</p>
+
+<p>Tucu grunted suddenly, and in one instant shifted his gait from the easy
+swing of the march to the prowl of a hunting animal. Behind him the line
+grew tense. The click of rifle hammers and of safeties being thrown off
+breech bolts blended with the faint slither of arrows being swiftly
+drawn from quivers. Eyes searched the bush, spying no enemy.</p>
+
+<p>Two more steps, and Tucu stopped, head thrust forward, eyes boring into
+something on the ground. The rest, taking care not to touch one
+another's weapons, crowded around and looked down at the huddled form of
+a man.</p>
+
+<p>A matted mass of black hair, a neck burned copper brown by sun, tattered
+cotton shirt and trousers, big, bare dirty feet, a rusty repeating rifle
+of heavy caliber&mdash;these were what they saw first. The man lay straight,
+his face in the dirt, his hands a little ahead as if he had been
+crawling forward at the moment of death. Tucu turned him on his back,
+revealing a blanched yellow-brown face which was proof positive of his
+race.</p>
+
+<p>"Peruvian," said Pedro.</p>
+
+<p>"What got him?" demanded Knowlton. "No wound on him."</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o questioned Tucu. The leader, who evidently knew just where to
+look, tore open the thin shirt at the left side and pointed to a tiny
+discoloration surrounding a red dot under the ribs. He muttered a few
+laconic words.</p>
+
+<p>"A blowgun trap," Louren&ccedil;o explained. "The gun is set a little way
+beyond here. This man, sneaking along the path, broke the little cord
+which shot the gun. The poisoned dart struck in his side. He must have
+pulled out the dart, but he could not go far before his legs became
+paralyzed, and he fell. Then, still trying to crawl, he died."</p>
+
+<p>Pedro picked up the dead man's gun and worked the lever. The weapon was
+fully loaded and showed no sign of recent firing. Pedro coolly pumped it
+empty, gathered up the blunt .44 cartridges, and pocketed them for his
+own use.</p>
+
+<p>Tucu watched the proceeding in satirical approval. Then, leaving the
+body where it lay, he went stooping along the path ahead, his keen eyes
+searching the undergrowth. In a few minutes he returned with the
+blood-stained dart which, as Louren&ccedil;o had guessed, the stricken prowler
+had pulled from his flesh and dropped. This he passed to a blowgun man.
+The latter carefully opened his poison pouch, redipped the point of the
+dart, held it a moment to dry in a shaft of sunlight, and slipped it
+into his dart case among a score of unused missiles.</p>
+
+<p>"No waste of ammunition here," was McKay's dry comment. "What happens to
+this corpse now?"</p>
+
+<p>Through Louren&ccedil;o's mouth Tucu answered.</p>
+
+<p>"It will be left here until police warriors come from the <i>malocas</i>.
+Certain men travel the paths daily to inspect the traps. When they find
+this man they will cut off his hands and feet with their wooden knives
+and throw the rest aside to be eaten by the animals. He has not been
+dead long or he would have been devoured by some wild thing before we
+came. The trail travelers will set the trap again and take the hands and
+feet to the <i>malocas</i>, where they will be washed, cooked, and eaten."</p>
+
+<p>The faces of the Americans contracted slightly. A simultaneous thought
+made them flash startled glances at each other.</p>
+
+<p>"Tim&mdash;" Knowlton said, and paused. Louren&ccedil;o smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"No, Senhor Tim will not be expected to eat man meat," he assured them.
+"I thought of that before we left&mdash;one never knows when these traps will
+yield human flesh. So, without letting Monitaya know why I spoke, I told
+him you North Americans believed the flesh of an enemy to be poisonous,
+and that you would not eat it on that account. Monitaya will remember
+that."</p>
+
+<p>"By George! you have a head on your shoulders, old scout! I was worried
+for a minute. If they offered Tim a broiled foot or a stewed hand he'd
+go for his gun."</p>
+
+<p>Briefly Tucu spoke. The Mayorunas separated and went into the forest,
+seeking any sign of other enemies.</p>
+
+<p>"Queer that this chap should come here alone&mdash;if he was alone," added
+Knowlton. "Suppose he's the fellow that's been swiping stray girls? Or a
+spy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Neither, I think, senhor. The girls were captured by more than one man,
+and I doubt if this one had been here before. Probably he was one of
+those lone prowlers of the bush whose hand is against every man. He is a
+half-breed, as you see, and came, perhaps, to steal a girl for himself.
+The jungle is well rid of him."</p>
+
+<p>"Uh-huh. Guess you're right. Say, I'd like to see how that blowgun trap
+operates. Can't understand what blows the dart when nobody is here."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know, either, senhor. Perhaps Tucu will show us."</p>
+
+<p>The savage guide, after a moment's hesitation, pointed along the trail
+and stalked away, the others at his heels. At a spot some fifteen yards
+farther on he turned into the bush at the right, walked a few paces away
+from the path, turned again sharply to the left, advanced once more, and
+halted. Before them, not easy to discern in the masking brush, even
+though they were looking for it, hung the long barrel of the blowgun,
+lashed to a couple of small trees and pointing toward the path.</p>
+
+<p>Tucu stepped to the mouthpiece of the slender tube and pointed to a
+sapling, just behind and in line with it, which had been cut off about
+shoulder-high from the ground. From the tip of this thin trunk dangled a
+wide strip of bark. The savage, having indicated this, stood as if the
+action of the device were perfectly clear.</p>
+
+<p>"Too deep for me," admitted McKay, after a puzzled study of the tube and
+the trunk. The others nodded agreement. Louren&ccedil;o confessed to the Indian
+the blindness of all.</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon Tucu bent the sapling far over and released it. As it sprang
+erect the bark strip slapped the end of the gun. Also, the watchers saw
+something hitherto unnoticed&mdash;a thin, flexible vine attached to the top
+of the thin stump. Louren&ccedil;o's face showed understanding.</p>
+
+<p>"See, comrades, this is it: The little tree is bent far down and held by
+the long vine. The vine passes around a low branch, then up over other
+limbs, and out across the path, where it is fastened to a root near the
+ground. A man following the path breaks the vine. The little tree then
+flies up and the bark sheet strikes the wide mouthpiece of the gun. The
+air forced into that mouthpiece by the blow of the bark shoots the
+little dart. The dart does not fly as hard as if blown by a man, but it
+goes swiftly enough to pierce the skin of anything except a tapir. As
+soon as the poison is in the blood the work is done."</p>
+
+<p>"It sure is done," Knowlton echoed, thinking of the short distance
+covered by the dead Peruvian after passing this spot. "Mighty ingenious
+apparatus. These people are no fools, I'll say."</p>
+
+<p>"You say rightly," Pedro muttered. Turning, they went out to the path,
+looking askance at the thin death tube as they passed along it.</p>
+
+<p>The scouting Mayorunas returned, having found nothing. Tucu resumed his
+place at the head of the line. Without a backward glance at the body
+sprawling in the trail at the rear, the column swung into its usual
+gait.</p>
+
+<p>The Americans, silent before, were silent again. They had looked for the
+first time on the work of the Mayoruna traps; had observed the
+cold-blooded way in which the Indiana handled the still form on the
+ground; had visualized the forthcoming mutilation of that body and the
+resultant cannibal rites. More vividly than ever before they realized
+that these men and Monitaya himself were relentless creatures of the
+jungle, and that, despite the present existent friendliness, there
+yawned between them and their barbarous allies an impassable gulf.</p>
+
+<p>For the moment the jungle itself seemed a poisonous green abyss of
+creeping, crawling, sneaking death. And though they had faced death too
+often in another land to fear it in any form, though they marched on
+with unwavering step, their eyes were somber as in their hearts echoed
+the last appeal of the man they had left behind them:</p>
+
+<p>"Ye ain't goin' to desert a comrade amongst a lot o' man eaters&mdash;"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE RED BONES</h3>
+
+
+<p>Four days the expedition tramped steadily onward through the rugged
+labyrinthine hills. Four nights its members slept in utter exhaustion.
+Neither by day nor by night was any sign of the Raposa seen, nor of any
+other human being.</p>
+
+<p>So tired from the constant struggle did the Americans become that their
+jaded brains began to picture the mysterious wild man as a mere
+legendary creature, which they never would find even though they
+searched the inscrutable forests until the end of time. Yet when, on the
+fifth day, Tucu informed them that they now were nearing the principal
+settlement of the Red Bones, the announcement cheered them as if they
+were about to enter a civilized city and there meet David Rand safe and
+sane.</p>
+
+<p>Not that any chance of striking his trail had been neglected in the
+meantime. It was thoroughly understood that if he were met anywhere he
+was to be made prisoner, and that thereafter the back trail should be
+taken. Louren&ccedil;o had impressed on Tucu the fact that the whole journey
+had for its object the finding of the wild man, and that he must not be
+killed if found. Since the Indians were not in the habit of hunting so
+assiduously anyone but a bitterly hated foe, it is quite possible that
+they misunderstood the spirit of the quest and believed the "dead-alive"
+prowler would, if captured, undergo some extremely unpleasant treatment
+at the hands of the white men. But so long as it was made clear that the
+Raposa must be caught alive, if caught at all, Louren&ccedil;o did not trouble
+about what the Mayorunas might surmise.</p>
+
+<p>Now, as the end of the long, pathless trail approached, arose a question
+of which McKay had previously thought but had not spoken&mdash;how he was to
+converse with the Red Bone chief. Louren&ccedil;o asked Tucu whether the Red
+Bones spoke the Mayoruna tongue. Tucu replied that they did not. He
+added, however, that the languages were not so dissimilar as to prevent
+some sort of understanding being reached between members of the two
+tribes. The veteran bushman nodded carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>"When the tongue fails, Capitao, the hands still can talk," he said. "It
+takes more time and work, that is all. Ah, here is a path!"</p>
+
+<p>It was so. For the first time since leaving the Monitaya region a path
+lay under their feet. And for the first time Tucu and his fellow
+Mayorunas, glancing along that faint track, showed hesitation.</p>
+
+<p>"Why the delay?" snapped McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"They suspect traps. I will go ahead and feel out the way. I have done
+it before on other paths."</p>
+
+<p>After a few words to Tucu, Louren&ccedil;o cut a long, slim pole. With this in
+hand he preceded the column, walking slowly, pausing sometimes,
+continually prodding the path, studying it with unswerving gaze as he
+progressed. The thin but rigid feeler, strong enough to tip the cover of
+any pit or to spring any concealed bow or blowgun, was at least ten feet
+long, and between the scout and the head of the line Tucu preserved
+another ten-foot interval. Progress was necessarily slow, but it was
+sure.</p>
+
+<p>In this fashion they advanced perhaps half a mile. Not once did they
+have to leave the path, but Louren&ccedil;o's caution did not diminish. Rather,
+it increased as they neared the Red Bone town. At length another path
+joined the one on which they were traveling. Here Louren&ccedil;o paused for
+minutes, inspecting with extreme care the ground and the bush.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he cocked his head as if listening. Then, with a backward
+motion of the hand to enjoin silence, he faced down the branch path and
+stood calmly waiting.</p>
+
+<p>To those behind came a light rustle of leaves and a scuffle of moving
+feet; a sudden cessation; then Louren&ccedil;o's voice speaking to some one
+concealed behind the intervening undergrowth. His tone was slow, quiet,
+easy&mdash;the tone which, even if the words were not understood, would
+soothe suspicious and abruptly alarmed minds. After another short
+silence he resumed talking, pointing carelessly to the place behind him
+where stood the silent file of Mayorunas. A guttural voice replied. A
+head peered cautiously from the edge of the bush, stared fixedly at
+Tucu, and withdrew. The voice sounded again. Immediately three Indians
+stepped into view, poised for action. Another interval of staring, and
+they relaxed.</p>
+
+<p>"Come forward, comrades," said Louren&ccedil;o. They came, halting again at the
+junction of the trails. Tucu spoke to one of the newcomers, who scowled
+as if only partly understanding, but grunted some sort of answer. Those
+behind the Mayoruna leader craned their necks and scanned the Red Bone
+men, who continued to eye with evident misgiving the tall-bonneted
+cannibals and the broad-hatted pair of whites.</p>
+
+<p>Man for man, these Red Bones were in every way inferior to the
+emissaries of Monitaya. Their bodies were more gaunt, their skins more
+coppery, their foreheads lower, and their expressions much less
+intelligent. Furthermore, they wore not even the bark-cloth clouts which
+formed the sole body covering of the Mayorunas&mdash;they were totally naked.
+The one point of similarity between the two tribes was that the faces of
+the Red Bone men were streaked with red dye. But the facial design was
+much different: two short transverse stripes on the forehead, and three
+lines on each cheek, running from the eyes, the end of the nose, and the
+corners of the mouth, straight back to the ears. Studying those visages,
+Knowlton and McKay recalled Schwandorf's statement that these people not
+only ate human flesh, but tortured prisoners of war. It was easy to
+believe that he had told truth.</p>
+
+<p>McKay, standing behind Pedro, shifted his position a bit. At once the
+eyes of the three Red Bones widened and riveted on his face. Heretofore
+they had seen only his hat and eyes, the rest being hidden from them by
+Pedro's neck and an intervening palm tip. Now that they saw his
+black-bearded jaw, they started slightly and peered intently at him.</p>
+
+<p>"I think, Capitao, you would do well to shave," Pedro suggested, with a
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>"'Fraid so," the captain granted. "Black beards evidently are <i>de trop</i>
+in the jungle social set at present."</p>
+
+<p>But then one of the Red Bone men came forward, still squinting narrowly,
+and his expression was not hostile. In fact, it was more friendly than
+it had yet been. After a closer scrutiny, however, his face turned
+blank. Slowly he stepped back and muttered something to his companions.</p>
+
+<p>At this Pedro's eyes narrowed speculatively. But his expression did not
+change, and he said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>A lengthy conference took place between Louren&ccedil;o and Tucu on the one
+hand and the three Red Bone tribesmen on the other; a difficult talk in
+which words and sign language both were used and frequently repeated.
+Eventually an understanding was reached. The three stepped back, picked
+up some small game which they had dropped on beholding Louren&ccedil;o,
+returned, and led the way along the path. Louren&ccedil;o cast aside his poke
+stick and resumed his usual place in the column. The whole line moved
+ahead at a much smarter gait than before.</p>
+
+<p>"Note&mdash;this path is not mined," thought Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>This proved true. Moreover, the way now was more broad and firm, so that
+travel on it was much easier. After twenty minutes of rapid tramping it
+debouched abruptly into a cleared space. Here all halted.</p>
+
+<p>Before them lay a town of small, low huts, crowded closely together in
+two parallel rows which curved together at one end. The other end lay
+open, giving access to a sizable creek whereon floated canoes. At the
+water's edge, along the crude street studded with charred stumps, and
+among the damp-looking huts moved naked figures of men and women
+occupied with various sluggish activities. Some of the men already had
+spied the invading party and were standing at gaze.</p>
+
+<p>"Comrades, we have reached the end of our trail," said Louren&ccedil;o, running
+a cool eye over the place. "Now all we have to do is to find your Raposa
+and get him and ourselves away alive."</p>
+
+<p>"That's all," Knowlton echoed, unsmiling. "The reception committee is
+forming now." And with the words he unbuttoned his holster.</p>
+
+<p>A shrill yell had run along the double line of houses, and out into the
+stumpy street now swarmed men armed with hastily seized weapons. Hands
+pointed, confused exclamations sounded, and a compact detachment of
+warriors came jogging toward the newcomers. The three guides drew away
+from the Mayorunas. The latter promptly fitted arrows to their bows,
+inserted darts in their blowguns, lifted spears or clubs, and with eyes
+glittering awaited whatever might befall.</p>
+
+<p>A couple of rods away the Red Bones halted, bows ready. A hatchet-faced
+savage who seemed to be in command rasped something at the three
+hunters, who quickened their pace toward him. Tucu strode out four paces
+beyond his own men and stopped. Then both parties waited while the
+hunters reported what they knew to the hatchet-face.</p>
+
+<p>"What did you tell them, Louren&ccedil;o?" asked McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"That we came on a friendly visit to the chief, for whom we had
+important words."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing of the Raposa?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. They wasted much time arguing that we must tell them all our
+business and let them inform the chief, while we were to stay back on
+the path until permitted to enter the town. We told them our talk was
+for the chief alone, and that we should come here whether they liked it
+or not. So, having no choice, they led us in."</p>
+
+<p>McKay made no comment. None was necessary. Furthermore, his steady eyes
+had caught a simultaneous head movement of the Red Bones&mdash;a peering
+movement, as if all were seeking some one man among the new arrivals.
+Pedro observed this. He spoke softly to Louren&ccedil;o.</p>
+
+<p>"Louren&ccedil;o, tell Tucu to say to the Red Bones that we come led by a
+black-bearded white man; that this blackboard comes from the far-off
+country where all men wear black beards; that the blackbeard will speak
+with the chief only."</p>
+
+<p>The Americans looked queerly at the young Brazilian, as did Louren&ccedil;o
+himself. But without question Louren&ccedil;o obeyed. Calling to Tucu, he gave
+the message. Tucu moved his head slightly, but gave no other sign of
+having heard.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Capitao, step forward a little and show yourself more clearly,"
+prompted Pedro.</p>
+
+<p>With another puzzled glance McKay did so. He saw that the brown eyes of
+the younger man held a dancing gleam, but he could not read the thought
+behind those eyes. Yet he noticed that as soon as he stepped out the Red
+Bones all focused their gaze on him. More than that, the spokesman of
+the three hunters pointed at him and said something to the
+sharp-featured leader.</p>
+
+<p>Now that leader came forward alone. Six feet from Tucu he halted again
+and talked in a growling tone. The Mayoruna leader, cool and dignified,
+made answer. After a somewhat protracted exchange Tucu turned his head
+and motioned to Louren&ccedil;o, who went forward, listened, replied shortly,
+and came back. Meanwhile the first detachment of Red Bones had been
+strongly reinforced by others who had come up singly or in small
+parties. Now the expedition was outnumbered at least four to one by
+hard-faced, brute-mouthed, naked men ready, if not eager, for trouble.</p>
+
+<p>"The Red Bone says we shall see the chief," Louren&ccedil;o stated. "At first
+he said only you, Capitao, should go to him. Then he insisted that we
+all lay down our arms. Tucu has told him we lay down our arms for no man
+or men; that we come in peace&mdash;otherwise there would be many more of us;
+that we leave in peace unless the Red Bones themselves bring on a fight.
+In that case, though we are few, there lies behind us the power of
+Monitaya, and behind Monitaya the power of the Mayoruna chiefs, all
+strong enough to wipe the Red Bone nation off the face of the ground."</p>
+
+<p>"Strong stuff, that," said Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>"Strong, yes. But no stronger than is needed to impress these people.
+Tucu intends to prevent trouble if he can; and often the best way to
+prevent trouble is to make the other man realize what may happen to him
+if he starts it. Also he has his orders from Monitaya to stay with us at
+all times, and he will follow that order even if you, Capitao, try to
+change it. Now we go together to the chief."</p>
+
+<p>He nodded to Tucu, who grunted to the Red Bone leader. The hatchet-face
+in turn shouted something to the men behind. Slowly they drew apart into
+two groups.</p>
+
+<p>"You are the leader, Capitao," suggested Louren&ccedil;o. Promptly McKay
+marched forward, head up, eyes front, face bleak. The rest followed,
+Tucu falling in behind McKay when the captain passed him. Preceded by
+the Red Bone spokesman, the line advanced between the two bodies of
+copper-skins and swung along the evil-smelling avenue to its upper end.</p>
+
+<p>There, in the very center of the loop joining the two rows of huts, was
+a house twice as big as any other. From its doorway the inhabitant of
+that house could watch the whole life of the Red Bone town. Obviously it
+was the home of the chief. At its door a pair of warriors stood guard,
+but of the ruler himself there was no sign.</p>
+
+<p>Ten paces from it the thin-featured leader stopped and motioned to McKay
+to halt. As the captain and the line behind him did so he stalked
+onward, passed through the doorway, and faded from sight in the dimness
+beyond. With one accord the members of the visiting party looked around
+them.</p>
+
+<p>The street behind now was filled with the mass of Red Bone warriors who
+had trooped after the column. All exit in that direction was blockaded.
+But the ex-officers noted that between the houses were spaces each wide
+enough to hold a couple of men, and in an undertone McKay gave defensive
+instructions to Louren&ccedil;o.</p>
+
+<p>"If fighting starts, have the Mayorunas take cover along these houses on
+each side. We who have guns will use the chief's house. We can sweep the
+whole street from there. You two fellows capture the chief alive if
+possible. He'll be more useful as a hostage than as a corpse."</p>
+
+<p>Pedro beamed approval of this swiftly formed plan. Louren&ccedil;o muttered to
+Tucu, who in turn passed the word down the line. Then all stood waiting.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the Red Bone man came out. He shouted a name. From the doorway
+near at hand, where he had been standing and peering at the small but
+formidable body of newcomers, an old man now stepped forth and advanced,
+limping a little, to the hatchet-face. The latter talked briefly to him,
+then to Tucu. The Mayoruna leader pointed to Louren&ccedil;o. The old man spoke
+to the Brazilian, who answered at once. Thereupon the wizened old fellow
+entered the chief's house.</p>
+
+<p>"That old man speaks the Mayoruna tongue quite well, Capitao," said
+Louren&ccedil;o. "He says you and I shall enter and talk through his mouth with
+the chief. All others remain outside, and we must leave our rifles
+here."</p>
+
+<p>"All right. Glad we can leave Tucu out here to control these fellows.
+Here, Merry." He passed his rifle to Knowlton. Pedro took Louren&ccedil;o's
+gun. With packs still on their backs the chosen men proceeded to the
+doorway and entered the house where waited the ruler of the Red Bone
+tribe.</p>
+
+<p>Behind them the line settled into easier postures of waiting. The Red
+Bones, though so compactly ranged as to cut off any chance of escape,
+held their distance, obviously neither inclined to fraternize nor ready
+to precipitate conflict by crowding. Thus, while keeping their ears open
+for any sound of a concerted movement from behind, the visitors could
+use their eyes to inspect the huts nearest them.</p>
+
+<p>In some of these, women stood near the doorways, staring with unwinking
+absorption at the light-skinned, athletic men outside who were so much
+better to look upon than their own mates. The Mayorunas returned the
+stares with the brief glances of men accustomed to noticing everything
+but totally uninterested&mdash;as well they might be, for these poorly
+shaped, heavy-mouthed, mud-skinned females were not to be compared with
+their own women. Knowlton and Pedro, too, looked them over, but with the
+same expression as if inspecting a family of lizards. Then they glanced
+into other huts now empty of life, and in a couple of these they saw
+rigid red-hued objects hanging from the roofs.</p>
+
+<p>"The red bones of the dead, senhor," Pedro muttered, and his blond
+companion, peering again at the sinister decorations, nodded without
+reply.</p>
+
+<p>Voices came to them from the chief's house, talking with droning
+deliberation. Evidently no cause for friction had yet arisen. They let
+their eyes rove on beyond the guarded doorway, to pause at a house a
+short distance away at the right. There stood a clubman, who leaned idly
+on his weapon, but showed no intention of moving from his place. The
+door of that house was closed. Not only closed, but barred on the
+outside.</p>
+
+<p>"Hm! Looks like a jail," said Knowlton. Pedro smiled, but an intent look
+came into his face and he studied the closed house.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly both started. At one corner of the house, unseen by the
+clubman, a head had cautiously slipped forth. For only an instant it
+hung there before dodging back out of sight. But both the watching men
+had seen that the face, though half masked by long dark hair and a thick
+beard, was much lighter than that of any Red Bone savage. And in the
+hair above one ear was a white streak.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX"></a>CHAPTER XX.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE RAPOSA</h3>
+
+
+<p>McKay and Louren&ccedil;o, in a broad, low, musty-smelling room, faced a man
+who stood and a man who sat. The man who stood was the old savage who
+could talk in the Mayoruna language. The man who sat was the chief of
+the Red Bones.</p>
+
+<p>In his first words to the visitors the old interpreter revealed that the
+name of the Red Bone ruler was Umanuh. Later on Louren&ccedil;o informed McKay
+that in the Tupi <i>lengoa geral</i> of the Amazonian Indians (which,
+however, was not spoken by this tribe) the word "umanuh" meant "corpse."
+And whatever the name may have signified in the language of the Red
+Bones, its Tupi definition fitted with disagreeable precision. For
+Umanuh was a living cadaver.</p>
+
+<p>Gaunt, gray skinned, lank haired, hollow of cheek and eye, with thin,
+cruel lips so tight drawn that the teeth behind seemed to show through,
+ribs projecting, clawlike hands resting on bony knees, his whole frame
+motionless as that of a man long dead, the head man of the bone-dyeing
+tribe was the antithesis of both the piggish Suba and the herculean
+Monitaya. Only his eyes lived; and those eyes were cold and merciless as
+those of a snake or a vulture. A man who ruled by ruthless cunning, who
+would gaze unmoved on the most ghastly tortures, who would devour human
+flesh with ghoulish relish&mdash;such was the creature who sat in a red-dyed
+hammock and contemplated the impassive face of McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Umanuh, great chief, eater of his enemies, with fangs of the jaguar and
+wisdom of the great snake, awaits the greeting of the one-whose-hair
+grows-from-his-mouth," droned the old mouthpiece of the chief.</p>
+
+<p>"Makkay, leader of the fighting men of the Blackbeards, whose voice is
+the thunder and whose hand spits lightning and death, gives greeting to
+Umanuh," responded Louren&ccedil;o in a like droning tone.</p>
+
+<p>A pause. Umanuh gave no sign of life. McKay, straight and cold, met the
+unwinking stare of the chief with his own chill gray gaze. Between the
+two who spoke not was a testing of wills.</p>
+
+<p>"Makkay brings with him none of the Blackbeard warriors," pointed out
+the interpreter, who seemed to know his master's thought. "He comes with
+only the jungle men of light skins."</p>
+
+<p>"Makkay needs none of his own warriors when he comes in peace. If he
+came in war the terrible Blackbeards with him would cause the whole
+forest to fly apart in smoke and flame. Since he walks in peace to visit
+his friend Umanuh, of whose wisdom he has heard, he brings only his
+friends the Mayorunas, who are friends also to the men of the Red
+Bones."</p>
+
+<p>Another pause. The old man now seemed somewhat uncertain of himself. The
+silent duel between McKay and Umanuh went on. At length the chief's eyes
+flickered a trifle. In a hissing whisper he said something.</p>
+
+<p>"The men of the Mayorunas never come to this country unless seeking
+something," the interpreter promptly spoke up. "What do they seek?"</p>
+
+<p>"Only that which Makkay seeks."</p>
+
+<p>Then, turning to the captain, the Brazilian added: "Capitao, we now have
+reached the point to talk business. Have you any presents? And is it
+your wish to give them now or later?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have a few things. But I'll give them later&mdash;if at all. This chief is
+hostile. Tell him what we're here for and see how he acts."</p>
+
+<p>"It has come to the ears of Makkay," Louren&ccedil;o informed the man of
+Umanuh, "that a man of the Blackbeards lives among the men of the Red
+Bones. Makkay would see that man."</p>
+
+<p>Again the interpreter awaited his master's voice before answering.</p>
+
+<p>"No man of the Blackbeards is among the men of Umanuh," he then denied.</p>
+
+<p>"If he is not among them he is near them," was Louren&ccedil;o's certain reply.
+"He has been seen both by other Blackbeards and by the Mayorunas. I,
+too, have seen him. He bears on his bones the sign that his mind is out
+of his skull. His eyes are green and his hair touched with white. Umanuh
+and his men know well that I speak true."</p>
+
+<p>The pause this time was longer than before.</p>
+
+<p>"There was such a man, but he is gone."</p>
+
+<p>"Then Makkay asks his friend Umanuh to find that one. A chief so wise
+can easily find him where others would see only water and mud."</p>
+
+<p>"If he could be found what would the great Blackbeard leader do with
+him?"</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o thought swiftly. To say the Raposa was McKay's friend would do
+little good. Friendship meant nothing to this unfeeling brute. Therefore
+the bushman insinuated something which his cruel mind could comprehend.</p>
+
+<p>"If a Red Bone man abandoned his people and went to another tribe, what
+would Umanuh do to him when he was found?"</p>
+
+<p>A cold glimmer in the chief's eyes showed that he thought he understood.
+Moreover, he would much like to see what sort of torture this hard-faced
+Blackbeard would use on a fugitive. It might be something even more
+fiendish than his own pastimes. So the next reply came promptly.</p>
+
+<p>"If that man is found the blackbeard will pay for him?"</p>
+
+<p>"There are gifts of friendship for Umanuh," Louren&ccedil;o nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"The Blackbeard leader will pay more than the other Blackbeard?"</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o almost blinked. What other Blackbeard? The Raposa himself? But
+the Brazilian repressed his bewilderment.</p>
+
+<p>"Makkay will first see the man to make sure he is the Blackbeard whom
+Makkay wants," he dodged. "Then he will pay well."</p>
+
+<p>"Umanuh will see the gifts now."</p>
+
+<p>"The gifts cannot be shown now. They are packed away. When Makkay has
+looked on the man Umanuh shall look on the gifts."</p>
+
+<p>Another eye duel between the chief and McKay. As before, the captain's
+eye proved the harder.</p>
+
+<p>"Umanuh will think of the matter. Night comes. The man hunted by the
+Blackbeard is not here. The Blackbeard and his men may stay to-night
+across the water. When the sun rises again Umanuh will talk further."</p>
+
+<p>"It is well. Let Umanuh tell his men to stay on this side of the water,
+that we may not mistake them in the night for enemies."</p>
+
+<p>When Umanuh had hissed assent the old man stepped to the doorway and
+summoned the hatchet-faced warrior. To him instructions were given. He
+turned and carried the commands to the tribesmen.</p>
+
+<p>"Makkay wishes Umanuh peaceful rest," said Louren&ccedil;o. With which he
+flicked his eyes toward the door. McKay, with stiff stride, stalked out.
+Louren&ccedil;o followed. Both felt the snake eyes of the cadaverous chief
+dwelling on their backs.</p>
+
+<p>To the waiting Knowlton, Pedro, and Tucu it was briefly explained that
+preliminary negotiations had been concluded and that camp now would be
+made on the farther side of the creek. Tucu, observing that the Red Bone
+mass behind was dividing again to let the visitors pass through, gave
+the word to his men. The column began to move out, marching in reverse
+order. Pedro muttered swiftly to his partner.</p>
+
+<p>"Louren&ccedil;o, see that house with the barred door where the clubman stands
+guard. Remember where it is."</p>
+
+<p>The other swept the loop in one quick glance, located the house, and
+fell into step without a word, the guarded structure fixed on his brain
+as clearly as if he had studied it for an hour. Walking down the
+malodorous street, he said, quietly, "There will be a small moon
+to-night."</p>
+
+<p>"You are becoming a reader of the mind, comrade," Pedro grinned. No more
+was said.</p>
+
+<p>Down to the shore of the creek trooped the party, followed closely by
+the hatchet-face and a score of tribesmen. The whites and the Mayorunas
+got into half a dozen of the waiting canoes and paddled across. In other
+dugouts the Red Bone men also crossed, but they did not land. As soon as
+the borrowed boats were empty the tribesmen took them in tow and
+returned to their own bank. The visitors were left on a partly cleared
+shore, separated from their uncordial hosts by some twenty yards of deep
+water. Not one canoe was left them. Furthermore, the Red Bones now began
+activities indicating an intention to establish a night-long watch on the
+irside of the stream.</p>
+
+<p>"Taking no chances of our raiding them to-night, or even snooping around
+town," said Knowlton. "Keeping everything in their own hands. Reckon
+we'd better post sentries to-night, Rod, just to keep an eye on that
+outpost of theirs."</p>
+
+<p>McKay nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"We four will take it in turn," he agreed. "Louren&ccedil;o&mdash;Pedro&mdash;you&mdash;I.
+Three-hour tours."</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon, Capitao," interposed Pedro. "It would be well to change that.
+You two senhores take the first two watches."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?" frowned McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Because Louren&ccedil;o and I wish to go visiting. We are much smitten with
+the charms of the ladies here."</p>
+
+<p>The captain's frown deepened, but he studied Pedro's devil-may-care face
+keenly before answering.</p>
+
+<p>"Humph! What's up your sleeve? Out with it!"</p>
+
+<p>Pedro glanced around him and across the water. The tribesmen, both of
+the Mayoruna force and of the Red Bones, were watching the colloquy.</p>
+
+<p>"We are watched, Capitao. Let us make camp now and talk later. These men
+do not understand our words, but we cannot tell what they may see in our
+faces. Now speak harshly, as if I had been insolent."</p>
+
+<p>McKay did. He thundered at the young bushman as if about to do him
+bodily injury.</p>
+
+<p>Pedro retreated a step, as if taken aback by the storm he had unleashed.
+When McKay stopped he replied: "Excellent, Capitao. Now I go to start
+work on the <i>tambo</i>."</p>
+
+<p>He trudged away with a sullen gait. On both sides of the stream the
+Indians muttered and looked at the tall commander with increased
+respect. Truly, the Blackbeard was a fierce ruler and one who must not
+be angered; he had the voice of a great gun and the temper of a jaguar.
+That other man was lucky to have his head still on his shoulders!</p>
+
+<p>When the camp was made at the edge of the bush and the four comrades
+were grouped in their hammocks, Louren&ccedil;o narrated in detail the
+conversation with Umanuh. Knowlton reciprocated with news of what he and
+Pedro had seen at the corner of the barred house.</p>
+
+<p>"I almost jumped after him, Rod," he admitted. "Had all I could do to
+hold myself. But I knew anything sudden like that might start war right
+there, and we wouldn't have a Chinaman's chance of getting away with
+him, so I stood fast. But he's here, and old Umanuh's a liar by the
+clock if he says otherwise."</p>
+
+<p>"He is the same man we saw in the forest, Louren&ccedil;o, or my eyes are
+twisted," added Pedro.</p>
+
+<p>"Hm! Something very fishy here," commented McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Very fishy indeed, Capitao," Louren&ccedil;o echoed. "The man is within call,
+yet Umanuh says he is not here. And Umanuh wants us to buy the man. What
+is more, he asks if we will pay more than the other Blackbeard. What
+other Blackbeard? The man himself has a dark beard, and since we left
+headquarters Pedro and I have grown black whiskers, too. Yet Umanuh
+cannot mean the crazy man would pay him to stay here, or that either of
+us Brazilians would try to buy him. There are no other men with black
+beards&mdash;except the German woman-stealer; and of course he cannot be the
+one."</p>
+
+<p>"No?" Pedro asked, softly.</p>
+
+<p>"No, certainly. Why? Of what were you thinking?"</p>
+
+<p>Pedro's brown eyes twinkled, but he made no answer. He only inhaled a
+long puff from his cigarette and looked across the water at the
+hairpin-shaped town.</p>
+
+<p>"What about that visiting trip of yours to-night?" McKay asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish to see what is in that house with the barred door, Capitao. When
+I am curious about such a matter Louren&ccedil;o always becomes curious, too,
+so I shall have to take him with me. If I did not he would say I was
+making love to the chief's wives."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Por Deus!</i> That may be all the barred house holds&mdash;the wives of the
+chief," guessed Louren&ccedil;o. "Why waste time and risk death to look into
+that place?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Quem nao arrisca nao ganha</i>, as the coronel would say&mdash;he who risks
+nothing gains nothing. I feel that we should visit that house. Something
+calls me back to it."</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o studied his partner a moment, then nodded slowly. But McKay
+interposed decided objection.</p>
+
+<p>"Too dangerous. Also unnecessary. We'll get Rand&mdash;if the man is
+Rand&mdash;through the chief. Your night spying might ruin everything and get
+you killed into the bargain. Nothing to gain and all to lose. Stay
+here."</p>
+
+<p>Pedro's eyes hardened. But it was Louren&ccedil;o who answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Capitao, I think we had best do as Pedro says. It is a queer thing and
+I cannot explain it, but I have known him to have such ideas in the past
+and they have always worked out for the best. He himself does not know
+why he does some things&mdash;things which look totally foolish and which
+often are very dangerous&mdash;except that he feels like doing them. Yet I
+have never known this foolishness to fail to turn out well. He and I
+will go over to-night and see what we may see."</p>
+
+<p>The captain's brows drew together. Flat insubordination! Then he
+remembered that these men were not subordinates at all; remembered also
+what Coronel Nunes said concerning their ability to get into and out of
+dangerous situations. When Knowlton sided with them he capitulated.</p>
+
+<p>"Up in the States we'd say Pedro was 'riding his hunch,'" was the
+lieutenant's remark. "And I've known a hunch to bring all kinds of good
+luck. Gee! I'd like to go across with you lads myself! But I'm no jungle
+expert, especially after dark, and I'd only be in the way. Besides,
+we'll sure have to stick here and keep up appearances while you're gone.
+How will you get over? There's no way but swimming, and this creek's
+probably inhabited by the usual 'gators and snakes and things."</p>
+
+<p>"When one can travel only by swimming, one swims," Pedro smiled. "Leave
+that to us, senhores. Now the sun sinks fast and I have hunger. Let us
+eat."</p>
+
+<p>Night was at hand. While the whites talked some of the Mayorunas had
+quietly slipped away into the bush, seeking whatever fresh meat might be
+obtainable without straying too far from camp. Naturally, the hunting
+was poor so near an inhabited place, but now the absent men came
+stealing back with a few small birds and one monkey. Though the savages
+asked nothing and evidently expected nothing from the whites to eke out
+this scant provision, the latter opened their meager larders to Tucu,
+ordering him to see that every man had at least a few mouthfuls to eat.
+Tucu, like a good commander, made no bones of accepting the invitation
+for the good of his men. When all hands had stowed away the last meal of
+the day the rations were reduced almost to the vanishing point.</p>
+
+<p>"Those miserable whelps over there might have had the decency to give us
+a few bites," Knowlton growled, looking at the Red Bone men on the other
+bank, who were gorging themselves on meat brought by their women.</p>
+
+<p>"It is quite possible that they intend to give us several bites later
+on," Pedro suggested, with a mirthless smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Uh-huh. Shouldn't wonder. But it's also possible that they'll have to
+assimilate a few lead pills before chewing us up. Rod, we'll have our
+work cut out standing guard to-night. I wouldn't put it past that lying
+old Umanuh to try rubbing us out before morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor I," concurred McKay. "Only question is whether he dares take a
+chance against our guns and against the likelihood that Monitaya will
+send other men to investigate our disappearance. Better keep well out of
+sight."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke the last light of day vanished. Stars and a quarter moon
+leaped out in the swiftly darkening sky. The small fire of the
+expedition threw dim shadows against the poles of the night shelters.
+Lights glimmered in the Red Bone huts, and other lights began to streak
+across the gloom&mdash;the bright little lanterns of fireflies coasting along
+the stream. But at the point where the Red Bone night guard lurked no
+light shone. They had built no fire, and now they were almost invisible
+in the faint moonshine&mdash;sinister shadows which even now might be
+meditating murder or worse.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o lounged over to Tucu, who was watching those shadows with a
+fixed cat stare, and informed him that until morning a man with a gun
+would be always on guard while the rest slept. The Indian grunted
+approval. By way of precaution against being killed by his own men, the
+Brazilian added the information that later on he and his comrade would
+leave the camp and go upstream for a time. At this Tucu's eyes dwelt on
+his, veered to the lights of the town, and returned. In them was a
+plain, though unspoken, question. The bushman ignored it and strolled
+back to his <i>tambo</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The moon sailed higher. The animal uproar of early night began to
+diminish. The fire, almost buried under slow-burning wood whose acrid
+smoke alleviated the insect pests, smoldered dull red. McKay and
+Knowlton drew lots for the first sleep, the captain winning and promptly
+getting under his net. In the Mayoruna shelter all was dark and silent,
+each man sleeping lightly with one hand on a weapon. The two Brazilians
+also were out of sight in their hut.</p>
+
+<p>Up and down, a barely distinguishable figure, Knowlton passed slowly
+with holster unbuttoned and rifle cocked, eyes turning periodically to
+the Red Bone outpost and ears intent to pick any unusual sound out of
+the night noise. Gradually the small lights of the town faded out. To
+all appearance, sleep had whelmed it for the night. The watchers on the
+farther shore stirred a little at times, but the blot they made in the
+moonshine remained fixed in the same spot. The only moving things were
+the khaki-clad sentinel and the blazing fireflies.</p>
+
+<p>Another hour rolled slowly by. The sentinel stopped and stood at a
+corner of the <i>tambo</i>. Now was as good a time as any for the Brazilians
+to start their perilous reconnaissance. Perhaps they had gone to sleep.
+He squinted at their hammocks. Yes, they were occupied. Stepping softly
+to the hammock of Pedro, he lifted the net to whisper to the occupant.
+Then he stared, dropped the net, and lifted Louren&ccedil;o's curtain. A soft,
+self-derisive chuckle sounded in his throat as he stole out again.</p>
+
+<p>The hammocks were occupied, yes; but only by packs and rifles. Armed
+only with machetes, the two bushmen now were&mdash;where? He did not even
+know when or which way they had gone. Fine sentinel, wasn't he, to let
+two full-grown men sneak away right under his nose? And if they could
+get out so slick, why couldn't somebody else&mdash;a murderous Red Bone, for
+instance&mdash;get in with equal facility?</p>
+
+<p>Wherefore he became all the more alert. Instead of resuming his slow
+pace, he stood quiet at a corner, scrutinizing everything within his
+range of vision, listening more intently than ever. Two or three times
+he leaned forward and lifted his piece as some splashing noise in the
+creek came to him; but each time the cannibal guards on the other bank
+also sprang to see what caused the sound, then grunted to one another
+and relaxed, so he knew it was made by piscatory or reptilian life. Near
+him nothing moved. And the moon sailed on westward, smoothly, steadily
+measuring off the silent hours of the night watch.</p>
+
+<p>Then all at once every nerve in him strained toward the back of the
+<i>tambo</i>. Something was there! He had not heard it&mdash;seen it&mdash;smelled
+it&mdash;but he felt it; a nameless thing that did not belong there. With
+smooth speed he pivoted, looked, listened. Nothing there.</p>
+
+<p>Motionless, feeling slightly creepy, concealed under the roof corner, he
+waited. A sound came&mdash;a stealthy sound. Something was creeping in.
+Louren&ccedil;o and Pedro, perhaps? Stooping low, he peered along the ground
+under the hammocks.</p>
+
+<p>A man was coming&mdash;coming on all-fours like an animal. He was too
+stealthy to be either of the Brazilians. Knowlton glimpsed him only
+dimly, but he was sure this was no man who belonged here. And now, as on
+a previous occasion almost identical in its circumstances, the watchman
+acted in accordance with Tim Ryan's General Order Number Thirteen.</p>
+
+<p>In three jumps he was upon the invader. His gun butt crashed down on the
+rising head. The other collapsed on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>Swiftly Knowlton snapped a match with his thumb-nail. The sudden flare
+half blinded him, but what he saw made him suck in his breath. When the
+match went out he turned the senseless body over, drew his pocket
+flashlight, stabbed its white ray downward. Then he committed the
+unpardonable sin of the army&mdash;he dropped his rifle.</p>
+
+<p>Dark haired, dark bearded, streaked with red dye and bleeding slightly
+at the nose, at his feet lay the man for whom the indomitable trio had
+traveled thousands of miles and dared all the deaths of the jungle&mdash;the
+Raposa.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
+
+<h3>SHADOWS OF THE NIGHT</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Rod! Wake up!"</p>
+
+<p>The tense whisper aroused McKay instantly. With one sweep of the arm his
+net was torn aside and he leaped out with pistol drawn.</p>
+
+<p>"Right, Merry. What is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"We've got him! Look!"</p>
+
+<p>The electric ray again streaked the gloom. The astounded captain did not
+drop his gun, but he came near it. For a long minute he stood as in a
+trance. When he attempted to holster his weapon he fumbled three times
+for the sheath before he found it.</p>
+
+<p>"Whew!" he breathed. "Have you killed him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nope&mdash;don't think so. Lord! I hope not! Now that I think of it, I did
+give him a mighty solid smash. Used the butt. He was crawling in here,
+and naturally I didn't stop to ask for his card. Feel his head."</p>
+
+<p>McKay complied. His exploring fingers found only a huge bump under the
+thick hair.</p>
+
+<p>"No, his skull's whole. Didn't even split the scalp. You crowned him
+hard, but unless he got concussion he's still useful. His nosebleed
+comes from hitting the ground, I think. Turn off the light. Are you
+still on guard?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. The Brazilians are out."</p>
+
+<p>"Take a turn and see that all's clear. Can't tell what might break any
+minute now. Leave your flash here."</p>
+
+<p>Passing the flat, nickel light-box to the captain, Knowlton retrieved
+his gun from the ground and resumed his patrol. Slight as the
+disturbance had been, uneasiness was in the air. The savages on the far
+shore were up, peering at the <i>tambo</i> and muttering to one another.
+Measuring the distance, the lieutenant saw that, though they had
+undoubtedly seen the flashlight switched on and off and made out the
+movements of men, they could not have discerned what lay on the ground
+beyond the hammocks. Nearer at hand, Tucu and a couple of the Mayorunas
+were awake and looking out. But the sight of the sentinel strolling up
+and down in apparent unconcern and the absence of light in the <i>tambo</i>
+gradually quieted the suspicions on both sides of the water. Soon the
+Red Bones squatted again and the Mayorunas lay back with minds at ease.</p>
+
+<p>Then a dim sheen of light showed for a time at the back of the white
+men's shelter, fading out after a few minutes into the usual gloom.
+McKay had pulled a blanket over himself and the unconscious man, masking
+his torch glare from any watching eye while he studied the face and form
+of the invader. After the faint radiance vanished certain sounds came to
+the sentry's ears. Then McKay's tall figure loomed in the vague
+moonshine. Knowlton stopped beside him.</p>
+
+<p>"It's Rand," the captain vouchsafed in an undertone. "No question of it.
+Features identical, though face is drawn. White hair mark, broken nose,
+green eyes. I opened one eye. Got a bad foot, partly healed; looks as if
+he'd torn it on a stub. Poor devil seems nearly starved."</p>
+
+<p>"So? Then that's why he sneaked in like that&mdash;wanted to steal some grub.
+Those mutts over yonder probably haven't fed him since he got hurt."</p>
+
+<p>"That's it. He's had to do his own foraging, and his foot has given him
+mighty little chance. Damn those brutes!"</p>
+
+<p>"Right! But now what? Look out that he doesn't sneak away again."</p>
+
+<p>"He won't. I tied his feet. He's in Pedro's hammock, still dead to the
+world. If he wakes up and starts to yell I'll gag him. We've got to get
+away now as soon as we can."</p>
+
+<p>"How?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't know. By water, perhaps. Wish those bushman were here. Haven't
+heard any noise over there, have you?"</p>
+
+<p>"All quiet. They're safe&mdash;or dead."</p>
+
+<p>"Hm! Confounded foolishness, anyway. But we've no means of getting out
+until they're back. Couldn't desert them, besides. What time is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ten-thirty. You go on watch at midnight."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm on watch now, inside. They may be back any time. If they don't show
+up in the next couple of hours I'll send Tucu to find out why. We'll
+have to get those canoes over here, too. Water leaves no trail."</p>
+
+<p>He turned back into the hut, leaving Knowlton figuring chances. To
+obtain those canoes was a man-sized job. To put the Red Bone guards out
+of action without arousing the whole tribe was an even bigger job. But
+no boats could be brought over until the outpost was silenced, that was
+sure.</p>
+
+<p>Another half-hour crept past. Still no noise from the town, no
+suspicious move on the other shore. Then from the <i>tambo</i> itself came a
+low mumble of voices. Knowlton stepped swiftly into it. As noiselessly
+as they had gone the two bushmen had returned.</p>
+
+<p>In his usual concise phrases McKay was informing them of the capture of
+the Raposa. With his back to the stream and the flashlight held close to
+his body, he played the light for an instant on the face of the still
+unconscious man. Then, once more in darkness, he asserted:</p>
+
+<p>"Now that we have him, we must get out of here. Only chance to do that
+is to get the canoes. With them we can at least be away from this town
+by sunrise, and it will take the Red Bones just so much longer to find
+our trail where we take to the bush. We'll get a flying start that way.
+Anything else to suggest?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is the best plan, Capitao," Louren&ccedil;o agreed. For the first time
+since the Americans had known him his voice held a note of suppressed
+excitement. "It is the only plan worth while. And I do not think we
+shall have to take to our legs soon&mdash;if at all. I believe this creek
+connects with that which flows past the Monitaya <i>malocas</i>. We have
+learned some things. <i>Por Deus!</i> If only we had known the Raposa was
+here!"</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because then we could have brought company with us. Senhores, guess
+what the barred house holds."</p>
+
+<p>"Well?"</p>
+
+<p>"Women of the Mayorunas! Girls stolen from Monitaya and other
+settlements!"</p>
+
+<p>"Jumping Judas!" ejaculated Knowlton. "Are you sure?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure, comrades! These foul Red Bones are the men who have been lurking
+around the Mayoruna tribe houses and capturing girls who went into the
+bush. They have taken the prisoners to the water, where the trails
+always were lost and where they could find hiding places until night,
+then drive their canoes past the clearings and get out of that country.
+So there must be some water connection by which these men travel, and by
+which we too can travel. If we go downstream we are almost sure to find
+it by daylight."</p>
+
+<p>"But why&mdash;what's the idea of their stealing the girls? For victims? If
+so, how are the girls still alive?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you not see, senhor?" Pedro broke in, impatiently. "Did not Umanuh
+ask if we would pay more than the other Blackbeard for the Raposa? What
+other Blackbeard?"</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf!" the Americans blurted, simultaneously.</p>
+
+<p>"Not so loud! Schwandorf, of course! Umanuh works with the German. He
+catches girls by stealth and sells them to the German to add to his
+slave gangs. While the Mayorunas all blame the Peruvians for the
+disappearances, Umanuh works unsuspected. He is holding these women
+until Schwandorf comes again&mdash;and it may be that Schwandorf is not far
+off at this moment. Now that we have come seeking the wild man, Umanuh
+at once thinks of selling him also; and he wonders whether we or
+Schwandorf will pay the more for him."</p>
+
+<p>"By thunder! I believe you're right!" Knowlton coincided. "He's stalling
+for time, holding us here while Schwandorf comes up, I'll bet. No wonder
+he and his men are wary of the Mayorunas&mdash;they thought we'd come to
+snoop around and catch 'em with the goods. You fellows must have done a
+mighty slick job to find out this stuff without getting caught. Isn't
+the house guarded at night?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed it is! Two clubmen are there now, and there is only the one
+door. Not even a window. But Louren&ccedil;o worked a small hole between two
+logs at the back while I watched the clubmen, and through the hole he
+whispered with one of the women inside. If only we had known the wild
+man was here we could have jumped the guards and tried to bring back the
+women. But of course your business about the Raposa had to be thought of
+first, so all we could do was to tell them friends were here."</p>
+
+<p>For a few seconds there was the silence of thought. Then Knowlton
+chuckled.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll say we have our hands full this night. Now we not only have to get
+ourselves and Rand out of here, but also rescue the fair damsels from
+the clutches of the ogre. 'Twon't do to leave them here while we go back
+to Monitaya and get the rest of his army. By the time we could come back
+they'd be gone&mdash;one way or another. What's done has to be done now or
+never."</p>
+
+<p>"Right!" McKay commended. "We'll have to save the women, of course.
+Question is&mdash;how?"</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o answered at once.</p>
+
+<p>"My idea, Capitao, is this: We two will return. With us we will take
+Tucu. The three of us can handle those guards quietly. We must have
+Tucu, because the women do not know us and might balk at the last
+moment. Women are queer creatures, and these might think themselves
+safer inside prison walls than following two strange men through the
+night; but Tucu can handle them. When once we are clear of the houses
+Tucu can lead the women to the bank above here, and we shall try for the
+canoes. Then it will be fast work to get away, but if we have good
+fortune it can be done."</p>
+
+<p>"Confound it! You fellows are taking all the risks! Can't you take more
+men&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No. No man but Tucu. He has a cool head. These others, if they knew,
+would go blood-mad and attack the Red Bones to avenge their lost women,
+and so would get us all killed. Now I will talk with Tucu."</p>
+
+<p>He slipped into the Mayoruna shelter and returned with the cannibal
+leader, whom he led to the far side of the <i>tambo</i> before speaking.
+Then, in whispers which the other tribesmen could not overhear, he
+explained the situation. Knowlton took another turn or two along his
+post, finding that the Red Bones across the water were stirring about
+and evidently aware that something was going on; but they made no move
+either to get into a canoe or to send a man to the houses beyond. As he
+stopped again at the corner near the whispering pair he heard Tucu
+grinding his teeth, and as the savage turned his face toward the Red
+Bone outpost it was a mask of murder. But he spoke no word as he slipped
+back to his own men.</p>
+
+<p>"He will wake another man and tell him what to do," Louren&ccedil;o explained.
+"But only we four shall know of the women until they are freed. Will one
+of you lend Tucu a machete? He may need a weapon, and he cannot carry
+his big bow on this trip."</p>
+
+<p>A few minutes later the three crept out behind the <i>tambo</i>, Tucu
+gripping McKay's machete. As a final word Louren&ccedil;o said: "Our men here
+may move about a little after a time, but do not try to keep them quiet.
+It is a part of the plan."</p>
+
+<p>With that he was gone. Listen as they might, the Americans could hear no
+sound to indicate that three men now were traversing the black tangle
+beyond.</p>
+
+<p>McKay took up his rifle and assumed the sentry work. Knowlton sat in his
+hammock, grateful for the chance to rest his weary legs. From the
+hammock where the Raposa lay no sound came. With a worried frown the
+lieutenant leaned over him and laid hand on his heart. After a while he
+sat up again in relief.</p>
+
+<p>"Lord! I sure knocked him cold!" was his thought. "But he's still with
+us, and there's no use in reviving him now; the less noise over here the
+better. Hope I didn't jar his brains loose altogether; he might wake up
+a murderous maniac. Poor devil! A millionaire, yet half starved and more
+than half nutty."</p>
+
+<p>He glanced at the dim scene before the hut. The moon now had journeyed
+so far westward that the creeping shadows of the tall trees had moved
+out almost to the creek, and the two crude shelters and the sentinel
+were surrounded by dense gloom. The Red Bone men opposite must rely on
+their ears alone hereafter, for they could not see through this
+darkness. McKay was visible enough to his own party, but not to the
+enemy. The blond man in the hammock watched the somber figure of his
+comrade, followed the flight of a big firefly whose light floated near,
+thought of the two bushmen out in the dark, and looked again at the
+still form of Rand.</p>
+
+<p>"Drifters all," he soliloquized. "The fireflies and Rod and Tim and I
+and those Brazilian dare-devils&mdash;all floating around because we can't
+keep still, and never getting anywhere. And you, you silly-ass Rand,
+have a mint waiting for you up home, and we have to come find you and
+lead you up there and shove your nose into it. And if you get your
+brains back you'll be a nine days' wonder and a hero of the jungle and
+all that, and the girls will all tumble over you&mdash;because you've got a
+couple of millions in your sock. And we fellows who yanked you out of
+hell by the left hind leg can pocket our pay and go jump off the dock,
+for all anybody cares. Ho-hum! All the same, I'd rather be me than you,
+old thing. Free to drift and able to handle myself. You can have the
+money and the moths that hang around it."</p>
+
+<p>With which he yawned, squinted again at the sinister figure squatting
+out yonder in the moonshine, arose, and made himself useful. Working
+very quietly, he took down three of the hammocks, rolled them up, laid
+them at the corner nearest the creek; made up the packs by sense of
+touch and placed them and the rifles of the absent pair in the same
+place. Then he lifted the Raposa from the one remaining hammock, laid
+him on the packs, rolled up the hammock itself, and put it under the
+unconscious man's head. If given time when the crisis came, he meant to
+save all equipment. If not, Rand lay where he could be grabbed without
+delay.</p>
+
+<p>Before he completed the work he became aware that the Mayorunas all were
+awake. Not only awake, but moving stealthily about, as Louren&ccedil;o had
+predicted. McKay also knew it and stepped back into the hut, where
+Knowlton told him what he had done. But so softly did the men of
+Monitaya move that the Red Bone watchers showed no sign of alarm. Both
+the Americans observed, however, that the cannibals across the stream
+had their heads together and that occasionally one looked up at the
+little moon.</p>
+
+<p>"Get that, Rod? They're waiting for the shadows to crawl over there and
+cover them and the water. They know that then we can't see what they're
+up to. I'm betting they intend to pull some dirty work after that."</p>
+
+<p>"Yep. But intention and accomplishment are two different birds. Wonder
+what these Mayorunas are fixing to do. Wish I could talk their
+language."</p>
+
+<p>"Tucu evidently left orders for them to get up at a certain time, but
+why I don't know. We'd better let them alone."</p>
+
+<p>The shadow line passed out upon the water, slipping by infinitesimal
+gradations across its mirror surface. The Mayorunas had become quiet.
+The whites waited in silent suspense for they knew not what. Far out in
+the forest a jaguar gave his coughing roar at intervals. Little by
+little the Red Bone men arose from their squat until they stood erect. A
+tense stillness held both forces. And the shadows crawled on&mdash;on&mdash;and
+reached the farther bank.</p>
+
+<p>Then a Red Bone man shoved his head forward, squinting upstream as if he
+had heard something move in the rank grass. He began to sneak softly in
+that direction. At that moment, from the water's edge a little above the
+camp, sounded a loud hiss.</p>
+
+<p>Before the sound died a sudden thrum of bow cords filled the air. A
+whisper of five-foot shafts speeding over the water&mdash;a rapid-fire series
+of tiny impacts&mdash;a couple of short groans&mdash;the thumps of falling
+bodies&mdash;and the Red Bone outpost was no more. Shot through and through
+by the deadly war arrows of the Mayorunas, they were dead before they
+struck the ground. And from the men of Monitaya sounded one short,
+subdued "Hah!" of savage satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>Up from the ground where that hiss had sounded rose a tall figure which
+waved its arms and danced about in impromptu signals. Then it ran for
+the canoes. Out from the gloom upstream other figures took shape,
+running fast for the same point. With one simultaneous movement Knowlton
+and McKay seized the Raposa and rushed with him to the stream.</p>
+
+<p>"Senhores!" sounded Pedro's voice, low but tense, across the water. "Be
+ready!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ready and waiting!" snapped McKay. "Who are those people. Your women?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i> We are not discovered&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Across his words smote a long shrill yell from the town.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Por Deus.</i> We <i>are</i> discovered! Get our rifles, for the love of <i>Deus
+Padre</i>."</p>
+
+<p>He leaped into a canoe, drove it headlong across, and dived for the
+<i>tambo</i>. Behind him the other figures dashed panting up to the landing.
+Tucu's voice rasped in swift commands. The fugitives swarmed into other
+dugouts. The Mayoruna men, still ignorant of the identity of these
+people, but assured by Tucu's voice and manner that they were not
+enemies, lowered their weapons and rushed for the water. Up in the town
+the yelling swiftly grew into a roar, and running figures came pelting
+toward the creek.</p>
+
+<p>The canoes struck the bank. Some were partly filled, some empty and in
+tow. Into Pedro's canoe the whites bundled the Raposa, while the
+Mayorunas got into anything within reach. Louren&ccedil;o appeared from nowhere
+and urged the Americans to open fire. As he spoke, arrows thudded into
+the ground and the water.</p>
+
+<p>"Take this man and go!" rasped McKay. "We're losing our equipment,
+but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>His rifle leaped to his shoulder. Flame spat from it. From the van of
+the charging Red Bones shrilled a death scream.</p>
+
+<p>Again and again the captain's gun cracked. Knowlton's joined in. Before
+their rifles grew silent the blunt roar of Pedro's repeater broke out.
+And with the emptying of their long guns the Americans drew their short
+ones, and in a concerted ripping crash the forty-fives volleyed death
+and dismay into the oncoming cannibals.</p>
+
+<p>The rush was checked. For a few seconds the Red Bones wavered and milled
+about. Into their mass poured a cloud of arrows and blowgun darts from
+the silent but no less deadly weapons of the Mayorunas. As the whites
+paused to reload, Pedro opened a new blast from Louren&ccedil;o's rifle, which
+his comrade had passed to him on the run. Louren&ccedil;o was not shooting, but
+working madly and alone to save the equipment. And, thanks to the
+renewed deadly fire of the guns, he saved it.</p>
+
+<p>Before the wicked belch of the three rifles and the two automatics the
+Red Bones gave back more and more. Their arrows plunged all around the
+fighting men, but they fell at random, for the gunmen and the canoes
+were virtually invisible in the deep shadows. Downstream, Tucu's harsh
+voice jarred in commands as he straightened out the line of boats.</p>
+
+<p>At the next lull in the firing Louren&ccedil;o panted: "In, comrades! We are
+loaded. In!"</p>
+
+<p>"Great guns! Are you still here?" snapped McKay. "I told you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"In! Talk later. Come!"</p>
+
+<p>The three gun fighters swiftly obeyed. With a powerful heave Louren&ccedil;o
+sent the canoe after the others. Americans, Brazilians, and the Raposa
+hunched up among the packs, all went sliding down a jungle Styx.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later the Red Bone warriors, taking heart from the cessation of
+firing, poured an avalanche of arrows into the spot where they had been.
+And as the canoe, last in the escaping line, was swallowed up in the
+impenetrable blackness of the forest a hair-raising screech of
+diabolical fury blended with a swift succession of splashes back where
+the cannibals were plunging headlong into the stream to reach the dead
+or wounded men whom they vainly hoped to find on the farther shore.</p>
+
+<p>"I told you to take this man and go!" McKay fumed. "By disobeying orders
+you risked losing him."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, pipe down, Rod!" remonstrated Knowlton. "If they had, where'd we be
+now? This was the last canoe."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i> It is so," added Louren&ccedil;o, his voice hard edged. "As it is, the
+man and the equipment and you also are here. And let me tell you this,
+Capitao Makkay, whether you like it or not: Pedro and I would see this
+wild man and a million others like him in a hotter place than this
+before we would abandon fighting comrades."</p>
+
+<p>To which McKay, finding no adequate answer, made none whatever.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE SIREN OF WAR</h3>
+
+
+<p>Like a fleet manned by sightless sailors the line of boats blundered on
+through the blackness. With no guiding light, the canoes bumped the
+banks and collided with one another in perilous confusion. Speed was
+impossible, yet speed was imperative. Knowlton and his little flashlight
+solved the problem.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, fellows, let's take the lead," he suggested. "This little light
+isn't much, but it's something, and there are some extra batteries in my
+haversack when this burns out. We can see a little way ahead, and pass
+back the word to the rest. What say?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Na terra dos cegos quem tem um olho e rei</i>&mdash;in blindman's land he who
+has one eye is king," said Pedro. "That little white eye in your box may
+save us all. Louren&ccedil;o, tell those ahead to let us pass."</p>
+
+<p>Without question the preceding dugouts swerved, and the boat of the
+white men slipped by. At the head of the line they found Tucu and his
+crew struggling manfully to make progress without wrecking the whole
+fleet at the turns. Vast relief and instant acceptance of the new
+leadership followed Louren&ccedil;o's explanation. At once the floating column
+began to pick up speed. And it was well that it did.</p>
+
+<p>Howls of baffled hate came faintly through the tree mass from the Red
+Bone town. Some time later more yells of rage sounded, much nearer&mdash;back
+at a place on the creek which the last boat had cleared only a few
+minutes previously. Some of the Umanuh men had made torches and run
+along one of the Red Bone trails to a bend in the stream, only to find
+the water bare of everything but dying ripples.</p>
+
+<p>Whether the enemy attempted to follow in canoes the escaping party never
+knew, for none succeeded in overtaking the rearmost boat. And after that
+one snarling uproar on the creek bank they heard no more of the land
+pursuit. The narrow margin of safety gained by the aid of the flashlight
+proved enough to give a commanding lead, and from that time on the only
+obstacles to their retreat were those of darkness and winding waters.</p>
+
+<p>Hour after hour Knowlton squatted in the extreme bow, picking out the
+turns and snags just ahead and passing the word back to Louren&ccedil;o, who,
+in the stern, steered in accordance with his orders and relayed the
+course to Tucu, just behind. Amidships, Pedro and McKay plied steady
+paddles and the Raposa lay all but forgotten on the baggage. There were
+no halts. If any boat back in the blackness got into difficulties it
+extricated itself as best it could, unaided by the rest, and fell into a
+new place in the column.</p>
+
+<p>At last a wan light, which was scarcely a light, but rather a lessening
+of the density, came about the stream. The renewed racket of birds and
+beasts announced that up overhead the sky had paled into dawn. Slowly
+the nearest tree trunks began to take shape in the void, and presently
+the shore line became visible to all eyes. At the same time Knowlton's
+tiny lamp dimmed and faded out.</p>
+
+<p>"Another battery gone," he announced, opening the case and dropping its
+contents into the creek. "Ho-yo-ho-hum! Gee! I'm all in! Eyes feel like
+a couple of burnt holes. Well, gents, I move that at the first available
+spot we go ashore, feed our faces, look at the ladies, and perform our
+morning salute to Umanuh&mdash;said salute consisting of applying the right
+thumb to the end of the nose and snappily twiddling four fingers."</p>
+
+<p>"Motion carried." McKay's set face relaxed. Then, his glance dropping to
+the Raposa, it tightened again. "Oh, hullo, Rand! How you feeling?"</p>
+
+<p>The unconscious man was unconscious no longer. Moreover, his expression
+was not that of one just emerging from a stupor and bewildered as to his
+surroundings. Though he had made no movement to change his position, his
+eyes indicated that he had been awake for some time. They dwelt steadily
+on McKay, then strayed past the captain to Pedro, Louren&ccedil;o, and the
+first Mayoruna crew following a few feet behind. His face was
+inscrutable, and he spoke no word.</p>
+
+<p>"You're with friends. Understand? Friends. You're going home. These
+Indians are friends, too. Get that? <i>Friends!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>The green eyes hung on McKay's face again; but, as before, no answer
+came in word, movement, or expression.</p>
+
+<p>"No good, Rod," said Knowlton, who could not see the rescued man's face,
+but watched McKay's. "'Fraid I knocked his last brains down his throat.
+Dead from the neck up."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know about that. He doesn't look vacant. See here, Rand. We're
+going to land and eat! You hungry? Uh-huh. Thought you'd understand
+that. He's alive, Merry. Maybe not all here, but enough to get us."</p>
+
+<p>"Good!"</p>
+
+<p>The blond man turned his attention downstream again. Soon he suggested,
+"How about landing at that little open space down there at the left,
+Louren&ccedil;o?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very good, senhor. It looks dry."</p>
+
+<p>The canoe swerved and floated down to a spot on the left shore where
+bright light poured down from an opening in the overhead wall of
+foliage.</p>
+
+<p>"Now look here, Rand," warned the captain. "We'll untie you. But if you
+try to duck into the bush, now or later, you get shot. Shot!
+Understand?"</p>
+
+<p>He tapped his pistol, and the gray eyes boring into the green ones were
+hard as chilled steel. For the first time Rand responded&mdash;a slow, short
+nod.</p>
+
+<p>McKay cut the cord around the wild man's ankles, then stepped ashore and
+held out a hand. Rand arose quietly, jumped to the earth unassisted,
+lifted his bad foot and stared at it, then limped onward into a spot
+where the sun now shone bright and warm, and sat down to bask.</p>
+
+<p>"Have to fix that foot, I expect," yawned Knowlton. "But my eyes right
+now are one solid ache, and I'm going to rest them. Watch him, will you,
+Rod? Can't tell what he might do. Of course you wouldn't shoot him,
+but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't I? Not to kill, no. But if he makes one break I'll drill a leg
+for him. He's going to the States!"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure. I'm with you all the way. Now beat it and let me repose myself."</p>
+
+<p>He bathed his eyes, then lay down in the canoe with a wet handkerchief
+across them. Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o already were ashore and raiding the
+slender packs for food. The Mayorunas were debarking and watching each
+new boat as it drew up, their eyes on the women who had wielded paddles
+with them but whose faces they now saw closely for the first time. In
+the shaft of sunlight McKay stood tall and forbidding, rifle in the
+crook of one arm, hat pulled low, guarding the gaunt man at his feet and
+viewing the landing of the expedition.</p>
+
+<p>The women, all young, numbered eleven. Their skins looked slightly
+pallid, their eyes too big and black, their faces somewhat drawn&mdash;the
+results of close confinement and anxiety; but none showed any sign of
+abuse. For commercial reasons alone, Umanuh had seen to it that the
+woman flesh he held for sale should remain uninjured. Now, saved from
+the slave trail or worse, the girls showed no more emotion than if on a
+mere journey after turtles or fish. A few spoke to men whom they
+evidently knew. Others gathered in a dumb cluster and awaited whatever
+might come next. With these Tucu talked in gruff monosyllables.</p>
+
+<p>When all were ashore, a dozen of the men went into the jungle to hunt.
+The others sought firewood, inspected weapons, talked with one another
+and with the girls, who stared at McKay and asked who he was. A number
+of the warriors looked sourly at Rand, whose face still bore the Red
+Bone tribal streaks which now, to Mayoruna minds, was the insignia of
+the enemy. All knew he was the man who had been sought, all saw that he
+was not a Red Bone, but a white man; yet their mental reaction to the
+sight of the sinister red cross on the forehead and the straight cheek
+lines was rabidly hostile. McKay, all-seeing, decided to wash Rand's
+face for him before journeying much farther. But Rand himself gave no
+sign that he either knew or cared what the feeling of the Mayorunas
+might be. Utterly impassive, he stared back at them.</p>
+
+<p>Then one of the women pointed at him and said something to Tucu. The
+tall watchdog's jaw set a little harder as he waited the effect.
+Somewhat to his surprise, Tucu and a couple of the other men now gave
+Rand a more friendly look. Soon afterward Tucu passed Louren&ccedil;o, who
+talked with him a few minutes. Catching the Brazilian's eye, the captain
+motioned him nearer and asked for any news.</p>
+
+<p>"Tucu says, Capitao, that most of these girls are from <i>malocas</i> other
+than that of Monitaya, though some of Monitaya's women also are here.
+And one of them says this man, the Raposa, tried to release them a short
+time ago and was nearly killed by the Red Bones for it. They let him
+live only because he is crazy, and they fear to kill a crazy man."</p>
+
+<p>"What! He tried to get them clear?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. He opened the door and motioned for them to run, but before they
+could escape they were caught. He was badly beaten. You will remember
+that he was hiding behind that same house when Pedro and Senhor Knowlton
+saw him. Perhaps he meant to try again."</p>
+
+<p>"Hm! Crazy and wild, but a white man for all that. How did you manage to
+free the women?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very simple," was the cool answer. "We stabbed the guards, opened the
+door, and came back to the creek with the women."</p>
+
+<p>"Just like that, eh? And the guards made no resistance, I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>"Not much," grinned the bushman. "They were not allowed to."</p>
+
+<p>"I see. Very simple, as you say. About as simple as our calm and
+unhurried departure."</p>
+
+<p>"Something like that, Capitao. What do you desire for breakfast&mdash;salt
+fish and coffee, or coffee and salt fish?"</p>
+
+<p>"A little of everything, thanks. Here comes some monkey meat, too."</p>
+
+<p>The first of the hunters had returned, bringing two big red howlers.
+Others drifted in at intervals, and not one returned empty handed; for
+here in the virgin jungle the game was plentiful, particularly at this
+early hour. Soon the air was heavy with the odor of broiling meat, and
+from the fire of the Brazilians the fragrance of coffee was wafted to
+the nostrils of the recumbent Knowlton. He arose, swallowing fast.</p>
+
+<p>"Gee! I'm half drowned!" was his humorous complaint. "The smell of eats
+makes my mouth water so fast I have to gasp for air. Must tickle your
+nose, too, eh, Rand, old top?"</p>
+
+<p>Rand, famished though he was, gave no sign of assent or of hunger. In
+fact, he gave no sign of anything. Stoically he sat, eyes front.</p>
+
+<p>"By thunder! the man's got pride!" the lieutenant added, in a lower
+tone. "Almost ready to keel over from lack of food, but stiff as a
+cigar-store Indian. Darned if I'm not beginning to respect him!"</p>
+
+<p>Tucu approached, carrying two big monkey haunches. One he offered to
+McKay, the other to Rand. The latter's immobility vanished in a flash.
+With a lightning grab he seized the proffered meat and sank his teeth in
+it. As he wolfed down the tough flesh the three men standing over
+exchanged glances. Tucu laid a hand on his stomach and pressed inward,
+signifying that the man had long gone hungry. The others nodded. Then
+they split the other haunch between them and fell to gnawing.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o, bringing coffee to the captain, asked Tucu in what direction
+the Monitaya houses lay. Without hesitation the Indian pointed off to
+the left. The Brazilian glanced at the creek, estimating its general
+direction and rate of flow, then returned to his fire.</p>
+
+<p>Offered coffee, Rand took it and sipped it with evident relish. Likewise
+he accepted a cigarette, which he puffed like a man just learning to
+smoke&mdash;or one who has not smoked for years. For his meat, his drink, and
+his smoke he gave no indication of gratitude. His attitude was as
+indifferent and matter-of-fact as if he were one of the Mayorunas. When
+his smoke was ended he began inspecting his bad foot.</p>
+
+<p>"Let's see that," said Knowlton, dropping on one knee. "Looks pretty
+sore. Yes, it's more than sore; it's infected. How'd you get it,
+anyway?"</p>
+
+<p>No answer. Knowlton probed his face keenly. Rand straightened out his
+legs, wriggled his toes, and scowled.</p>
+
+<p>"Queer!" muttered the lieutenant, rising. "He looks as if he actually
+didn't know how he got that wound. You'd think he'd remember that much,
+anyhow. I sure am afraid his head is all scrambled up."</p>
+
+<p>He went to the canoe, returned with his meager medical kit, and knelt
+again.</p>
+
+<p>"Now listen here, Rand. I don't know how well you understand me, but I'm
+taking the chance. This foot has to be opened up and cleaned out.
+Otherwise you're going to have serious trouble with it. I'm going to
+hurt you. If you raise a row you'll get an an&aelig;sthetic&mdash;a swift punch
+under the ear. Better sit still and make no fuss."</p>
+
+<p>With which he went to work. He did a thorough job, and there was no
+doubt that it hurt. But Rand gave no trouble, nor even a sign of
+pain&mdash;except that he dug his fingers into the dirt.</p>
+
+<p>"Good boy!" the amateur surgeon approved, when he finished. "You're a
+Spartan&mdash;if you happen to remember what that is. Now we'll move on. But
+before we go, wash your face good and hard. Get that tribe paint off.
+These Indians with us don't like it. You're no Indian, anyhow; you're
+white, like us. Savvy? White man. Wash off paint!"</p>
+
+<p>He rolled up his kit and returned to the canoe. The Mayorunas, men and
+women, were entering their own craft. Rand sat motionless a moment,
+McKay and the Brazilians watching him keenly. Slowly then he got up of
+his own accord, limped to the water's edge, and began to scrub his face.</p>
+
+<p>When he desisted the marks still showed, for the red dye clung
+stubbornly to his skin; but they were fainter than before. The other men
+eyed him thoughtfully, none speaking. He settled himself in his former
+place, curled up, and began to doze.</p>
+
+<p>"A queer fish!" Pedro said, softly. "Is he crazy or not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hanged if I know," replied McKay. "He's no maniac, anyhow. I'd give
+real money to know just what his mental condition is. But we can forget
+him for a while. I'm going to let you fellows sleep by turns now. I had
+some sleep last night; you've had none at all. Merry, your eyes need
+rest. You curl up in the bow and snooze one hour. Then another man, and
+so on. And how about letting Tucu lead the parade again?"</p>
+
+<p>"Excellent, Capitao! I was thinking of that." Louren&ccedil;o talked to Tucu,
+who swung out into the current. The boat of the white men followed, then
+the others. At a steady cruising speed the brigade surged on downstream.</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton's allotted hour passed. Pedro took his place and was instantly
+asleep. In turn he was aroused, and Louren&ccedil;o laid down his paddle. But
+just then Tucu's canoe slowed and floated in to the left bank.</p>
+
+<p>The others backed water and looked at a very narrow ravine&mdash;almost a
+cleft&mdash;in a rising hillside. Through it led a lane of water. From the
+third boat, in which were two women of the Monitaya tribe, now came
+voices carrying information to the Indian leader. At once he turned his
+boat into the cleft.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the connection we have been seeking." Louren&ccedil;o explained. "The
+women say the boats of their captors came through this crack in the
+hill. At the end we shall find the creek of Monitaya."</p>
+
+<p>The women spoke truth. After threading their way along the weedy
+water-path, which was barely wide enough to give passage for the boats,
+they emerged at a slant into another stream. Down this, with the sure
+instinct for direction of the hereditary jungle-dweller, Tucu turned his
+prow without asking the women whether to go with or against the current.
+Once more on the waters of their home creek, the Mayorunas quickened
+their strokes and howled merrily on toward their <i>malocas</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o took his nap and resumed his place. Hour after hour the fleet
+sped on. Noon passed without a halt, the paddlers munching at whatever
+fragments remained from breakfast. By turns the Americans and Brazilians
+each got another hour's sleep, McKay consenting to relax when all his
+mates had rested. Rand dozed and awoke at intervals, seeming content and
+comfortable despite his cramped position.</p>
+
+<p>By four o'clock even the Mayorunas began to lag in their strokes.
+Excluding the halt at sunrise, they now had been journeying for fifteen
+hours, in the last nine of which they had covered many miles of
+serpentine water. The heat of the day and the constant drive of the
+paddles had taken their toll, and now the body of every man fiercely
+demanded more food. McKay, knowing that in jungle travel distance is not
+a matter of miles, but of hours, had begun to figure that the journey
+which had taken nearly five days of overland work might be completed
+that night by the swiftly moving canoes. But now, recognizing the signs
+of exhaustion, he realized that without some powerful spur the Indians
+would not attempt to reach the home <i>malocas</i> until the morrow.</p>
+
+<p>Then the spur came. Even as Tucu began scanning the shores for a good
+camp site, he and every other Mayoruna suddenly ceased paddling and
+threw up his head. Faint and far, a xylophonic call of beaten wooden
+bars rapped across the jungle, rising and falling in swift, regular
+cadence&mdash;a sirenical flow and ebb of sound waves. Over and over it
+undulated, rapid, incessant, imperative.</p>
+
+<p>A chorus of excited grunts broke from the canoe brigade. The dugout of
+Tucu leaped away like a roweled horse. Louren&ccedil;o and Pedro buried their
+paddles in mighty strokes, hurling their boat ahead to keep from being
+run down by those behind.</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o barked at Tucu, who flung back an answer.</p>
+
+<p>"Paddle hard, Capitao! If we do not keep up we shall be wrecked. That
+message is the war call of the Mayorunas&mdash;calling in the hunters from
+the forest to take arms against an enemy. We must race now with these
+madmen around us, or we go under. Paddle!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>STRATEGY</h3>
+
+
+<p>In the last light of the fast-fading day the canoes darted from the
+forest into the clearing where stood the Monitaya <i>malocas</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Long before their arrival the siren call had ceased, but there had been
+no lessening of speed by the racing dugouts. On the contrary, the last
+long mile had been covered in a final desperate spurt, the paddles
+swinging in swift unison to the accompaniment of a ferocious chant of
+one syllable: "Hough! Hough! Hough!" This explosive cadence had echoed
+down the stream ahead of them; and now, as the panting crews emerged
+from the jungle, they found themselves flanked by a long line of their
+fellow-warriors, bristling with drawn arrows and ready spear points. But
+of the enemy whose presence that great xylophone had betokened there was
+no sign.</p>
+
+<p>At sight of the familiar feather bonnets of their own men the tense
+Monitayans let their weapons slowly sink. And when Tucu, leaping ashore,
+gaspingly demanded news of the fight, the line dissolved into a mob
+which rushed to welcome him and his mates. In the first few breaths it
+was learned that no fight had yet taken place, but that all the warriors
+had been brought in and ordered to prepare to march at the next sunrise;
+and that the sudden war call had been sent out as the result of the
+arrival of a stranger.</p>
+
+<p>Then the crowd parted, and through it came striding two men whose
+appearance caused the white men to erupt into hoarse shouts of greeting.
+One, whose hard face swiftly relaxed into a half smile of relief, was
+the great chief himself. The other, whose jutting jaw suddenly dropped
+and whose blue eyes opened in incredulity, was Tim&mdash;Tim, once more
+strong and florid and aggressive, gripping his rifle, astounded at the
+sight of his comrades standing there alive and alert. They soon learned
+why.</p>
+
+<p>Dropping his gun, he sprang at them with an inarticulate roar of
+welcome. He wrung their hands, pounded their shoulders, laughed, cried,
+swore, all at once. Then he burst out:</p>
+
+<p>"Glory be! Ye're alive, homelier 'n ever and tough as tripe! We thought
+ye was wiped out sure! We was all set to start in the mornin' and pull
+them Red Bones to pieces. Mebbe we'll do it yet, too. How'd ye break
+through? Did ye kill Sworn-off and his gang?"</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf? Gang? Haven't seen anybody but Red Bones&mdash;though we sure
+saw plenty of them," replied Knowlton. "What are you talking about?"</p>
+
+<p>"Then ye missed him by about one point windage. When'd ye leave? Last
+night? I bet he's there by now. Gee! Where'd ye git them girls? And
+who's this guy? Great gosh! Is he the Raposy? Wal, for the love o'
+Mike&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Tim!" broke in McKay. "What's all this about? Now wait. This is the
+Raposa. These girls are Mayoruna women held prisoners by the Red Bones.
+We got them last night and lit out in the middle of a general
+engagement. Now open up with your news."</p>
+
+<p>"Right, Cap. We got a visitor to-day&mdash;old friend of ourn&mdash;li'l' old
+Hozy, the only white guy in that Peruvian crew we had. He's all dolled
+up like an Injun&mdash;shaved face, tribe paint, and so on. He come through
+the Injun country that way&mdash;I dunno yet how he done it, him bein' a
+Peruvian and all, but he got through, and he says Sworn-off and a whole
+gang of bad eggs is back here to git this Raposy guy and all the girls
+they can lay hands on. He says Sworn-off's got them Red Bones workin'
+for him, and you fellers must be massacreed sure by now.</p>
+
+<p>"Good thing I was here when he come, or he'd be cut up and in the
+stewpot. Monitaya's a good skate, but he sure is poison to anything
+Peruvian, and soon as Hozy begun to try to talk he got wise and dang
+near bumped him off. I got him to cool down some, and he believes Hozy's
+tellin' the truth, but even at that they got Hozy tied up like a dog.
+Come look at him."</p>
+
+<p>But it was necessary to wait awhile for Tucu and Louren&ccedil;o to tell
+Monitaya the tale of what had taken place; for the chief demanded
+immediate and full details, and not until he had them would he return to
+his <i>maloca</i> and his hammock throne. By that time the little moon was
+again ruler of the sky and the keen hunger of the voyagers had grown
+ravenous. Followed by the rescued and the rescuers, he then stalked into
+the tribal house and to his usual place, where he commanded that food be
+brought.</p>
+
+<p>On the ground, directly in front of the chief's hammock, sat a gaunt,
+painted Indian around whose neck was a stout noose, the other end of the
+cord being held by a muscular savage whose skull-smashing club was
+gripped loosely in his other fist. As the whites reached them the noosed
+man's face cracked in a grin.</p>
+
+<p>"Greetings, se&ntilde;ores," said the voice of Jos&eacute;. "You will pardon me for
+remaining seated, yes? The man behind me is itching for an excuse to
+crush my head."</p>
+
+<p>"Jos&eacute;!" exclaimed both Knowlton and McKay. Though Tim had said Jos&eacute; was
+"tied like a dog," they had not thought to find the expression literal
+truth. The sight angered them and they turned to Louren&ccedil;o.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell Monitaya we want this man freed!" McKay snapped. At his peremptory
+tone the cannibal chieftain looked oddly at him, and when Louren&ccedil;o
+translated the demand&mdash;though in a more diplomatic manner&mdash;he scowled.
+But he gave the clubman the word and the rope was lifted from the
+prisoner's neck.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Gracias, amigos</i>," he bowed. "If I still remain seated, it is because
+I am very weary&mdash;and I have not eaten since yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>His thin face and his projecting ribs not only corroborated his simple
+announcement, but indicated that for more than one day his food and rest
+had been almost <i>nil</i>. Naked, painted, minus his fierce mustache and
+flamboyant headkerchief, he appeared a far different man than the
+domineering <i>puntero</i> of a short time back. But his bold black eyes, his
+reckless grin, and his mocking tone proved him the same swashbuckling
+Jos&eacute;, undaunted by hunger, exhaustion, or his position as prisoner of
+man eaters whose enmity was implacable.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you're going to eat now, or we'll know why not!" vowed Knowlton.
+"We understand that you brought a warning to Monitaya. Is this his way
+of treating men who risk their lives to befriend him?"</p>
+
+<p>Jos&eacute; shrugged.</p>
+
+<p>"Once an enemy, always an enemy. That is their rule. And do not think
+that I traveled the bush and threw myself into this snake heap from love
+of Monitaya. I do not care if he and all his race are blown to hell. I
+am here because, as I once told you, Jos&eacute; Martinez never forgets. Thank
+you, se&ntilde;or, I will eat now and talk later."</p>
+
+<p>Deftly he extracted a chunk of meat from a clay pot which had been
+placed before Knowlton and in turn tendered to him. Monitaya watched him
+eat, but gave no sign of disapproval; and the Americans, and even the
+Brazilians, made an aggressive show of friendship toward the lone
+Peruvian for the express benefit of the chief. They knew well that by
+their rescue of the Mayoruna women they had made their own position
+among these people virtually impregnable, and that their recognition of
+Jos&eacute; as a friend probably would be his only bulwark. Wherefore they left
+no doubt in the minds of the watchers as to where he stood in their
+regard.</p>
+
+<p>Monitaya, sitting in regal dignity, looked down upon two parties of
+seven feasting with famished speed&mdash;the rescued women who were not
+members of his own tribe, and the four Americans, two Brazilians, and
+one Peruvian. All the others had scattered&mdash;Tucu and his band to their
+own family triangles, and the four Monitaya girls to become the nuclei
+of feminine groups which demanded intimate accounts of their capture and
+treatment by the captors.</p>
+
+<p>To the strange women at his feet the chief paid scant attention now,
+though he meant to interrogate them after their hunger was satisfied.
+His eyes dwelt on Rand, the strange combination of white man, Indian,
+and jungle demon of whom he had heard so much and on whose tanned skin
+the red skeleton streaks told the tale of a "mind out of the skull."
+Jos&eacute; and Tim stared in frank curiosity at the dead-alive newcomer, whose
+silent composure remained totally unperturbed. But the seven new girls,
+though ignored by the chief and his guests, were by no means neglected
+by the other men of the <i>maloca</i>, being thoroughly stared at by most of
+the young bucks&mdash;and, it must be confessed, by a goodly proportion of
+the married men also.</p>
+
+<p>When at length the meal was finished Monitaya commanded the girls to
+stand before him and narrate their experiences. The men lit smokes, Jos&eacute;
+seizing the proffered cigarette with avidity, Rand accepting his with
+the usual odd deliberation.</p>
+
+<p>"Wal, Hozy, old feller, ye're in right with the chief now," asserted
+Tim. "Ye got all our gang with ye, and she's some li'l' old gang, I'll
+tell the world. This feller Renzo can talk cannibal so good he makes
+Monitaya hunt for the dictionary, and he'll tell the chief in ten
+seconds what I tried half an hour to say this afternoon&mdash;that ye belong.
+I 'ain't been here long enough to learn much o' their lingo, ye
+understand. If I could spout it like French, now, there wouldn't been no
+trouble."</p>
+
+<p>McKay and Knowlton snickered. They knew Tim's French was several degrees
+worse than the usual American doughboy's "frog" talk.</p>
+
+<p>"Good thing you couldn't," derided Knowlton. "You'd have had Jos&eacute;
+crucified before we got here."</p>
+
+<p>"That's right, gimme the razz! Course, I did have a li'l' trouble makin'
+some o' them frogs understand, but that was because they was so ignorant
+they didn't know their own language when they heard it spoke right.
+Anyways, ye got to admit Hozy's still with us and sassy as ever, and he
+wouldn't been if Timmy Ryan hadn't been round to powwow for him."</p>
+
+<p>"You have it right, se&ntilde;or," Jos&eacute; agreed, gravely. "Without you I should
+now be dead. I can speak the Mayoruna tongue quite well, but of what use
+is it to talk any language when men will not listen? It was you and your
+gun that saved me."</p>
+
+<p>"Gun? Good Lord! Did you pull a gun on Monitaya?" ejaculated the
+lieutenant.</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, no. That is&mdash;I guess mebbe I did wave me piece around while I was
+arguin'&mdash;I can always convince a guy better if I got somethin' in me
+hand. But I didn't git real rough."</p>
+
+<p>"You are lucky to be still alive, Senhor Tim," said Louren&ccedil;o. "If
+Monitaya were not the man he is you would not be alive. I am glad we
+have returned."</p>
+
+<p>"Meanin' I need a guardeen? Say, lookit here now&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"As you were!" clipped McKay. "We're all wasting time. Jos&eacute;, let's hear
+your report. I thought you were going to put Schwandorf out of action
+for good?"</p>
+
+<p>"And I am, Capitan! That is why I now am here. If I had reached him
+immediately after leaving the Nunes place it would have been done at
+once. But a man travels slowly when he is alone and has lost much blood,
+and before I met Schwandorf again I had time to think coolly. Then when
+I saw him I changed my plans.</p>
+
+<p>"Some days down the river I met him traveling fast in a canoe paddled by
+hard men whom I know. He pretended to be greatly grieved when I told him
+you all were dead. Oh yes, se&ntilde;ores, I told him that! I was playing with
+him, and it amused me to see how he thought he was deceiving me when I
+was really fooling him. I said we were attacked by Indians a short way
+above the Nunes place and that I alone escaped. Then he said something
+that made me decide not to kill him for a time.</p>
+
+<p>"He told me he had learned that this man here&mdash;his name is Rand,
+yes?&mdash;that the man Rand was a bank thief who had run away from North
+America, and that a reward would be paid for him. He said your real
+reason for coming here was that you were detectives trying to earn the
+reward. That is false, is it not, se&ntilde;ores?"</p>
+
+<p>"We're no detectives. Rand's no thief."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, so I thought. But Schwandorf often tells truth to conceal his lies,
+so that it is sometimes hard to know which is true and which untrue. He
+went on to say he had warned you not to come into this Indian country,
+and he was sorry you had been killed&mdash;the snake&mdash;but since you were dead
+we might get the money for ourselves. If we succeeded in catching the
+man Rand and taking him out alive I should get half the reward, or five
+hundred dollars.</p>
+
+<p>"I saw plainly what his plan was. I might be useful to him in catching
+Rand if Rand was out in the bush, for I have traveled this country alone
+more than once and am a far better bushman than the German. But whether
+I got Rand or not, I never should live to demand my part of the money. I
+know too much about Schwandorf&mdash;things which I shall not tell now. So
+when the right time should come, Jos&eacute; would meet with a fatal accident,
+such as a bullet in the back, or a knife in the throat while sleeping.
+But I did not let him know I saw this. I pretended to fall in with his
+plan like the fool he thought me to be.</p>
+
+<p>"It was not Rand alone that brought him here. You have brought back
+Mayoruna women from the Red Bone country, so you know the Red Bones are
+women stealers. And they steal for Schwandorf. You may believe me or
+not, se&ntilde;ores, but I did not know this until the German told me. Oh yes,
+I knew he dealt in women, but of the Red Bone part of his business I was
+ignorant. As soon as I learned it I saw how I could put the illustrious
+Se&ntilde;or Schwandorf out of action, as you say, and at the same time try to
+save you.</p>
+
+<p>"I sharpened my knife to a razor edge, deserted the German when we
+reached the right place, shaved with my knife, painted myself with the
+red and black plant dyes, and came overland to this place, thinking you
+would be here if still alive. But you had traveled faster than I
+expected and had gone into the Red Bone country, so my chance to save
+you seemed to have passed. I could only try to tell this chief the Red
+Bones were stealers of his women and that the German was with them,
+knowing that if he believed me he would go on the war trail against them
+and kill them all. But if Se&ntilde;or Tim had not befriended me I should have
+died too soon to tell my tale. That is all, se&ntilde;ores. Now can you spare a
+little more tobacco?"</p>
+
+<p>They could and they promptly did. With a new cigarette glowing he lay
+back and looked quizzically at the women lined up before Monitaya.</p>
+
+<p>"How many men has Schwandorf?" asked McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"About twenty in all, Capitan. There were eight in his crew, and they
+were to meet a dozen more at a place on the Peruvian side."</p>
+
+<p>"All riflemen?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i> He brought many cartridges for them. They are to raid tribe
+houses of these people."</p>
+
+<p>"Capture women and run them into Peru?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Si.</i>" Jos&eacute; yawned as if speaking of a deal in salt fish.</p>
+
+<p>The Americans looked thoughtfully around the big house. They saw that
+every man near them was inspecting some kind of weapon&mdash;making sure that
+bow cords were unfrayed, that arrow heads and spear points were firm,
+that the long blowguns had received no cast from suspension, and that
+darts were absolutely straight and true. The strong but cruel faces of
+the warriors were stamped with malignant hatred of the Red Bone tribe
+and the Blackbeard who enslaved their women. The command to prepare for
+a march at dawn had not been withdrawn.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll be expected to go, too, and I'd sure like another crack at
+Umanuh, not to mention the Schwandorf outfit," said Knowlton, "but we
+have friend Rand on our hands now, and our first duty is to get him out
+of here safely."</p>
+
+<p>"Aw, Looey, have a heart! I 'ain't had no action since that li'l' scrap
+down the river, and I got to have some excitement before we blow. What's
+more, we can't beat it now, with Monitaya dependin' on us to fight on
+his side. He'd git sore, and I don't blame him."</p>
+
+<p>His superior officers and the Brazilians frowned. Every man of them
+itched to close with the enemy in one final decisive battle. Yet&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"What 'll we do with Rand?" Knowlton voiced the general thought.</p>
+
+<p>The green eyes of the Raposa turned to him, rested long on his, traveled
+deliberately along the other faces. And then, to the utter astonishment
+of all, the dumb spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll fight," said Rand.</p>
+
+<p>Speechless, the men around him stared. His face was inscrutable as ever,
+his eyes fathomless, his voice flat and toneless. But slowly he raised
+his hands as if holding a bow; twitched his right thumb and forefinger
+in the motion of loosing a shaft; let the hands sink. His gaze calmly
+lifted from theirs and dwelt on the farthest wall. Not another word did
+he speak.</p>
+
+<p>"Begorry! there's yer answer!" triumphed Tim. "He says, 'Fight!' And I
+bet he can sling a wicked bow and arrer, at that. Don't ye s'pose he
+wants a crack at them Red Bones, after the way they used him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think, comrades, that the man has settled the matter for us," Pedro
+seconded. "None of us wants to run away; and, as Tim says, we are
+expected to help Monitaya. We should be considered cowards, worse than
+dogs, if we refused. If we do not fight the Red Bones we may have to
+fight these Mayorunas, who now are our friends. We must stay."</p>
+
+<p>McKay nodded, still studying the expressionless countenance of Rand.</p>
+
+<p>"That's settled," he announced, crisply. "Now, Louren&ccedil;o, find out
+Monitaya's plan of battle."</p>
+
+<p>The chief had finished his examination of the women and Louren&ccedil;o
+promptly put the question. Monitaya laconically replied.</p>
+
+<p>"His purpose is not changed by our arrival, Capitao. He and his men go
+to-morrow to attack and destroy the Red Bones. When they reach the town
+of Umanuh they will surround it, and all will rush in when the chief
+gives his yell of war."</p>
+
+<p>"About what I expected. An Indian has a single-track mind always. But
+his strategy is rotten. Might be good enough if he had only Umanuh to
+deal with, but with Schwandorf in the game it's different. Ask him how
+he expects to protect his women while he's gone."</p>
+
+<p>"He says," Louren&ccedil;o reported, "that there will be no danger to the
+women, because his warriors will be between the women and their enemies
+until those enemies are dead."</p>
+
+<p>"Very simple. So simple that it's foolish. He doesn't figure on the
+other fellow's mind at all; doesn't realize that a man like Schwandorf
+is bound to outguess him on such straightaway tactics and isn't at all
+likely to play into his hands. But that's the exact situation. The
+German will outguess him, and it's up to him to outguess the German in
+turn. We'll do his guessing for him.</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf goes into Umanuh's town, learns what's happened, finds the
+Red Bones frothing at the mouth, and is sore himself. He figures that
+we've returned here with the women, that Monitaya's men are blood-mad
+against the Red Bones, and that they'll do just what they are planning
+to do&mdash;march on Red Bone town and leave their women unprotected except
+by the old men, whose defensive power is negligible. He is in this
+country for the express purpose of getting girls, and with Monitaya's
+men away from their <i>malocas</i> he has a wide-open chance to make the
+biggest slave haul of his life. So he plans to outmaneuver Monitaya,
+attack this place, capture all the young women, allow the Red Bones to
+massacre everyone else and burn the houses, and then move on without the
+loss of a man. After that perhaps he intends to find us and get Rand, or
+perhaps to attack other Mayoruna <i>malocas</i>. At any rate, his first
+objective is this place. Am I right so far?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dead right," Knowlton nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well. Now he may figure that, having found the water connection
+between the two creeks, the Mayorunas will come against Umanuh by the
+canoe route. Or he may think they'll make the overland trip. In either
+case, the Red Bones have to come through the bush, for the simple reason
+that they haven't boats enough to carry all their force. Their canoes
+were rather few when we were there, and we commandeered several of them
+for our own use. If they decide to come part of the way in canoes
+they'll have to work a come-and-go transport service, bringing the
+fighting men down in batches to some rendezvous from which they must
+finish the journey on foot. Chances are that they'll disregard the
+canoes and all march overland by some route that would dodge the
+Mayoruna line of march. But in either case they're coming here. And it's
+here, in the place where he's not expected to be, that Monitaya should
+meet them. Let him fortify himself and await the assault. It will come."</p>
+
+<p>"And we shall be saved many weary miles of leg work," Jos&eacute; smiled.
+"Capitan, your strategy is magnificent."</p>
+
+<p>"Begorry! it ain't so bad at that!" Tim approved. "Hozy, me and you will
+have our hammicks slung out front here when the show starts and do our
+shootin' prone. Suits me fine. Put it up to the chief, Renzo."</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o did. Very carefully he explained it all to Monitaya, dwelling
+on the fact that McKay himself was a warrior chieftain and familiar with
+the fighting methods of such men as the atrocious Blackbeard, and
+depicting graphically the horror of an attack by the barbarous Red Bones
+on the defenseless women. It took him some time to divert the chief's
+stubborn mind from the original plan, but in the end he succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>To the vast astonishment and disappointment of the vengeful warriors,
+Monitaya curtly announced that the projected march would not take place.
+They stared as if disbelieving their ears, and more than one black look
+was given Louren&ccedil;o. But not a man questioned the countermanding of
+orders, not a mutter was heard. The great chief had spoken, and his word
+was final.</p>
+
+<p>Reluctantly they laid aside the weapons on which they had been toiling
+with such purposeful zeal. The chief watched them with a little smile of
+pride&mdash;pride in their zest for war, pride in their unquestioning
+acceptance of his dampening order. Then he coolly told them to continue
+their work; told them, further, that the next morning all the streams
+were to be poisoned, new traps set, and scouts stationed far out on
+every trail to await and report the approach of foes. Instantly their
+faces flamed again and from every quarter of the wide house rose an
+excited hum. They were to fight, after all!</p>
+
+<p>"Tough eggs, these lads, if ye ask me," yawned Tim. "Bet ye we'll see a
+row worth lookin' at when she does break."</p>
+
+<p>He forebore to mention the fact that in rifle power their assailants
+would outnumber them four to one.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXIV.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BATTLE OF THE TRIBES</h3>
+
+
+<p>The next four days, though they were days of waiting, were busy enough
+to satisfy the most impatient Mayoruna warrior.</p>
+
+<p>Outposts were established on every route by which the attacking force
+would be likely to approach the twin <i>malocas</i>, the watchmen being given
+the strictest commands not to fight, nor even to allow themselves to be
+seen, but to run at top speed with the warning.</p>
+
+<p>Poison detachments went forth to collect the ingredients for making
+deadly the water and the weapons. Those detailed to the work of
+polluting the streams gathered quantities of blue-blossomed,
+short-podded plants with yellow roots, the roots being pulped and thrown
+into the slow currents, which straightway became fatal to man or beast
+The wurali squad procured their favorite materials and, in a flimsy shed
+well away from the houses, prepared a plentiful supply of the venomed
+brew.</p>
+
+<p>New traps were set at points where a man or two might be picked off,
+though it was realized that these would have little effect on the final
+result. And inside the big houses men especially skilled in the
+manufacture of arrows and darts toiled swiftly and steadily from dawn
+till far into the night.</p>
+
+<p>These activities, however, were only the usual defensive preparations
+made by the warriors whenever they knew a sizable body of foes was
+somewhere in the vicinity. It remained for the brains of the white men
+to devise additional features, simple enough in themselves, but
+astounding to the savages, who were accustomed only to the primitive
+battle tactics of their ancestors. For the first time in their lives the
+cannibals found themselves digging in&mdash;and also digging out.</p>
+
+<p>After a survey of the terrain and a catechism of Louren&ccedil;o and Monitaya
+as to the usual methods of attack and defense, the two officers broached
+an idea born of the exigencies of the situation. As they expected, the
+great chief was somewhat slow to approve it, for it involved a literal
+undermining of the walls of his fortresses. But despite the natural
+inflexibility of his mental processes he was an unusually intelligent
+savage, and eventually the patient reiteration of the advantages of the
+scheme won him first to assent and then almost to enthusiasm. Wherefore
+the amazed tribesmen were set to work, armed with crude wooden shovels,
+in digging holes under the logs which sheltered them from man, beast,
+and jungle demon.</p>
+
+<p>All along the walls, at intervals marked by McKay and Knowlton, the
+tunnels were dug. At the same time another large gang excavated before
+each of the <i>malocas</i> a deep, curving trench, the two long pits being
+separated by a ten-foot space of solid earth affording free passage from
+the houses to the creek. Meanwhile the women and the older children were
+weaving flimsy covers from withes and vines. As soon as a tunnel was
+completed it was masked outside the walls by one of these covers, on
+which a thin layer of earth and grass was laid. The two trenches were
+likewise concealed, and the loose earth was carried inside the house and
+packed solidly against the walls flanking the doors.</p>
+
+<p>At sundown of the fourth day the work was ended. And so well was it done
+that when the great chief, his subchiefs, and his foreign allies went on
+a final tour of inspection they could find no sign that the houses were
+honeycombed with exits or that the ground in front of the little
+entrances was not solid at all points.</p>
+
+<p>"Rod and I took the idea from those pit traps out on the trails,"
+Knowlton explained for the dozenth time. "Holes are covered to look
+exactly like the rest of the ground. Every man of us has to be inside
+when the enemy arrives, but we have to get out quick when the right time
+comes, so we go under the walls. And can't you see those brave women
+stealers go kerplunk down into the trenches? Oh boy!"</p>
+
+<p>Whereat Louren&ccedil;o and Jos&eacute; smiled as if enjoying a secret joke. They
+were. For they knew something of which the Americans were not
+aware&mdash;that Monitaya had improved on the trench-trap idea of the whites
+by studding the bottom of those trenches with barbed araya bones smeared
+with wurali.</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah, and I figger them guys 'll git some jolt when these houses, which
+'ain't got nobody in 'em but women and kids, begin to spit lead out o'
+loopholes and spew screechin' cannibals up out o' the ground. Gosh! I
+wouldn't miss seein' Sworn-off's face for a keg o' beer&mdash;and that's
+sayin' somethin'."</p>
+
+<p>Wherein Tim expressed the general sentiment.</p>
+
+<p>So ended the fourth day. When the fifth broke no man showed himself
+outside the walls. Except the few outposts, every male of the Monitaya
+<i>malocas</i> bided within, awaiting with growing tension the arrival of the
+enemy. It was more than likely, McKay had pointed out, that the main
+body of the barbarous force led by Schwandorf would be preceded by a
+handful of scouts, and quite possible that one or more of these would
+slip past the outguards and spy on the tribal houses. The sight of even
+one warrior would instantly apprise any such spy that the others must be
+near, and the word would go back at all speed to the Red Bones.
+Wherefore the only Monitayans to pass through the tiny doorways that
+morning were a few young women sent out as bait. These, naturally, took
+good care to stay near the entrances.</p>
+
+<p>Within, the men waited at their appointed places. Each tunnel had its
+quota of warriors, the number being divided evenly to assure a speedy
+and simultaneous exit. The Americans had elected to fight from the
+<i>maloca</i> of the great chief, while the Brazilians and Jos&eacute; were to
+garrison the doorway of the other house as soon as the warning came.
+Rand, wordless and imperturbable as ever, now was armed with a strong
+bow and plenty of new arrows with unpoisoned heads; and he, of course,
+would remain with his own countrymen. Thus, preparations completed, all
+settled themselves to the interminable hours of waiting.</p>
+
+<p>Up on the heaped earth near the doorway, which made the walls
+practically bullet-proof to a height of six feet and thus would protect
+the women and children, one or more of the Americans was constantly on
+the lookout through some inconspicuous loophole. Hour after hour dragged
+past, and no unusual movement or sound came to reward their vigilance.
+Under the glare of the sun the roof and walls grew hot; under the silent
+strain of endless anticipation the impatience of the fighting men became
+a ferment. At length Pedro, unable to keep still, mounted to a peephole
+near Knowlton. Scarcely had he put his eye to the opening when both men
+sucked in their breath.</p>
+
+<p>At the edge of the bush a man's head peered from behind a tree. And at
+the same moment a single canoe came creeping out of the bush and up to
+the landing place. The head behind the tree was that of a Red Bone spy.
+The two in the small canoe were Yuara and a companion from the Suba
+tribe.</p>
+
+<p>"Louren&ccedil;o!" hoarsely whispered Pedro. "Yuara comes. Tell girls to run to
+welcome him and guide him between the pits. A spy is watching. If Yuara
+walks on the pits he dies and our trap is revealed. <i>Por amor de Deus</i>,
+send girls quickly!"</p>
+
+<p>Louren&ccedil;o acted instantly. Seizing two young women, he propelled them
+doorward, talking swiftly the while. Yuara and his mate were already
+advancing innocently toward the few girls outside, none of whom had wit
+enough to warn him. But the two whom the Brazilian had grasped happened
+to be of quick intelligence, and now they darted out. Before the
+visiting pair could reach the death trap the girls were upon them,
+laughing as if delighted to see a man once more, and deftly turning them
+aside to the point where two unobtrusive stubs marked the bridge of
+safety.</p>
+
+<p>Vastly astonished by such effusive welcome from two girls whom they did
+not know, but by no means displeased thereby, the young warriors of the
+Suba clan were piloted to the door and inside. As they disappeared, the
+head of the spy also vanished.</p>
+
+<p>"Woof!" muttered Knowlton, wiping sweat from his brow. "That was close!
+Here's hoping we have no more visitors."</p>
+
+<p>Yuara and his companion meanwhile were being interrogated by both
+Louren&ccedil;o and Monitaya, who in turn enlightened them as to the present
+state of affairs. At the promise of war the faces of the Suba men lit
+up.</p>
+
+<p>"Yuara comes only on a visit to learn news," Louren&ccedil;o told the rest.
+"You remember that the day after our return a canoe was sent downstream
+to a point where the wooden bars could be beaten and heard by Suba's
+men, and that a warning against the Red Bones and Schwandorf was given
+in that way. Yuara has become anxious to know more, so he is here."</p>
+
+<p>"If he sticks around he'll learn a lot," predicted Tim.</p>
+
+<p>With no waste of words or motion Yuara coolly attached himself and his
+fellow-tribesman to McKay. Monitaya and his subchiefs were informed of
+the arrival and departure of the enemy scout. The word passed among the
+warriors, who, despite their innate equanimity, began to grit their
+pointed teeth and quiver like dogs held in leash. But another hour
+passed, and yet another; and still no word from the outposts arrived.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly a chorus of screams shrilled from the women outside. In a
+frenzy of fear they plunged through the doorways. Blending with their
+outcries, a hoarse yell of ferocity rose raucously from the direction of
+the creek. At once a louder ululation burst forth at the rear and sides
+of the clearing. Monitaya's outguards had failed and the <i>malocas</i> were
+surrounded.</p>
+
+<p>Loping from the bush fringing the stream came a score of yellow-faced,
+shirtless, barefooted brutes crisscrossed with cartridge belts and
+gripping rifles. At their head loomed a burly black-whiskered creature
+with a revolver in each hand&mdash;the malignant Schwandorf himself.</p>
+
+<p>Grinning like a pack of yellow-fanged wolves, they doubled toward the
+low entrances, their guns spouting wantonly at the upper walls&mdash;a ragged
+volley meant to terrorize the defenseless women within, none of whom
+were to be killed until the handsomest had been cut out and set aside
+for slavery. Some of the heavy bullets bored through between logs and
+thudded wickedly into rafters and roof poles within. But from the
+loopholes where the defending rifles lurked no shot cracked in reply.</p>
+
+<p>The fiendish howling of the Red Bones, sweeping in from all sides to the
+butchery, swelled into a feline screech that almost drowned the roar of
+the rifles. Into the view of the watchers at the loopholes streamed
+hideous faces and naked brown bodies swerving inward from left and right
+to follow at the heels of the Blackbeard and his gunmen. In a few
+seconds more the trotting line of Peruvians was backed and flanked by a
+horde of demons hungering for the taste of women and babes. On they
+came&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>With the suddenness of a cataclysm the ground opened. Riflemen vanished
+in midstride. Savages screaming triumphant hate were gone in the flick
+of an eye. Others, instinctively digging their heels into the ground the
+instant those ahead of them disappeared, were hurled forward and down by
+the momentum of the following mass. Before the rush could be checked the
+trenches were packed with men struggling in frenzy to get out, wounding
+themselves and one another with the deadly points of their poisoned
+weapons.</p>
+
+<p>Of the twenty gunmen only four remained. They were the four immediately
+behind Schwandorf. By blind chance the German had set foot on the narrow
+isthmus separating the twin trenches, saving himself and the henchmen at
+his heels from being engulfed. Now, as the Red Bones fought back from
+the trap yawning before them, he and the surviving Peruvians stood
+staring in momentary stupefaction at the welter of death on their
+flanks. The malevolent yells of the savages had been cut short by the
+catastrophe, and for the moment no sound was heard but the grunts and
+snarls of struggling men.</p>
+
+<p>Then into the semisilence burst a mighty voice&mdash;the battlefield voice of
+McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Now! Fire at will!"</p>
+
+<p>The walls spat flame and lead. A scythe of death swept above the ground
+where stood Schwandorf and his riflemen. The Peruvian half-breeds
+collapsed and lay still. But Schwandorf, shocked into activity by the
+impact of that first word, dodged death by an infinitesimal fraction of
+a second. Hurling himself backward, he struck the earth just as the
+bullets sped through the air over him. With a lightning rebound he was
+up while fresh cartridges were jumping into the rifle barrels menacing
+him. Headlong he dived into the mass of Red Bones just behind. And the
+next bullets darting after him killed the savages, leaving him unharmed.</p>
+
+<p>The command of McKay and the crack of the rifles sent the quivering
+Mayorunas into the fight. In a flash every masking tunnel cover was
+thrown bodily into the air. Before the thunderstruck Red Bones had
+recovered from the shock of finding their gun-armed leaders annihilated
+and their mass being swept by swift-shooting rifles hidden in the walls,
+they beheld a horde of vindictive foes erupting from under those walls
+like warrior ants rushing from subterranean galleries. A blood-chilling
+yell of concentrated fury smote their ears; a hastily loosed storm of
+war arrows and short throwing-spears ripped into their flesh; a
+swift-running arc of light-skinned men swerved around them, shooting and
+stabbing as they went. They, who had so exultantly surrounded the homes
+of women and children, now were surrounded in turn.</p>
+
+<p>From the doorway of Monitaya's <i>maloca</i> the two Brazilians and Jos&eacute; now
+leaped forth and, firing as they ran, dashed to hold the entrance of the
+other big house. A few arrows whirred around them during their transit,
+but the shafts were shot hurriedly and missed. Meanwhile the three
+bushmen were striking down enemies at every flash of their guns, firing
+with the swift surety of veterans of many a running fight. They reached
+their objective unwounded; and when they reached it a fringe of dead
+foes marked their passage along the face of the hostile array. Once
+within the door, they rapidly reloaded and sprayed lead along the
+trenches, which, though now nearly full, had become a dead-line past
+which no Red Bone sought to go.</p>
+
+<p>Up on the earth embankments within the chief's house the four Americans
+fought steadily on; the soldiers shooting as coolly as if engaged merely
+in rapid-fire target practice, the silent Rand methodically driving
+arrows in swift succession from his wall-slit. Arrows thudded thickly
+into the logs masking them. Bullets, too, slammed into their
+rampart&mdash;bullets from the heavy revolvers of Schwandorf, who, ever
+keeping himself protected by the bodies of his cannibal allies, shot
+with both hands as the chance came. And the German could shoot. With
+only the small gun muzzles as targets, he planted bullets so close as to
+knock dirt more than once into the eyes of the riflemen and render them
+momentarily useless. After a time he got a bullet fair into a loophole.</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton grunted suddenly, swayed back, toppled, fell down the parapet.
+For a few seconds he lay still.</p>
+
+<p>"Looey!" howled Tim. "How ye fixed? Hurt bad?"</p>
+
+<p>The lieutenant heaved himself into a sitting position, stared around,
+clapped a hand to his right shoulder, looked at the red smear his palm
+brought away, reeled up, and scrambled back to his rifle. Schwandorf's
+bullet had drilled clear through the shoulder, and in falling his head
+had struck one of the upright poles. Without a word he got his gun into
+action once more, shooting now from the left shoulder. Tim, with a tight
+grin of relief, devoted himself once more to trying to shoot down the
+dodging German.</p>
+
+<p>The encircling Mayorunas, their first paroxysm of fury vented, now
+settled in cold hate to their work. On all sides their clubmen and
+spearmen were bludgeoning and stabbing at the close-packed Red Bones,
+leaping in, killing, springing back and onward with terrible efficiency.
+Beyond these a thin but deadly line of bowmen poured arrows in
+high-looping curves over the heads of the hand-to-hand combatants, the
+shafts whizzing far up, turning, and plunging down unerringly into the
+center of the enemy force. Each of those arrows could, and many did, end
+the lives of two or three adversaries by gouging their skins and letting
+the fearful wurali into their blood. The blowgun men too were darting
+into every opening, handling their clumsy weapons like feathers and
+constantly moving to spy out fresh targets.</p>
+
+<p>But the men of Monitaya were by no means escaping unscathed. The Red
+Bones, assailed from every quarter and milling about in hopeless
+disorder, were fighting now with desperate frenzy. Their own clubbers
+and stabbers were charging out and smashing skulls or piercing abdomens,
+their arrows rose in all directions at once, and some into whose veins
+the wurali had struck sprang in the last moments of life on nearby foes
+and bit like mad dogs. With a leader and a chance to form into any sort
+of flying wedge they might have broken through with comparative ease and
+taken a far heavier toll. But they had no leader: for Umanuh, whose name
+meant "corpse," now was a corpse in truth, his merciless brain oozing
+from a skull shattered by a Mayoruna clubman; and Schwandorf was very
+busy looking out for Schwandorf. So it was every man for himself, with
+the devil rapidly taking not only the hindmost, but the foremost as
+well.</p>
+
+<p>Thicker and thicker fell the dead. The trenches now not only were filled
+to the level of the ground, but piled with a windrow of bullet-torn
+bodies knocked down by the ever-spitting rifles. Jos&eacute;, Pedro, and
+Louren&ccedil;o abandoned all shelter and knelt in plain sight before the door
+which they had kept clear of all close attack. Monitaya, until now a
+field general who strode up and down roaring commands and encouragement,
+suddenly cast away his regal role and, seizing a club from one of his
+bodyguard, hurled himself on the nearest Red Bones&mdash;a raving, ravening
+demon of destructiveness whose glaring eyes smote terror into those
+fronting him and whose weapon swung like the club of Hercules. His
+bowmen and blowgun men, at last out of missiles, came charging in with
+bare hands or weapons seized from fallen warriors. Maneuvering had
+ended. Henceforth the fight was a grappling m&ecirc;l&eacute;e.</p>
+
+<p>Then the gunfire dwindled and died. The rifle cartridges were spent.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV"></a>CHAPTER XXV.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE PASSING OF SCHWANDORF</h3>
+
+
+<p>The three soldiers flung down their hot, empty guns.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothin' left but the gats and the steel," rumbled Tim. "Me, I'm goin'
+out and git some fresh air."</p>
+
+<p>With which he drew pistol and machete, leaped down, and lunged through
+the door. McKay bounded at his heels.</p>
+
+<p>"Merry! Rand! Stay here!" he commanded. Then he was outside, his pistol
+roaring in unison with Tim's.</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton and Rand looked at each other. The lieutenant fumbled his
+pistol from its holster, got it firmly in his left hand, slid down the
+embankment, and staggered out. Rand coolly walked over to Tim's
+discarded gun, picked it up, and followed.</p>
+
+<p>Over at the other doorway the bushmen threw aside their useless guns and
+drew their machetes. Jos&eacute;, grinning like a death's-head, whirled the
+bush knife aloft and mockingly dared the Red Bones still fronting him to
+come and take it from him. Pedro and Louren&ccedil;o indulged in no such
+bravado, but leaped like jaguars at their foes. Whereupon Jos&eacute;,
+muttering a curse on them for getting the jump on him, dashed forward
+with furious abandon.</p>
+
+<p>Their pistols emptied, the Americans also drew machetes&mdash;all except
+Rand, who had no weapon but the bulletless rifle&mdash;and waited. Few
+unwounded Red Bones now were left; but among those few Schwandorf still
+lived.</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf!" bellowed McKay. "You yellow cur&mdash;you <i>Schweinhund</i>! Come
+and fight!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah!" taunted Tim. "The women and kids are inside. Come and git 'em!"</p>
+
+<p>Schwandorf came. He came not because he wanted to, however, for his
+guns, too, were empty. He came because the Red Bones, sensing the
+challenge and loathing the Blackbeard who had shielded himself so long
+among them, threw him out bodily. They had no time to stand and watch
+what might happen to him, but they took time to cast him out where he
+must stand on his own legs. Then, snarling, they resumed their now
+hopeless battle against their encompassing executioners.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment the German stood glowering at McKay. Then, with a dramatic
+gesture, he threw aside his useless revolvers and advanced empty handed.</p>
+
+<p>"Man to man?" he growled.</p>
+
+<p>"Man to man!" echoed McKay, passing his pistol to Tim and sheathing his
+machete. Fists clenched, he sprang forward.</p>
+
+<p>Schwandorf halted. His hands remained empty&mdash;until the captain was
+within eight feet of him. Then he leaped back, his machete jumped into
+his fist, and its point stabbed for his antagonist's abdomen.</p>
+
+<p>An instantaneous side-step and twist of the body saved the captain from
+evisceration. The blade ripped through breeches and shirt and scraped
+the skin. As Schwandorf yanked it back for another thrust McKay struck
+it away with one hand and, without drawing his own steel, jumped again
+at his assailant. An instant later the two blackbeards were clenched in
+a death grapple.</p>
+
+<p>Schwandorf found his long knife useless and dropped it. He strove for a
+back-breaking hold, but found it blocked. McKay, though an indifferent
+swordsman, was a formidable wrestler and fist fighter, and the German's
+advantage in weight was more than offset by the American's quickness and
+wiry strength. Science was thrown to the winds. A heaving, choking,
+wrenching man-fight it was, stumbling over bodies, each straining every
+muscle, trying every hold to twist and break the other and batter him
+down to death.</p>
+
+<p>Smashing fist blows brought blood dripping from their faces.
+Bone-wringing grips forced gasps from their lungs and superhuman spasms
+of resistance from their outraged nerve centers. They fell across a
+corpse, rolled on the ground, throttled, kicked, struck, and tore.
+Finally, in a furious outburst of energy, the American fought his enemy
+down under him, clamped his body with iron knees, and crashed a terrific
+punch squarely between the German's glaring eyes. Schwandorf went limp.</p>
+
+<p>At that instant a backward eddy of the battle surged over the pair. The
+maniacal Red Bones, fighting to the last bitter drop of doom, found two
+white men under their feet. Screeching, snarling, they fell on them like
+wild beasts, tearing with tooth and nail. Their arrows were gone, their
+darts exhausted, and no spearman was among them; they fought with
+nature's weapons, while above them one lone clubman struggled to swing
+down his lethal bludgeon without killing his fellows.</p>
+
+<p>McKay, wrenching his machete loose and gripping it with both hands, got
+its point upward and jabbed blindly at the weight of flesh bearing him
+down. Faintly to his ears came yells of rage and the impact of
+blows&mdash;the battle roars of Tim and Knowlton, who with their machetes
+were cleaving a way to their captain. But the beastly demons over him
+still crushed him down on Schwandorf, smothering him under the burden of
+bodies dead and alive. His stabs grew weak. Exhaustion and lack of air
+were killing him more surely than the savages.</p>
+
+<p>Pedro, Louren&ccedil;o, Jos&eacute; and the inexplicable Rand came slashing and
+clubbing a path of their own to the beleaguered Scot&mdash;the Brazilians
+cutting straight ahead with deadly surety, the painted Peruvian chopping
+and thrusting with a fixed grin, Rand swinging the gun butt down on head
+after head. From still another direction Yuara and his satellite came
+boring in with spears snatched from dead hands. The three rescue parties
+reached the squirming heap at almost the same moment. But Yuara was the
+one whose arrival counted most.</p>
+
+<p>In one last convulsive struggle McKay heaved himself up until he was
+once more on his knees. His head came out of the welter, his mouth wide
+and gulping for breath. The lone clubman grunted, swung his weapon high,
+and with all the power of his muscular body drove it down at that
+upturned, unprotected face.</p>
+
+<p>With a mighty plunge Yuara threw himself over the captain. His spear
+sank into the stomach of the clubman. But the heavy wooden war hammer
+fell with crushing force. As the Red Bone collapsed with the spear head
+buried in his middle, his slayer also dropped under that terrible stroke
+with head mangled beyond recognition.</p>
+
+<p>Yuara, son of Rana, warrior of Suba, who owed his life to McKay's rough
+surgery, had paid his debt.</p>
+
+<p>Under the impact of his body McKay also slumped forward, senseless.</p>
+
+<p>Over them now burst the bloodiest berserk battle of that bloody day. The
+soldiers, the bushmen, and the reclaimed Raposa, already smeared from
+head to foot with red stains from their own veins and those of foemen,
+went stark mad. Before their united ferocity the men of Umanuh dropped
+as if rolled under by an inexorable machine of war. Backward they
+reeled, striving now to escape the red wall of cold steel surging at
+them&mdash;only to fall under a fresh attack of ravening Mayorunas who came
+pouring in upon them from the sides. The last of the group lurched
+headless to the ground under a decapitating side-swing from the awful
+club of Monitaya himself.</p>
+
+<p>Then Knowlton, his lifeblood still draining slowly but surely away
+through his wounded shoulder, pitched on his face and was still.</p>
+
+<p>"Back!" gasped Tim. "Git looey and cap out o' this! Here, you Raposy!
+Lend a hand!"</p>
+
+<p>The Raposa, his green eyes ablaze and his obdurate calmness totally
+gone, glared around as if seeking one more Red Bone to kill. Then, as
+Tim heaved the lieutenant across his shoulders and went lunging across
+contorted bodies toward the <i>malocas</i>, he ran back to the heap where
+McKay lay and dug him clear. Louren&ccedil;o aided him in lifting the captain,
+and they bore him off after Knowlton.</p>
+
+<p>Pedro and Jos&eacute; shoved the other bodies aside until they uncovered the
+prone figure of Schwandorf&mdash;a ghastly form dyed from hair to heels with
+the blood of the cannibals whom he had led there. To all appearances he
+was dead. Yet the Brazilian and the Peruvian looked keenly at him, then
+at each other.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a saying, is there not, that the devil takes care of his own?"
+grinned Jos&eacute;. "It would be sad if this man should yet live and escape.
+See! What is that tall Red Bone doing over yonder?"</p>
+
+<p>Pedro followed his pointing finger. He saw no such Red Bone as Jos&eacute; had
+mentioned. But when he looked back at Schwandorf he noticed something
+that made him glance quickly at Jos&eacute; once more.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah yes, Se&ntilde;or Schwandorf is truly dead," the Peruvian added, wiping his
+machete carelessly on one bare leg. "Whether or not the devil takes care
+of his own, as I was saying, there is no doubt that <i>el Aleman</i> now is
+with the devil. So, since we can do nothing for him, let us look after
+the two North American se&ntilde;ores."</p>
+
+<p>Pedro, with a grim smile, turned with him toward the tribal houses.
+There was nothing else for them to do, for the Mayorunas now were
+dispatching the last survivors of the attacking force. Before the pair
+entered the low doorway a long, triumphant yell burst from the hoarse
+throats of the men of Monitaya. Of all the Red Bones who had swept in
+such ghoulish glee into that clearing not one now remained alive.</p>
+
+<p>At that shout of victory and the entrance of the men to whose
+precautions and prowess they owed so much, the women flocked again into
+the center of the <i>maloca</i> and the children dived out through the
+tunnels to behold the battlefield. Though bullets and arrows had come
+through the doorway, those inside had escaped all injury by hugging the
+protective earth embankment or taking refuge in the vacant shafts under
+the walls. Now the older women, experienced in treatment of wounds,
+busied themselves with the white warriors, while the younger ones
+fetched water and pieces of isca&mdash;a natural styptic made by ants&mdash;or
+made up pads of poultices of healing herbs.</p>
+
+<p>Tim, who had expected to play surgeon with his crude knowledge of first
+aid, found himself not only relieved of his job, but being bathed and
+plastered with the others. He, Jos&eacute;, Pedro, Louren&ccedil;o, and even Rand were
+gashed by thrusts from broken spear hafts, bleeding from open bites,
+ripped by glancing sweeps of tooth-set clubs, bruised by fierce
+blows&mdash;minor injuries all, but such as might easily have resulted in
+blood poisoning unless given prompt attention. Later on they were to be
+thankful for those ministrations, but now they tolerated them only
+because they could do nothing for the captain and the lieutenant.</p>
+
+<p>McKay and Knowlton were under the direct and capable treatment of the
+wives of the great chief. Of the two McKay looked by far the worse, but
+actually was in much better condition. From the waist up he was clawed,
+bitten, and bruised so badly that he was a fearsome spectacle; his left
+arm was dislocated, three fingers of his right hand were broken, and his
+muscles were so wrenched that for a week afterward he moved like a
+cripple; but his present unconsciousness was largely due to exhaustion
+and partial asphyxiation. Knowlton, whose skin was comparatively
+unmarked, but whose veins had continued to pour vital fluid from his
+gaping bullet wound during his stubborn fight, now was badly weakened.
+But whatever could be done for him was being done, and the others could
+only stand by.</p>
+
+<p>The women not engaged in caring for the fighting visitors soon found
+themselves busy with their own male relatives, who came stumbling in by
+themselves or were carried by others. The Red Bones, though finally
+annihilated, had made their mark in the Mayoruna tribe. At that moment
+thirty-six of Monitaya's warriors lay dead among the bodies of their
+enemies, and before the next sunrise several more passed on to join the
+spirits of their comrades in arms. Yet all who survived, though some
+were crippled for life, thought only of the victory and gloated on their
+scars of combat. As for those who had fallen, they were dead, had died
+as Mayorunas should, and so needed no sympathy or regret. Even now their
+bodies were being collected for immediate transportation into the
+forest, where, in accordance with the tribal custom, they would be
+burned.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the men who brought in the wounded men continued on to the
+bushmen and, in significant sign manual, requested a loan of their
+machetes. Having received them, they hastened out to join those who,
+equipped with hardwood knives, were gathering the sinister trophies of
+triumph before heaving the dead Red Bones out to the waiting vultures.</p>
+
+<p>"Urrrgh!" growled Tim. "'Twas a lovely scrap, but I wisht I was
+somewheres else, now it's over. While ye was away they brought in the
+fists and feet o' some guy they caught in a trap&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"We know," nodded Pedro.</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah. Wal, I s'pose we got to look pleasant. Dog eat dog, as the feller
+says. Long as somebody has to git et, I'm glad it ain't us." Wherewith
+he turned to the Raposa and changed the subject. "Raposy, old sport, ye
+sure done some good work, for a crazy guy. I'll tell the world ye
+cracked heads like a Bowery cop full o' bootleg booze."</p>
+
+<p>The Raposa's green eyes glimmered. In fact, they almost twinkled. And
+for the second time the wild man spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not crazy."</p>
+
+<p>"Huh? My gosh! Ye spoke four whole words! That makes six in a week. Be
+careful, feller, or ye'll strain yerself. And as far's bein' crazy's
+concerned, don't let it worry ye none. We're all crazy, too, or we
+wouldn't be here."</p>
+
+<p>Under cover of his banter the veteran eyed the other sharply. As he
+turned his gaze aside to the moving figures about him he thought:
+"Begorry! he don't look like a nut, at that. Mebbe somethin's
+unscrambled his brains again. Here's hopin', anyways."</p>
+
+<p>The big tribe house now was full of life. Small groups of warriors,
+their hurts dressed with primitive poultices, gathered around the
+hammocks of those more seriously injured and discussed the battle.
+Others came in bearing armfuls of severed Red Bone hands and feet, which
+were distributed among the family triangles. The women, their remedial
+work done, now turned to the clay cooking vessels, freshened the fires,
+stripped the flesh of their enemies from the bones, and set it to boil.
+Among the hammocks moved the subchiefs, their eyes still shining with
+the light of battle, examining the wounded men and glancing at the
+preparations for the dire feast to come.</p>
+
+<p>Over all drifted a steadily thickening smoke which rolled up and out
+through the vent in the peak of the roof, where the setting sun smote it
+with rays of gleaming red. Around the <i>maloca</i> gleamed the red light of
+the cooking fires among whose burning fagots bubbled the red pots and
+pans. Red men and women passing about in a crimson setting&mdash;the scene
+formed a fitting end to the reddest day in the unwritten records of the
+tribe, who since noon had proved themselves worthy champions of the
+ancient god whose name they never had heard, but who nevertheless ruled
+their lives&mdash;the red god Mars.</p>
+
+<p>Monitaya himself, head high and chest swelling with pride, now came
+striding lithely in, followed by a young warrior carrying something. He
+stopped between the hammocks of McKay and Knowlton, studied their faces
+gravely, listened as his wives told of what had been done. At almost the
+same moment the eyes of the pair slowly opened and stared up at him.</p>
+
+<p>The face of the great chief melted in one of its transforming smiles.
+The captain and the lieutenant grinned pluckily back. With a nod of
+silent comradeship the big savage turned to his own hammock and sat
+down. Two of his women built up the royal fire and fell to work on the
+things handed over by the young warrior. Tim and his mates took one
+squint at what they were doing. Then they moved between the fire and the
+two officers, blocking the view.</p>
+
+<p>"'Bout time ye woke up and listened to the birdies," Tim chaffed.
+"Fight's over, and we been hangin' round waitin' for ye to quit snorin'
+so's we could hear ourselves think. Lay still, now! Ye're all plastered
+up nice and comfy&mdash;and don't preach to me no more about the girls. Ye
+had every dang one o' the big chief's wives hangin' over ye and kissin'
+ye so hard it sounded like a machine gun. Ain't that right, fellers? Me,
+I'm so jealous I could bite the both of ye."</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf dead?" hoarsely queried McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Huh? Oh, him? Sure. Ye fixed him right, Cap. The pretty li'l'
+blackbirds has flew away with him by now. Say, ye mind that feller
+Yuarry? Know what he done? Wal&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>And while he talked, behind his back the wives of Monitaya completed
+their task and dropped into the great chief's stewpot the flesh of the
+black-bearded slaver and slayer who would menace them no more.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXVI.</h2>
+
+<h3>PARTNERS</h3>
+
+
+<p>Seven men squatted around a camp fire on the river bank. Beyond them,
+half revealed by the flickering light of the flames, rose the poles of a
+<i>tambo</i> wherein empty hammocks hung waiting. At the edge of the water
+lay two canoes.</p>
+
+<p>Five of the men wore the habiliments of civilized beings, though their
+shirts and breeches were so tattered and stained that a civilized
+community would have looked askance at them. The other two were nude as
+savages, but their beards and tanned skins were those of white men.
+Beards of varying length seemed, in fact, to be the fashion, for
+everyone present wore one, and all but two were very dark. Of the odd
+pair, one's thin face was partly covered by stubby, blond hair, while
+the other's jaw was masked by a growth of unmistakable red.</p>
+
+<p>Lifting their cigarettes, the blond man and a tall, eagle-faced comrade
+moved their arms stiffly, as if still hampered by injuries. Newly healed
+scars showed on the skins of the rest.</p>
+
+<p>"Injuns are a funny lot," declared the red-haired one. "There's
+Monitaya, now. Keeps us a couple weeks, doctors us half to death, feeds
+us till we gag, gives us new canoes, sends a platoon o' hard guys with
+us to see that we git to the river safe&mdash;and don't even say good-by. No
+handshake, no 'Good luck, fellers'&mdash;jest a grin like we was goin' to
+walk round the house and come right back. And the lads that come out
+with us done the same&mdash;turned round and quit us without a word. I bet if
+we lived amongst 'em long we'd git to be dummies, too."</p>
+
+<p>For a moment there was silence. For no apparent reason all glanced at
+one of the naked men, on whose skin faintly showed reddish streaks.</p>
+
+<p>"You would," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Huh! Gee! Rand's talkin' again! First time since we licked them Red
+Boneheads. Two whole words. Go easy, feller, easy!"</p>
+
+<p>"I will be easy. But it's time I talked. I am not dumb. I am not crazy."</p>
+
+<p>The green-eyed man spoke slowly, as if forming each word in his mind
+before pronouncing it. The rest squatted with eyes riveted on his face.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not talked before because I had to find myself. I had to hear
+English spoken and become used to it. I had to put things together in my
+mind. Even now some things are not clear. But I can talk and make sense
+of my talk. I will tell what I can remember. First tell me one thing.
+McKay, am I a murderer?"</p>
+
+<p>"A murderer? You? If you are we never heard of it."</p>
+
+<p>"A man named Schmidt. Gustav Schmidt. German merchant at Manaos."</p>
+
+<p>"Gustav Schmidt? Piggy little runt, bald and fat, with a scar across his
+chin?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"He's dead, but you didn't kill him. He was shot a little while ago by a
+young Brazilian for getting too intimate with the young fellow's wife.
+We heard about it while we were in Manaos, and saw his picture. What
+about him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I thought I killed him. I struck him with a bottle. I was told he was
+dead. How long have I been here?"</p>
+
+<p>"You left the States in 1915. It is now 1920."</p>
+
+<p>"Five years? My God! What has happened in that time? Is my mother well?"</p>
+
+<p>The others looked pityingly at him. Slowly Knowlton spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Your mother died two years ago from heart trouble. Your uncle, Philip
+Dawson, also is dead."</p>
+
+<p>Rand's jaw set. The others shifted their gaze and busied themselves with
+making new cigarettes, spending much time over the simple task.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor mother!" Rand said, huskily. "Uncle Phil&mdash;he was a good old scout.
+And I was here&mdash;buried alive&mdash;only half alive! My head&mdash;Tell me, what
+happened on the night before you dressed my lame foot? I remember
+clearly everything from the time I woke in the canoe before daylight
+that morning. Before that there is a blur."</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton sketched the events of that night, and told also of the glimpse
+which he and Pedro had caught of the "wild man" while waiting outside
+the house of the Red Bone chief. A flash lit up Rand's face.</p>
+
+<p>"So that is how I got my sore head. You struck me with your rifle butt.
+That explains much. Before I became a wild beast I was shot in the head.
+The bullet did not go through the skull. It struck me a terrible blow on
+the crown. When I recovered consciousness I was not myself. I have never
+been the same until&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Gee cripes!" exploded Tim. "That's it. I seen that same thing up home.
+Bug Sullivan, it was. When he was a li'l' feller he tumbled downstairs
+and hit his head, and for 'most ten years he was foolish. Then a brick
+fell off a buildin' and landed on his bean. It knocked him for a gool,
+but when he come out of it he was bright as a new dime. Looey, when ye
+busted Rand with yer gun ye jarred somethin' loose inside, and now he's
+good as any of us."</p>
+
+<p>"By George! You're right!" cried the lieutenant. "Things like that do
+happen. I've heard of them. Haven't you, Rod?"</p>
+
+<p>McKay nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"That is it," affirmed the Raposa. "I have not been insane. But much was
+gone from me. My mind was a house full of closed doors which I could not
+open. I knew who I was and why I was here, but I knew also that
+something had happened to my brain; knew I was defective; believed I was
+wanted for murder. So I could not go out. I could only stay here, prowl
+the jungle, live the jungle life.</p>
+
+<p>"Now that the closed doors have opened again, others have swung shut. I
+cannot remember much of my wild-beast life here. Some things are clear.
+Too clear. Torturings and horrible feasts. Perhaps I should be grateful
+that some things are forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>"But now my life up to the time I was shot is plain again. I talked with
+a man who had traveled the Amazon and the Andes. I never had seen
+either, and I was ripe for something new. A steamer was just sailing
+south, and I got aboard in a hurry. No baggage but a suitcase and five
+thousand dollars. I had traveled a good deal&mdash;Europe, Canada, Japan&mdash;and
+always found that plenty of money was all a man needed. Thought it was
+the same way here. I've learned better.</p>
+
+<p>"I visited Rio&mdash;a few hours&mdash;and then came up along the coast and
+inland. At Manaos I got into trouble. Went ashore and got to drinking
+with two Germans. One of them&mdash;Schmidt&mdash;grew ugly and said a lot of
+rotten things about the States. Tell me something, men&mdash;is the war over
+and did our country get into it?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is, and it did." And Knowlton outlined the epochal occurrences of
+the world conflict.</p>
+
+<p>"And I missed that, too!" mourned Rand. "But I started a war of my own
+down here, anyway. When I quit seeing red I had a bottle neck in my hand
+and both the Germans were down. Somebody said Schmidt was dead. A couple
+of men tried to grab me. I fought my way clear, hid awhile, got back on
+the boat without being noticed, and paid one of the crew well to hide me
+in the hold and feed me. Nearly died from heat and suffocation down
+there, but lived to reach Iquitos, where my man smuggled me ashore. I
+thought I was safe there. But before I could make a move to travel on I
+fell into the hands of that cursed Schwandorf."</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf!"</p>
+
+<p>"Schwandorf. He was in Iquitos. The sailor who hid me must have sold me
+out to him. Schwandorf told me he was a police officer in Brazilian
+employ. Said he would take me back to stand trial for murdering Schmidt.
+The dirty blackmailer took all my money to keep his mouth shut and take
+me to a 'safe place.' The safe place was up this river. I came up here
+with him in a canoe paddled by some tough Peruvians. Then he began
+trying to bully me into doing dirty work for him&mdash;running women into
+Peru. I saw red again and jumped for him. He gave me that bullet on the
+head.</p>
+
+<p>"After that things are badly blurred. I found myself among savages. How
+I got there, why I wasn't killed, I don't know. Schwandorf was there
+awhile. Then he went away with his gang, leaving me very sure of only
+one thing&mdash;I was a murderer and would be executed if caught. And&mdash;well,
+that's about all, except that the savages seemed rather afraid of me and
+didn't want me around."</p>
+
+<p>There was another silence. Then Louren&ccedil;o remarked:</p>
+
+<p>"Between Schmidt and Schwandorf you have suffered much. It is possible
+that there was a connection of some sort between them. But neither can
+ever trouble you again. I do not see why Schwandorf took the trouble
+even to put you among the Red Bones. One more bullet would have ended
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Any ideas on that subject, Jos&eacute;?" asked McKay.</p>
+
+<p>"Only a guess, Capitan. I was not here five years ago, and I knew
+nothing of Schwandorf then. But I know he always schemed for his own
+good and overlooked no chances. So perhaps, finding this man not dead,
+but darkened in mind by his bullet, he thought he might be able to use
+him in some way at some future time. A dead man is not useful to anyone.
+If this man should never become valuable he could live and die forgotten
+among savages, where he could do Schwandorf no harm. If worth something
+he could be found again."</p>
+
+<p>"Cold-blooded Prussian efficiency," nodded McKay. Then he spoke directly
+to Rand.</p>
+
+<p>"Since you're mentally sound," he went on, "we may as well tell you how
+you happen to be among us. We three&mdash;Merry, Tim, and I&mdash;came here to
+find you. The settlement of the Dawson estate hinges on you."</p>
+
+<p>"On me? How? I've no claim to it. Paul Dawson, Uncle Phil's son&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Is dead, too. Killed in action in the Argonne, You're next in line."</p>
+
+<p>McKay watched him keenly. So did Knowlton. The half-expected jubilance
+did not come.</p>
+
+<p>"So Paul's gone," was Rand's reply. "Hard luck. Suppose I hadn't been
+found&mdash;then what?"</p>
+
+<p>"In due time the money would go to a school. Boys' school."</p>
+
+<p>"Orphans? Blind? Cripples?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hardly." McKay's mouth curved sardonically. He named a preparatory
+school of the "exclusive" type. Rand's mouth also twisted.</p>
+
+<p>"That hotbed of snobbery? That twin sister to a society girls' finishing
+school? Might have known it, though. Uncle Phil was fond of the sort of
+education that doesn't educate. I'm glad you fellows found me. I'll go
+home and collect every red cent, just to keep it out of the hands of the
+supercilious bunch of bishops that run that sissy-spawner."</p>
+
+<p>Knowlton chuckled appreciatively.</p>
+
+<p>"It's not the sort of school that breeds he-men, for a fact," he agreed.
+"But you don't seem much enthused over having a couple of millions
+dropped into your lap."</p>
+
+<p>Rand sat still. His face remained cheerless, impassive.</p>
+
+<p>"What is money?" he said, presently. "I've always had plenty of it.
+What's it done for me? When you have it you can't tell whether people
+are friends to you or only friends to your money. It makes you cynical,
+suspicious. What's worse, you depend too much on it. You think it will
+do everything. Then if you land in a place where it's no good and you
+haven't got it, anyway, you're up against it a good deal harder than the
+fellow who never had it but knows how to handle himself without it."</p>
+
+<p>"True for ye," Tim concurred, heartily. "All the same, I bet ye'll
+change yer tune after ye git home."</p>
+
+<p>"Will I?" The green eyes impaled him. "Maybe. But I don't think so. I've
+had my run at blowing in money on myself alone. Now I'm going to blow
+some on other folks. I missed out on the war, but&mdash;There must be quite a
+few of our fellows lamed and crippled by that war. And I'll gamble that
+the government isn't treating them all like princes. I know something
+about governments."</p>
+
+<p>"Princes? Say, feller, there's many a dog that's took better care of
+than some of our boys back home!"</p>
+
+<p>"So I thought. The income from a couple of millions, along with some of
+the principal, will do a lot of good if used right. And&mdash;" His eyes
+turned to the three bushmen.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not look at us in that way," said Louren&ccedil;o, reading his thought. "We
+can make all the money we need, and we came with the capitao and his
+comrades only because we wanted excitement. Use your money for the
+crippled men who need it."</p>
+
+<p>"And Jos&eacute; Martinez also is well able to provide for his wants," coolly
+added the other naked man. "I am here only to settle old scores, and now
+they are settled. Each man is goaded by his own spur&mdash;money, wine,
+women, excitement, revenge. Money is not mine."</p>
+
+<p>He yawned, arose, stretched like a cat, and stepped toward his hammock.
+The two Brasilians also moved toward the <i>tambo</i>. The others stood a
+moment longer beside the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, since we three didn't come here because of wine, women, or
+revenge," Knowlton said, whimsically, "it must have been for money and
+excitement. Don't know which was the stronger lure, but if we could have
+only one of the two I think we'd let the money slide. How about it,
+Rod?"</p>
+
+<p>"Right! And, Rand, let me say this: Before we knew you we had an
+impression that you were more or less of a worthless pup. We've changed
+our ideas. If you ever go broke and want to hit a trail into some new
+place to make a strike of your own, and you need partners, let us know."</p>
+
+<p>And he held out his hand.</p>
+
+<p>The naked millionaire took it. For the first time a faint smile
+lightened his face.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll do that, partners!" he promised.</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah! That's the word. Pardners! Only, li'l' Timmy Ryan bucks at ever
+travelin' back into this here, now, Ja-va-ree jungle. I got enough of
+it. Right now I'm homesick."</p>
+
+<p>"So say we all," affirmed Knowlton. "Now let's turn in."</p>
+
+<p>But Tim stood a little longer looking out at the moonlit river and the
+two waiting canoes. His gaze roved along the stream, northward. He
+lifted his head, opened his mouth, expanded his lungs, and then the
+astounded denizens of forest and stream cut short their discordant
+concert to listen to something they never had heard before and never
+would hear again&mdash;a great voice thundering a censored version of a North
+American army song.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Home, boys, home! Home we want to be!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Home, boys, home, in God's countree!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We'll raise Ol' Glory to the top o' the pole<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And we'll all come back&mdash;not a dog-gone soul!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PATHLESS TRAIL***</p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Pathless Trail, by Arthur O. (Arthur
+Olney) Friel
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Pathless Trail
+
+
+Author: Arthur O. (Arthur Olney) Friel
+
+
+
+Release Date: October 24, 2009 [eBook #30324]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PATHLESS TRAIL***
+
+
+E-text prepared by David Garcia, Mary Meehan, and the Project Gutenberg
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+THE PATHLESS TRAIL
+
+by
+
+ARTHUR O. FRIEL
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+New York
+Grosset & Dunlap
+Publishers
+
+Made in the United States of America
+
+THE PATHLESS TRAIL
+
+Copyright, 1922, by Harper & Brothers
+Printed in the United States of America
+
+
+
+
+ TO
+ THE MEMORY OF
+ MY FATHER
+ GEORGE WILLIAM FRIEL
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ I. SONS OF THE NORTH
+
+ II. AT SUNDOWN
+
+ III. THE VOICE OF THE WILDS
+
+ IV. THE GERMAN
+
+ V. INTO THE BUSH
+
+ VI. IN THE NIGHT WATCH
+
+ VII. COLD STEEL
+
+ VII. THE DOUBLE-CROSS
+
+ IX. FIDDLERS THREE
+
+ X. BY THE LIGHT OF STORM
+
+ XI. OUT OF THE AIR
+
+ XII. THE ARROW
+
+ XIII. THE WAY OF THE JUNGLE
+
+ XIV. A DUEL WITH DEATH
+
+ XV. THE CANNIBALS
+
+ XVI. BLACKBEARD
+
+ XVII. FEVER
+
+ XIX. FRUIT OF THE TRAP
+
+ XIX. THE RED BONES
+
+ XX. THE RAPOSA
+
+ XXI. SHADOWS OF THE NIGHT
+
+ XXII. THE SIREN OF WAR
+
+ XXIII. STRATEGY
+
+ XXIV. THE BATTLE OF THE TRIBES
+
+ XXV. THE PASSING OF SCHWANDORF
+
+ XXVI. PARTNERS
+
+
+
+
+THE PATHLESS TRAIL
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+SONS OF THE NORTH
+
+
+Three men stood ankle deep in mud on the shore of a jungle river,
+silently watching a ribbon of smoke drift and dissolve above the somber
+mass of trees to the northwest.
+
+Three men of widely different types they were, yet all cradled in the
+same far-off northern land. The tallest, lean bodied but broad
+shouldered, black of hair and gray of eye, held himself in soldierly
+fashion and gazed unmoved. His two mates--one stocky, red faced and red
+headed; the other slender, bronzed and blond--betrayed their thoughts in
+their blue eyes. The red man squinted quizzically at the smoke feather
+as if it mattered little to him where he was. The blond watched it with
+the wistfulness of one who sees the last sign of his own world fade out.
+
+Behind them, at a respectful distance, a number of swarthy individuals
+of both sexes in nondescript garments smoked and stared at the trio with
+the interest always accorded strangers by the dwellers of the Out
+Places. They eyed the uncompromising back of the tall one, the easy
+lounge of the red one, the thoughtful attitude of the light one. The
+copper-faced men peered at the rifles hanging in the right hands of the
+newcomers, their knee boots, khaki clothing, and wide hats. The women
+let their eyes rove over the boxes and bundles reposing in the mud
+beside the three.
+
+"_Ingles?_" hazarded a woman, speaking through the stem of the black
+pipe clutched in her filed teeth.
+
+"_Notre-Americano_," asserted a man, nodding toward the broad hats.
+"Englishmen would wear the round helmets of pith."
+
+"_Mercadores?_ Traders?" suggested the woman, hopefully running an eye
+again over the bundles.
+
+"_Exploradores_," the man corrected. "Explorers of the bush. Have you no
+eyes? Do you not see the guns and high boots?"
+
+The woman subsided. The others continued what seemed to be their only
+occupation--smoking.
+
+The smoke streamer in the north vanished. As if moved by the same
+impulse, the three strangers turned their heads and looked
+south-westward, upriver. The red-haired man spoke.
+
+"So we've lit at last, as the feller said when him and his airyplane
+landed in a sewer. Faith, I dunno but he was better off than us, at
+that--he wasn't two thousand miles from nowheres like we are. The
+steamer's gone, and us three pore li'l' boys are left a long ways from
+home."
+
+Then, assuming the tone of a showman, he went on:
+
+"Before ye, girls, ye see the well known Ja-va-ree River, which I never
+seen before and comes from gosh-knows-where and ends in the Ammyzon.
+Over there on t'other side the water is Peru. Yer feet are in the mud of
+Brazil. This other river to yer left is the Tickywahoo--"
+
+"Tecuahy," the blond man corrected, grinning.
+
+"Yeah. And behind ye is the last town in the world and the place that
+God forgot. What d'ye call this here, now, city?"
+
+"Remate de Males. Which means 'Culmination of Evils.'"
+
+"Yeah. It looks it. Wonder if it's anything like Hell's Kitchen, up in
+li'l' old N'Yawk."
+
+They turned and looked dubiously at the town--a row of perhaps seventy
+iron-walled and palm-roofed houses set on high palm-trunk poles, each
+with its ladder dropping from the doorway to the one muddy street. Then
+spoke the tall man.
+
+"Before you see it again, Tim, you'll think it's quite a town. Above
+here is nothing but a few rubber estates, seven hundred miles of unknown
+river, and empty jungle."
+
+"Empty, huh? Then they kidded us on the boat. From what they said it's
+fair crawlin' with snakes and jaggers and lizards and bloody vampires
+and spiders as big as yer fist. And the water is full o' man-eatin' fish
+and the bush full o' man-eatin' Injuns. If that's what ye call empty,
+Cap, don't take me no place where it's crowded."
+
+A slight smile twitched the set lips of the tall "cap."
+
+"They're all here, Tim, though maybe not so thick as you expect. Lots of
+other things too. Who's this?"
+
+Through the knot of pipe-puffing idlers came a portly coppery man in
+uniform.
+
+"Well, I'll be--Say, he's the same chap who came onto the boat in a
+police uniform. Now he's in army rig," the light-haired member of the
+trio exclaimed. "O Lordy! I've got it! He's the police force and the
+army! The whole blooming works! Ha!"
+
+Tim snickered and stepped forward.
+
+"Hullo, buddy!" he greeted. "What's on yer mind?"
+
+"_Boa dia_, senhor," responded the official, affably. With the words he
+deftly slipped an arm around Tim's waist and lifted the other hand
+toward his shoulder. But that hand stopped short, then flew wildly out
+into the air.
+
+Tim gave a grunt and a heave. The official went skidding and slithering
+six feet through the mud, clutching at nothing and contorting himself in
+a frantic effort to keep from sprawling in the muck. By a margin thin as
+an eyelash he succeeded in preserving his balance and stood where he
+stopped, amazement and anger in his face.
+
+"Lay off that stuff!" growled Tim, head forward and jaw out. "If ye want
+trouble come and git it like a man, not sneak up with a grin and then
+clinch. Don't reach for no knife, now, or I'll drill ye--"
+
+"Tim!" barked the black-haired one. "Ten-_shun_!"
+
+Automatically Tim's head snapped erect and his shoulders went back. He
+relaxed again almost at once. But in the meantime the tall man had
+stepped forward and faced the raging representative of the government of
+Brazil.
+
+"Pardon, comrade," he said with an engaging smile. "My friend is a
+stranger to Brazil and not acquainted with your manner of welcome. In
+our own country men never put the arm around one another except in
+combat. He has been a soldier. You are a soldier. So you can understand
+that a fighting man may be a little abrupt when he does not understand."
+
+The smile, the apology, and most of all the subtle flattery of being
+treated as an equal by a man whose manner betokened the North American
+army officer, mollified the aggrieved official at once. The hot gleam
+died out of his eyes. Punctiliously he saluted. The salute was as
+punctiliously returned.
+
+"It is forgotten, Capitao. As the capitao says, we soldiers are
+sometimes overquick. I come to give you welcome to Remate de Males. My
+services are at your disposal."
+
+"We thank you. Why do you call me capitao?"
+
+"My eyes know a capitao when they see him."
+
+"But this is not a military expedition, my friend. Nor are any of us
+soldiers now--though we all have been."
+
+"Once a capitao, always a capitao," the Brazilian insisted. Then he
+hinted: "If the capitao and his friends wish to call upon the
+superintendente they will find him in the intendencia, the blue building
+beyond the hotel. It will soon be closed for the day."
+
+The tall American's keen gray eyes roved down the street to the
+weather-beaten house whose peeling walls once might have been blue. He
+nodded shortly.
+
+"Better go down there," he said. "Come on, Merry. Tim, stick here and
+keep an eye on the stuff. And don't start another war while we're gone."
+
+"Right, Cap." Tim deftly swung his rifle to his right shoulder. "I'll
+walk me post in a military manner, keepin' always on the alert and
+observin' everything that takes place within sight or hearin', accordin'
+to Gin'ral Order Number Two. There won't be no war unless somebody
+starts somethin'. Hey, there, buddy, would ye smoke a God's-country
+cigarette if I give ye one?"
+
+"_Si_," grinned the soldier-policeman, all animosity gone. And as the
+other two men tramped away through the mud they also grinned, looking
+back at the North and the South American pacing side by side in
+sentry-go, blowing smoke and conversing like brothers in arms.
+
+"Tim likes to remember his 'general orders,' but he's forgotten Number
+Five," laughed the blond man.
+
+"Five? 'To talk to no one except in line of duty.' Don't need it here,
+Merry."
+
+"Nope. The _entente cordiale_ is the thing. Here's hoping nobody makes
+Tim remember his 'Gin'ral Order Number Thirteen' while we're gone, Rod."
+
+He of the black hair smiled again as his mate, mimicking Tim's gruff
+voice, quoted:
+
+"'Gin'ral Order Number Thirteen: In case o' doubt, bust the other guy
+quick.'"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+AT SUNDOWN
+
+
+Past the loungers in the street, past others in the doorways, past
+children and dogs and goats, the pair marched briskly to the faded blue
+house whence the federal superintendent ruled the town with tropic
+indolence. There they found a thin, fever-worn, gravely courteous
+gentleman awaiting them.
+
+"Sit, senhores," he urged, with a languid wave of the hand toward
+chairs. "I am honored by your visit, as is all Remate de Males. In what
+way can I serve you?"
+
+The blond answered:
+
+"We have come, sir, both for the pleasure of making your acquaintance
+and for a little information. First permit me to introduce my friend Mr.
+Roderick McKay, lately a captain in the United States army. I am
+Meredith Knowlton. There is a third member of our party, Mr. Timothy
+Ryan, who remained on the river bank to talk with--er--a soldier of
+Brazil."
+
+The federal official nodded, a slight smile in his eyes.
+
+"We are here ostensibly for exploration," Knowlton continued, candidly,
+"but actually to find a certain man. I think it quite probable that we
+shall have to do considerable exploring before finding him."
+
+"Ah," the other murmured, shrewdly. "It is a matter of police work,
+perhaps?"
+
+"No--and yes. The man we seek is not wanted by the law, and yet he is.
+He has committed no crime, and so cannot be arrested. But the law wants
+him badly because the settlement of a certain big estate hinges upon the
+question of whether he is alive or dead. If alive, he is heir to more
+than a million. If not--the money goes elsewhere."
+
+"Ah," repeated the official, thoughtfully.
+
+"I might add," McKay broke in with a touch of stiffness, "that neither I
+nor either of my companions would profit in any way by this man's death.
+Quite the contrary."
+
+"Ah," reiterated the other, his face clearing. "You are commissioned,
+perhaps, to find and produce this man."
+
+"Exactly," Knowlton nodded. "From our own financial standpoint he is
+worth much more alive than dead. On the other hand, any absolute proof
+of his death--proof which would stand in a court of law--is worth
+something also. Our task is to produce either the man himself or
+indisputable proof that he no longer lives.
+
+"The man's name is David Dawson Rand. If alive, he now is thirty-three
+years old. Height five feet nine. Weight about one hundred sixty. Hair
+dark, though not black. Eyes grayish green. Chief distinguishing marks
+are the green eyes, a broken nose--caused by being struck in the face by
+a baseball--and a patch of snow-white hair the size of a thumb ball, two
+inches above the left ear. Accustomed to having his own way, not at all
+considerate of others. Yet not a bad fellow as men go--merely a man
+spoiled by too much mothering in boyhood and by the fact that he never
+had to work. This is he."
+
+From a breast pocket he drew a small grain-leather notebook, from which
+he extracted an unmounted photograph. The superintendent looked into the
+pictured face of a full-cheeked, wide-mouthed, square-jawed man with a
+slightly blase expression and a half-cynical smile. After studying it a
+minute he nodded and handed it back.
+
+"As you say, senhor, a man who never has had to work."
+
+"Exactly. For five years this man has been regarded as dead. It was his
+habit to start off suddenly for any place where his whims drew him,
+notifying nobody of his departure. But a few days later he would always
+write, cable, or telegraph his relatives, so that his general
+whereabouts would soon become known. On his last trip he sent a radio
+message from a steamer, out at sea, saying he was bound for Rio Janeiro.
+That was the last ever heard from him."
+
+"Rio is far from here," suggested the Brazilian.
+
+"Just so. We look for Rand at the headwaters of the Amazon, instead of
+in Rio, because Rio yields no clew and because of one other thing which
+I shall speak of presently.
+
+"It has been learned that he reached Rio safely, but there his trail
+ended. As he had several thousand dollars on his person, it was
+concluded that he was murdered for his money and his body disposed of.
+This belief has been held until quite recently, when a new book of
+travel was published--_The Mother of Waters_, by Dwight Dexter, an
+explorer of considerable reputation."
+
+The Brazilian's brows lifted.
+
+"Senhor Dexter? I remember Senhor Dexter. He stopped here for a short
+time, ill with fever. So he has published a book?"
+
+"Yes. It deals mainly with his travels and observations in Peru, along
+the Maranon, Huallaga, and Ucayali. But it includes a short chapter
+regarding the Javary, and in that chapter occurs the following, which I
+have copied verbatim."
+
+From the notebook he read:
+
+"'It falls to the lot of the explorer at times to meet not only hitherto
+unclassified species of fauna and flora, but also strange specimens of
+the _genus homo_. Such a creature came suddenly upon my camp one day
+just before a serious and well-nigh fatal attack of fever compelled me
+to relinquish my intention to proceed farther up the Javary.
+
+"'While my Indian cook was preparing the afternoon meal, out from the
+dense jungle strode a bearded, shaggy-haired, painted white man, totally
+nude save for a narrow breechclout and a quiver containing several long
+hunting arrows. In one hand he carried a strong bow of really excellent
+workmanship. This was his only weapon. He wore no ornament, unless
+streaks of brilliant red paint be considered ornaments. He was wild and
+savage in appearance and manner as any cannibal Indian. Yet he was
+indubitably white.
+
+"'To my somewhat startled greeting he made no response. Neither did he
+speak at any time during his unceremonious visit. Bolt upright, he stood
+beside my crude table until the Indian stolidly brought in my food.
+Then, without a by-your-leave, the wild man rapidly wolfed down the
+entire meal, feeding himself with one hand and holding his bow ready in
+the other. Though I questioned him and sought to draw him into
+conversation, he honored me with not so much as a grunt or a gesture.
+When the table was bare he stalked out again and vanished into the dim
+forest.
+
+"'After he had gone my Indian urged that we leave the place at once. The
+man, he said, was "The Raposa"--a word which denotes a species of wild
+dog sometimes found on the upper Amazon. He knew nothing of this
+"Raposa" except that he apparently belonged to a wild tribe living far
+back in the forest, perhaps allied with the cannibal Mayorunas, who were
+very fierce; and that he appeared sometimes at Indian settlements,
+where, without ever speaking, he would help himself to the best food and
+then leave. My man seemed to fear that now some great misfortune would
+come to us unless we shifted our base. When the fever came upon me soon
+afterward, the superstitious fellow was convinced that the illness was
+attributable directly to the visit of the human "wild dog."
+
+"'Aside from the nudity and barbarism of the mysterious stranger,
+certain personal peculiarities struck me. One was that his eyes were
+green. Another was a streak of snow-white hair above one ear.
+Furthermore, the red paint on his body outlined his skeleton. His ribs,
+spine, arm- and leg-bones all were portrayed on his tanned skin by those
+brilliant red streaks. In this connection my Indian asserted that in the
+tribe to which "The Raposa" probably belonged it was the custom to
+preserve the bones of the dead and to paint them with this same red dye,
+after which the bones were hung up in the huts of the deceased instead
+of being given burial. Beyond this my informant knew nothing of the "Red
+Bone" people, except that to enter their country was death.'"
+
+Knowlton returned the book to his pocket and carefully buttoned the
+flap.
+
+"When that appeared," he continued, "efforts were made to get hold of
+Dexter, with the idea of showing him the photograph of the missing man
+and learning any additional details. Unfortunately, by the time the book
+was published Dexter had gone to Africa to seek a race of dwarfs said to
+exist in the Igidi Desert, and thus was totally out of reach. Then we
+were called upon to follow up this clew and find the Raposa if possible.
+Men with green eyes and patches of white hair above one ear are not
+common. So, though our knowledge of this strange wild man is confined to
+those few words of Dexter's, we are here to learn more of him and to get
+him if we can."
+
+He looked expectantly at the official. The latter, after staring out
+through the doorway for a time, shook his head slightly.
+
+"Something of this Raposa and of those red-streaked people has come to
+my ears, senhores, but only as rumors," he said, slowly. "And one does
+not place great faith in rumors. Yet I have repeatedly been surprised to
+learn, after dismissing a story as an empty Indian tale, that the tale
+was true.
+
+"Of the Mayorunas more is known. They are eaters of human flesh,
+inhabiting both sides of the Javary, deadly when angered, and very
+easily angered. Their country is not many days distant from here, but as
+they never attack us we do not attack them. It is an armed neutrality,
+as you senhores would say. True, we have to be careful in drinking
+water, for they sometimes poison the streams against real or imaginary
+enemies, and the poisoned waters flow down to us, causing those who
+drink it to die of a fever like the typhoid. Yet," and he smiled, "there
+is a saying, is there not, that water is made not to drink, but to bathe
+in?"
+
+Knowlton laughed. McKay's eyes twinkled.
+
+"I'm sorry to say that water's about all a fellow can get to drink in
+the States now," the blond man said, ruefully. "That is, of course,
+unless a man knows where to go."
+
+"_Si._ It is a pity. But here in Brazil one need not drink water unless
+he wishes, and often it is better not to. Of the Mayorunas, senhor--you
+do not intend to go among them, seeking this wild man of the red bones?
+If you should do so it would be a matter of regret to me."
+
+"Meaning that we should not come out again? That's a risk we have to
+face. We go wherever it is necessary."
+
+"I am sorry. I regret also that I can give you no definite information.
+Yet I wish you all success, senhores, and a safe return. This much I can
+do and gladly will do: I can send word to another white man who now is
+in the town and who knows much of the upper river. He may be able to
+assist you, and without doubt will be eager to do so. He is staying at
+the hotel, just below here--Senhor Schwandorf."
+
+The eyes of the two Americans narrowed. The official coughed.
+
+"Senhor McKay has been a soldier. And Senhor Knowlton--"
+
+"I was a lieutenant."
+
+"Ah! But the war has passed, senhores. Senhor Schwandorf was not a
+soldier of Germany--he has been in Brazil for more than six years."
+
+"War's over. That's right," McKay agreed. "But don't bother to send
+word. We'll find him if he's at the hotel. Going there ourselves. Glad
+to have met you, sir. Good luck!"
+
+"And to you also luck, Capitao and Tenente," smiled the official. McKay
+and Knowlton strode out.
+
+"Guess this is the hotel," hazarded McKay, glancing at a house which
+rose slightly above the others. "I'll go in and charter rooms. You get
+Tim and have somebody rustle our impedimenta up here."
+
+He turned aside. Knowlton trudged on through the glare of sunset to the
+river bank where Tim and the army of Remate de Males still loafed up and
+down, the admired of all beholders.
+
+"All right, Tim. We're moving to the hotel. No more war, I see."
+
+"Lord love ye, no," grinned Tim. "Me and this feller are gittin' on
+fine. He's Joey--I forgit the rest of his names; he's got about a dozen
+more and they sound like stones rattlin' around inside a can. But Joey's
+a right guy. After me tour o' duty ends he's goin' to buy me a drink and
+maybe introjuce me to a lady friend o' his. Want to join the party,
+Looey?"
+
+"Not unless the ladies are better looking than these," laughed the
+ex-lieutenant, moving his head toward the pipe-smoking females.
+
+"Faith, I was thinkin' that same meself. Unless he can dig up somethin'
+fancier 'n what I see so far, I'd as soon have Mademoiselle."
+
+"Who?"
+
+"Mademoiselle of Armentieres. Sure, ye know that one, Looey. Goes to the
+tune o' 'Parley-Voo.'"
+
+Wherewith he lifted up a foghorn voice and, much to the edification of
+"Joey" (whose name really was Joao) and the rest of Remate de Males,
+burst into song:
+
+ "Mademoiselle of Armenteers,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ She smoked our butts and bummed our beers,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ She had cockeyes and jackass ears
+ And she hadn't been kissed for forty years,
+ Rinkydinky-parley-voo!"
+
+As his musical effort ended, out from the dense jungle hemming in the
+town burst a hideous roaring howl. Again and again it sounded in a
+horrible crash of noise.
+
+"Holy Saint Pat!" gasped Tim, throwing his rifle to port and bracing his
+feet. "Now look what I went and done! Is that the echo, or a couple
+dozen jaggers all fightin' to oncet?"
+
+"Guariba, Senhor Ree-ann," snickered Joao. "Not jaguars--no. Only one
+little guariba monkey. The howler."
+
+"G'wan! Ye're kiddin'!"
+
+"But no, _amigo_. It is as I tell you. One monkey. It is sunset, and the
+jungle awakes."
+
+"My gosh! I'll say it does. Sounds like a Sat'day night row in a Second
+Av'noo saloon, except there ain't no shootin'. Guess you boys have some
+night life, too, even if ye are away back in the bush."
+
+"Time for us to move, Tim," laughed Knowlton. "It'll be dark in no time.
+Joao, will you have our baggage moved to the hotel?"
+
+"_Si_, senhor. _Immediatamente._ Antonio--Jorge--Rosario! And you, too,
+Meldo--_vem ca_! Carry the bundles of the gentlemen to the hotel,
+presto! Proceed, senhores. I, Joao d'Almeida Magalhaes Nabuco Pestana da
+Fonseca, will remain here on guard until all your possessions have been
+transported. Proceed without fear."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE VOICE OF THE WILDS
+
+
+McKay, eyes twinkling again, awaited them at the top of the hotel's
+street ladder.
+
+"Rooms any good, Rod?" hailed Knowlton.
+
+"Best in the house, Merry."
+
+"See any insects in the beds?"
+
+"Nary a bug--in the beds." The twinkle grew. "Didn't look in the bureaus
+or behind the mirrors. Come look 'em over."
+
+Entering a sizable room evidently used for dining--for its chief
+articles of furniture were two tables made from planed palm
+trunks--McKay waved a hand toward a row of four doorways on the right.
+
+"First three are ours," he explained. "Only vacancies here. Eight rooms
+in this hotel--the other four over there." He pointed across the room,
+on the other side of which opened four similar doors. "They're occupied
+by two sick men, one drunk--hear him snore?--and one she-goat which is
+kidding."
+
+"Huh?" Tim snorted, suspiciously. "I think ye're the one that's kiddin',
+Cap."
+
+"Not a bit. I looked. The last room on this side is the Dutchman's, and
+these are ours. Take your pick. They're all alike."
+
+Knowlton stepped to the nearest and looked in. For a moment he said no
+word. Then he softly muttered:
+
+"Well, I'll be spread-eagled!"
+
+"Me, too," seconded Tim, who had been craning his neck.
+
+The room was absolutely empty. No bed, no chair, no bureau, no
+rug--nothing at all was in it except two iron hooks. Its floor consisted
+of split palm logs, round side up, between which opened inch-wide
+spaces. Its walls were rusty corrugated iron, guiltless of mirrors or
+pictures, which did not reach to the roof.
+
+"Observe the excellent ventilation," grinned McKay. "Wind blows up
+through the floor--if there is any wind--and then loops over the
+partition into the next fellow's room."
+
+"Yeah. And I'll say any guy that drops his collar button is out o' luck.
+It goes plunk into the mud, seven foot down under the house. But say,
+Cap, how the heck do we sleep? Hang ourselves up on them hooks?"
+
+"Exactly."
+
+"Kind o' rough on a feller's shirt, ain't it? And the shirt would likely
+pull off over yer head before mornin'."
+
+"Yes, probably would. But the secret is this--you're supposed to hang
+your hammock on those hooks. You provide the hammock. The hotel provides
+the hooks. What more can you ask of a modern hotel?"
+
+"Huh! And if a guy wants a bath, there's the river, all full o' 'gators
+and cattawampuses and things. And if ye eat, I s'pose ye rustle yer own
+grub and pay for eatin' it off that slab table there. There's jest one
+thing ye can say for this dump--a feller can spit on the floor. But with
+all them cracks in it he might not hit it, at that. Mother of mine! To
+think Missus Ryan's li'l' boy should ever git caught stayin' in a hole
+like this, along o' drunks and skiddin' she-goats and--did ye say a
+Dutchman?"
+
+"German. Chap named Schwandorf."
+
+"Yeah?" Tim's tone was sinister. "Say, Cap, gimme the room next that
+guy. And if ye hear anybody yowlin' before mornin' don't git worried. It
+won't be me."
+
+"None of that, Tim," warned Knowlton. "The war's over--"
+
+"Since when? There wasn't no peace treaty signed when we left the
+States."
+
+"Er--ahum! Well, technically you're right. But this fellow may be useful
+to us. He knows the upper river, they say."
+
+"Aw, well, if ye can use him I'll lay off him. Where is he?"
+
+"Out somewhere," answered McKay. "I haven't seen him yet. Want this
+first room, Merry?"
+
+"Just to play safe, I'll take the one next the German. And if I hear any
+war in the night, Tim, I'm coming over the top with both hands going."
+
+"Grrrumph!" growled Tim.
+
+"That goes, Tim," warned McKay. "I'll take this room and you can have
+the one between us. Here comes the baggage train with our stuff. In
+here, men!"
+
+Puffing and grunting, Antonio and Jorge and Rosario and Meldo shuffled
+in with the boxes and bundles. Under the directions of McKay and
+Knowlton, these were stowed in the bare rooms. Then the four shuffled
+out again, grinning happily over a small roll of Brazilian paper reis
+which McKay had peeled from a much larger roll and handed to them.
+Immediately following their departure, in came a youth carrying three
+new hammocks.
+
+"Our beds," McKay explained. "I sent this lad to a trader's store for
+them. He's the proprietor's son. Thank you, Thomaz. Tell your father to
+put these on our bill, and take for yourself this small token of our
+appreciation."
+
+More reis changed hands. The young Brazilian, with a flash of teeth,
+informed them that the evening meal would soon be ready and disappeared
+through a rear door.
+
+"Do they really feed us at this here, now, hotel?" Tim demanded. "Then
+the goat's safe."
+
+"Meaning?" puzzled Knowlton.
+
+"Meanin' I didn't know but we had to kill our supper, and I was goin' to
+git the cap'n's goat. That is, the goat the cap'n's kiddin'--I mean the
+goat that's kiddin' the cap--the skiddin' she-goat--Aw, rats! ye know
+what I'm drivin' at. Me tongue so dry it don't work right."
+
+Wherewith Tim retreated in disorder to his room and began wrestling with
+his new hammock and the iron hooks.
+
+Swift darkness filled the rooms. The sun had slid down below the bulge
+of the fast-rolling world. Thomaz re-entered, lit candles stuck in empty
+bottles, and, with a bow, placed one of these crude illuminants at the
+door of each of the strangers. By the flickering lights McKay and
+Knowlton disposed their effects according to their individual desires,
+bearing in mind Tim's observation that any small article dropped on the
+floor would land in the mud under the house, whence sounded the grunts
+of pigs. Their work was soon completed, and they sauntered together to
+the small piazza.
+
+"Nice quiet little place," commented Knowlton. "Make a good sanitarium
+for nervous folks."
+
+The comment was made in a tone which, in the daytime, would carry half a
+mile. McKay nodded to save a similar effort. The outbreak of the howling
+monkey which so startled Tim had been only the first note of the night
+concert of the jungle. Now that the sun was gone the chorus was in full
+swing.
+
+Beasts of the village, the jungle, the river, all hurled their voices
+into the uproar. From the gloom around the houses rose the bellowing of
+cows and calves, the howls and yelps of dogs, the yowling of cats, the
+grunts and squeals of hogs. In the black river, flowing past within a
+stone's throw of the hotel door, sounded the loud snorts of dolphins and
+the hideous night call of the foul beast of the mud--the alligator. Out
+from the matted tangle of trees and brush and great snakelike vines
+behind the town rolled the appalling roars of guaribas, raucous bird
+calls, dismal hoots, sudden scattered screams. And over all, whelming
+all other sound by the sheer might of its penetrating power, throbbed
+the rapid-fire hammering of millions of frogs.
+
+"Frogs sound like a machine-gun barrage," the blond man added.
+
+"Or thousands of riveting hammers pounding steel."
+
+"Queer how much worse it is when you're right in it. We've heard it all
+the way up two thousand miles of Amazon, but--"
+
+"But you're right beside the orchestra now. Position is everything in
+life."
+
+The double-edged jest made Knowlton glance sidelong at his mate. Of the
+tall, eagle-faced Scot's past he knew little beyond what he had seen of
+him in war, where he had met him and learned to respect him
+whole-heartedly. From occasional remarks he had learned that McKay had
+been in all sorts of places between Buenos Aires and Nome; and from a
+few intangible hints he suspected that his "position in life" had once
+been much higher socially than at present. But he asked no questions.
+
+"Some orchestra, all right," he responded, casually. "Plenty of jazz.
+It'll quiet down after a while."
+
+For a time they stood leaning against the wall, staring abstractedly out
+at the dark. One by one the domestic animals ceased their clamor and
+settled themselves for the night. The jungle din, too, seemed to
+diminish, though perhaps this was because the ears of the men had become
+accustomed to it. At length through the discordant symphony boomed the
+voice of Tim.
+
+"By cripes! I know now what folks mean when they talk about a howlin'
+wilderness. Always thought 'twas one o' them figgers o' speech, but I'll
+tell the world it ain't no joke! Gosh! Think of all the things that's
+layin' out there and bellerin' and waitin' for us pore li'l' fellers to
+come in amongst 'em and git et up."
+
+"You'll find the same things in the cities up home," said Knowlton, a
+bit cynically. "Different bodies and different methods of attack, but
+the same merciless animals under the skin. Snakes in silk
+suits--foul-mouthed alligators in dinner jackets--hunting-cats and
+vampires, painted and powdered--and all the rest of it."
+
+"Yeah. Ye said a mouthful, Looey. But say, Tommy's shovin' some grub on
+the table. Mebbe we better hop to it before the flies git it all."
+
+After a glance at the vicious attack already begun by the aforesaid
+flies, the pair adopted Tim's suggestion and hopped to it. Manfully they
+assailed the rubbery jerked beef, black beans, rice, farinha, and thick,
+black, unsweetened coffee which comprised the meal. All three were
+wrestling with chunks of the meat when Tim, facing the door, stopped
+chewing long enough to mutter:
+
+"Dutchland overalls. Here's the goose stepper."
+
+The heads of the other two involuntarily moved a little. Then their
+necks stiffened and they continued eating. Tim alone stared straight at
+a burly, black-whiskered Teuton who had halted in the outer doorway. And
+Tim alone saw the ugly look crossing the newcomer's visage as he gazed
+at the khaki shirts, the broad shoulders under them, and the
+unmistakably Irish--and hostile--face of Tim himself.
+
+Catching the hard stare of the red-haired man, he of the black beard
+advanced at once, his eyes veering to the door of his own room. Straight
+to that room he marched with heavy tread. He opened the door with a
+kick, shut it behind him with a slam. The three at the table glanced at
+one another.
+
+"Say what ye like," grumbled Tim, "but me and that guy don't hold no
+mush party. I don't like his map. I don't like his manners. And he looks
+too much like the Fritz that shot me in the back with a kamerad gun
+after surrenderin'. I was in hospital three months. D'ye mind that time,
+Looey?"
+
+Knowlton nodded. He remembered also that Tim, shot down from behind and
+almost killed, had reeled up to his feet and bayoneted his man before
+falling the second time. Wherefore he replied:
+
+"He isn't the same one, Tim."
+
+"Nope," grimly. "That one won't never come back. All the same, if you
+gents want to chew the fat with this feller I'm goin' slummin' with me
+friend Joey Mouthgargle Nabisco Whoozis. Then I won't be round here to
+make no sour-caustic remarks and gum up yer party."
+
+"Might be a good idea," McKay conceded.
+
+"There he is now, the li'l' darlin'! Hullo, Joey, old sock! Stick around
+a minute while I scoop a few more beans. Be with ye toot
+sweet--vite--presto--P.D.Q."
+
+Wherewith he demolished the rest of his meal with military dispatch,
+proceeded doorward, smote the grinning army of Remate de Males a buffet
+on the shoulder, and vanished into the night. A moment later his
+stentorian voice rolled back through the nocturnal racket in an
+impromptu paraphrase of an old and highly improper army song:
+
+ "We're in the jungle now,
+ We ain't behind the plow;
+ We'll never git rich,
+ We'll die with the itch.
+ We're in the jungle now!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE GERMAN
+
+
+The door of the German's room opened. The German came out and marched to
+the table. Two paces away he halted and faced the Americans, ready to
+speak if spoken to, equally ready to sit and ignore them if not greeted.
+McKay and Knowlton rose.
+
+"Herr von Schwandorf?" inquired Knowlton.
+
+"Schwandorf. Neither Herr nor von. Plain Schwandorf."
+
+The reply came in excellent English, though with a slight throaty
+accent.
+
+"Knowlton is my name. Mr. McKay. The third member of our party, Mr.
+Ryan, has just left."
+
+Schwandorf bowed stiffly from the waist.
+
+"It is a pleasure to meet you. White men are all too few here."
+
+Seating himself at a place beyond that just vacated by Tim, he
+continued, "You stay here for a time?"
+
+"Not long." They reseated themselves. "We go up the river as soon as we
+can arrange transportation."
+
+The black brows lifted slightly.
+
+"It is a dangerous river. You would do well to travel elsewhere unless
+you have some pressing reason to explore this stream."
+
+With an accustomed sweep of the hand he shooed the flies from the bean
+dish and helped himself to a big portion. Over the legumes he poured
+farinha in the Brazilian fashion.
+
+"We have. We are seeking a tribe of people who paint their bones red."
+
+Schwandorf's hand, conveying the first mouthful of beans upward, stopped
+in air. His black eyes fixed the Americans with an astounded stare. He
+lowered the beans, stabbed absently at a chunk of beef, sawed it apart,
+popped a piece of it into his mouth, and sat for a time chewing. When
+the meat was down he spoke bluntly:
+
+"Are there not ways enough to kill yourselves at home instead of
+traveling to this place to do it?"
+
+McKay smiled. The directness of the man amused him.
+
+"As bad as that?" asked Knowlton.
+
+"As bad as that. Blow your head off if you like. Cut your throat. Take
+poison. Jump into the river among the alligators. Step on a snake. But
+keep away from the Red Bones."
+
+"Why?" shot McKay.
+
+"Cannibals--and worse."
+
+"Worse?"
+
+"Truly. Most of the Brazilian savages do not torture. The Red Bones do."
+
+"Pleasant prospect."
+
+"Very. Nothing to be gained among them, either. If you're hunting gold,
+try the hills over west of the Huallaga. None here."
+
+Knowlton filled and lit a pipe. McKay slowly drank the last of his
+syrupy coffee and rolled a cigarette. Schwandorf continued shoveling
+food into his capacious mouth.
+
+"Know anything about the Raposa?" Knowlton asked.
+
+The Teuton's eyelashes flickered. He ground another chunk of meat
+between his jaws before answering.
+
+"Of course," he said then. "Wild dog. Sharp snout, gray hair, bushy
+tail. I've shot a couple of them."
+
+"This one is a man. Green eyes, streak of white hair over the left ear.
+Paints himself like the Red Bones, as you call them, but is a white
+man."
+
+"Oh! That one? Heard of him, yes. Wild man of the jungle. Want to catch
+him and put him in a circus?"
+
+"Maybe. We'd like to see him, anyhow. Heard about him awhile ago. Any
+way to get him that you know of?"
+
+"Might try a steel trap," the German suggested, callously. "But I don't
+know where you'd set it. Best way to get a wild dog is to shoot him, and
+he isn't much good dead. Or would this one be worth something--dead?" A
+swift sidelong glance accompanied the question.
+
+"Not a cent!" snapped McKay.
+
+"And perhaps he'd be worth nothing alive," added Knowlton. "But we have
+a healthy curiosity to look him over. Guess the Red Bone country would
+be the likeliest place. How far is it from here?"
+
+"Keep out of it," was the stubborn reply.
+
+The Americans rose.
+
+"We are not going to keep out of it," Knowlton declared, coldly. "We are
+going straight into it. Thank you for your assistance."
+
+"Not so fast," Schwandorf protested. "If you are determined to go I will
+help you if I can. Shall we sit on the piazza with a small bottle to aid
+digestion? So! Thomaz! Bring from my stock the kuemmel. Or would you
+prefer whisky, gentlemen?"
+
+"Ginger-ale highballs are my favorite fruit," admitted Knowlton. "Can
+ginger ale be bought here?"
+
+"Indeed yes. At one milrei a bottle."
+
+"Cheap enough. Thomaz, three bottles of ginger ale and one of North
+American whisky--the best. Cigars also. Out on the piazza."
+
+"Si, senhores."
+
+Schwandorf got up.
+
+"If you will pardon me, I will drink my kuemmel. Frankly, I do not like
+whisky."
+
+"And frankly, we do not like kuemmel. All a matter of taste."
+
+"Truly. So let each of us drink his own preference. I will join you in a
+moment."
+
+The Americans sauntered to the door, while the German strode into his
+room.
+
+"Blunt sort of cuss," Knowlton commented.
+
+"Ay, blunt. But not candid. Knows more than he's telling."
+
+Disposing themselves comfortably, they sat watching the lights of the
+town and the jungle--the first pouring from windows and open doors, the
+latter streaking across the darkness where the big fire beetles of the
+tropics winged their way. As Knowlton had predicted, the night noise of
+forest and stream had diminished; but now from the village itself rose a
+new discord--a babel of vocal and instrumental efforts at music
+emanating from the badly worn records of dozens of cheap phonographs
+grinding away in the stilt-poled huts.
+
+"Good Lord!" groaned McKay. "Even here at the end of the world one can't
+get away from those beastly instruments."
+
+A throaty chuckle from the doorway followed the words. Schwandorf
+emerged, carrying a big bottle.
+
+"Yet there is one thing to be thankful for, gentlemen," he said. "In all
+this town there is not one man who attempts to play a trombone."
+
+The others laughed. Thomaz appeared with bottles and thick cups. Corks
+were drawn, liquids gurgled, matches flared, cigars glowed. Without
+warning Schwandorf shot a question through the gloom:
+
+"Have you seen Cabral--the superintendent?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Ask him about the wild man?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Get any information?"
+
+"Nothing definite. He suggested that we see you."
+
+"So."
+
+A pause, while Schwandorf's cigar end glowed like a flaming eye.
+
+"The Red Bones live well up the river," he began, abruptly. "Twenty-four
+days by canoe, five days through the bush on the east shore. That would
+bring you to their main settlement--if you were not wiped out before
+then. They're a big tribe, as tribes go. Ever been here before?"
+
+"No. Not here," Knowlton told him. "I've been in Rio, and McKay here has
+knocked around in--"
+
+A stealthy kick from McKay halted him an instant. Then, deftly shifting
+the sentence, he concluded, "--in a number of places."
+
+"So." Another pause. "Then I should explain about tribes. Tribes here
+generally consist of from fifty to five hundred or more persons living
+in big houses called '_malocas_.' Unless the tribe is very big, one
+house holds them all. There may be any number of _malocas_, the
+inhabitants of which are all of the same racial stock; yet each _maloca_
+is, as far as government is concerned, a tribe to itself, controlled by
+a chief. No _maloca_ owes any duty to any other _maloca_. There is no
+supreme ruler over all, nor even a federation among them. They live
+merely as neighbors--distant neighbors. At times they fight like
+neighbors. You understand."
+
+"'When Greek meets Greek--'" quoted McKay.
+
+"Just so. When I say, then, that the Red Bones are a big tribe, I mean
+that there are about five hundred--maybe more--individuals in their main
+settlement. They live in huts, not in one big tribe-house like the
+Mayorunas. They are not Mayorunas, in fact; they paint differently, are
+darker of skin, and more cruel.
+
+"The Mayorunas, by the way, are not so debased as you might think.
+Though cannibals, they do not kill for the sake of eating 'long pig,'
+like the cannibals of the South Seas. Neither do they eat the whole
+body. Only the hands and feet of their dead enemies are devoured. These
+are carefully cooked and eaten as delicacies along with monkey meat,
+birds, fish, and other things prepared for a feast in honor of a
+victory. The eating of human flesh seems to be symbolism rather than
+savagery. Furthermore, they do not range the jungle hunting for victims.
+They eat only those who come against them as enemies.
+
+"So it is quite possible, you see, that strangers might go among them
+and escape death. It would depend largely on the ability of the
+strangers to convince the savages that they were friends. The difficulty
+is that the savages consider all strangers to be enemies until
+friendship is proved."
+
+"A sizable difficulty," McKay remarked.
+
+"Almost insurmountable. Yet it might be done. Mind, I speak now of the
+Mayorunas, not of the Red Bones. I tell you again that the Red Bone
+country is closed."
+
+"And where is the Mayoruna region?"
+
+"In the same general section. The Mayorunas are much more widely
+distributed. They are on both banks of the Javary and extend as far west
+as the Ucayali.
+
+"Now if I sought to enter the Red Bone region--and again I say I would
+not--this would be my way of going at it. I would go first among the
+Mayorunas near the Red Bones and seek to convince them that I was their
+friend. I would make the Mayoruna chief as friendly to me as possible. I
+might even take a Mayoruna woman for a time--some of them are handsome,
+and such a step would make me almost a Mayoruna myself in their eyes.
+Then I would persuade the chief to send messengers to the Red Bones with
+word of me and a request that I be allowed to visit their settlement.
+The request, coming from the Mayoruna chief, probably would be granted.
+I would then go in with a bodyguard of Mayorunas, do my business, and
+come out via the Mayoruna route."
+
+A thoughtful silence ensued. Bottle necks clinked against the cups.
+
+"Something in that idea," conceded Knowlton. "A good deal in it. Barring
+the woman part, of course."
+
+"Ay," spoke McKay, his tone casual as ever. "When you came out what
+would you do with your woman, _mein Herr_?"
+
+Schwandorf, tongue loosened a bit by his kuemmel, chuckled.
+
+"Ho-ho! The woman? Leave her, of course, when she had served my purpose.
+Why bother about a woman here and there?"
+
+"I see." McKay's face, indistinct in the gloom, was unreadable, but his
+tone had a caustic edge.
+
+Schwandorf laughed again. "You are fresh from the woman-worshiping
+United States and you disapprove. But this is the jungle, and all is
+different. '_Cada terra com seu uso_,' as these Brazilians say--each
+land with its own ways. Perhaps when you have met the Mayoruna women,
+looked on their handsome faces and shapely forms--they wear no clothing,
+by the way--you will change your ideas. More than one man along this
+border has risked his life to win one of those women. But that rests
+with you. And now if you will excuse me, gentlemen, I have an engagement
+with a man at the other end of town."
+
+"Certainly. We are indebted to you for your interest."
+
+"It is nothing. Remember that I strongly advise you not to go. But if
+you will go, I shall gladly do whatever lies in my power to aid you in
+preparing for the trip. Do not hesitate to call on me."
+
+He passed into the house, returning almost at once.
+
+"By the way," he added, "one of you has the room next mine?"
+
+"I have it," said Knowlton.
+
+"Yes. Are you a good sleeper? I sometimes snore most atrociously, I am
+told. So perhaps--"
+
+"Don't worry. I can sleep in the middle of a bombardment."
+
+"You are fortunate. Good evening, gentlemen."
+
+When he was gone they sat for a time smoking, sipping now and then at
+their highballs. At length McKay said, "Humph!"
+
+"Amen. Pretty square sort of chap, though, don't you think?"
+
+"I'm not saying," was the Scot's cautious answer. "Seems to be trying to
+discourage us and egg us on at the same time. Something up his sleeve,
+perhaps."
+
+"Can't tell. But his line of talk rings true so far. Checks up all right
+with what we've heard about the Mayorunas and so on. And that scheme of
+working in through the Mayoruna country sounds about as sensible as
+anything. Desperate chance and all that, but it might work. Say, why did
+you kick me when I was going to tell him you'd been in British Guiana?"
+
+"Don't know exactly. Had a hunch. Seems to me I've seen that fellow
+before somewhere, but I can't place him. None of his business where I've
+been, anyhow. We're boobs from the States hunting for a wild man. That's
+all he needs to know."
+
+But it was not enough for Schwandorf to know. At that very moment he was
+on his way to the home of Superintendent Cabral, with whom he had no
+engagement whatever, to learn all he could concerning the business of
+these military-appearing strangers; also to impress on that official the
+fact that he had sought to dissuade them from starting on their mad
+quest.
+
+And much later that night, when Knowlton was making good his boast that
+he was a sound sleeper, a black-bearded face rose silently above the
+iron partition between his room and that of the German. A hand gripping
+a small electric flashlight followed. A white ray searched the room,
+halting on the khaki shirt lying over a box. A tough withe with a barb
+at one end came over like a slender tentacle, hooked the shirt neatly,
+drew it stealthily up to the top. Shirt, stick, lamp, hand, face all
+dissolved into darkness.
+
+After a time they reappeared. The shirt came down, swung slowly back and
+forth, was dropped deftly where it had previously lain. The breast
+pocket holding the grain-leather notebook and the photograph of David
+Dawson Rand was buttoned as it had been, and the notebook bulged the
+cloth slightly as before. But the contents of that book and the pictured
+face of Rand now were stamped on the brain of Schwandorf. A sneering,
+snarling smile curled the heavy mouth of Schwandorf. And softly, so
+softly that none could hear it but himself, sounded the ironical
+benediction of Schwandorf:
+
+"Sleep well, _offizier americanisch_! Dream on, poor fool! In time you
+will wake up. _Ja_, you will wake up!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+INTO THE BUSH
+
+
+Sleepy eyed and frowzy haired, with shirt unbuttoned and breeches and
+boots unlaced, Tim emerged from his iron-walled cell into the
+cool-shadowed main room, blinked at McKay and Knowlton lounging over
+their morning coffee and cigarettes, stretched his hairy arms, and
+advanced sluggishly to the table.
+
+"Yow-oo-hum!" he yawned. "Ain't they cute! All dressed and shaved like
+they was goin' to visit the C. O. And here's pore Timmy Ryan lookin'
+like a 'drunk and dirty' jest throwed into the guardhouse, and feelin'
+worse. Top o' the mornin' to ye, gents!"
+
+"Same to you, Tim," McKay nodded.
+
+"Who hit you?" asked Knowlton, squinting at bumps and scratches on Tim's
+forehead.
+
+"Nobody. Couple fellers tried to, but they was out o' luck. Oh, I see
+what ye mean! I done that meself while I was gittin' to bed."
+
+"Waves must have been running high on the ocean last night. Better drink
+some coffee. Thomaz, another cup--big and black."
+
+"Thanks, Looey. 'Twas kind of an active night, at that."
+
+"I heard you come in," vouchsafed McKay. "Were you trying some high
+diving in your room?"
+
+"Faith, I done some divin' without tryin', but 'twas ragged work--I
+pulled a belly smacker every time. I got to tame that hammick o' mine.
+It throwed me four times hand-running and the only way I could hold it
+down was to unhook it and lay it on the floor."
+
+"Sleep well then?"
+
+"I did not. Cap, I thought I knowed somethin' about cooties, but I take
+it back--I never knowed nothin' about them insecks till last night.
+Where they come from I dunno, but I'll tell the world they come, and if
+they wasn't half an inch long I'll eat 'em. They darn near dragged me
+off whole, and all the sleep I got ye could stick in a flea's eye.
+Lookit here."
+
+He extended an arm dotted with swollen red spots.
+
+"Ants!" said McKay, after one glance. "Ants, not cooties. They're
+everywhere. Especially under the floor. That's one reason why folks
+sleep in hammocks down here. Even then they're likely to come down the
+hammock cords and drive you out."
+
+"Ants, hey? Never thought o' that. And I'd sooner spend another night
+fightin' all the man-eatin' jaggers in the jungle than them bugs. It's
+the little things that count, as the feller said when his wife give him
+his fourteenth baby."
+
+He downed the thick coffee brought by Thomaz, demanded another cup,
+accepted cigarette and light from Knowlton, and sighed heavily.
+
+"Who tried to hit you?" Knowlton persisted.
+
+"Aw, I dunno. Two-three fellers took swipes at me with bottles and
+things. Me and Joey went to a place where they's card games and so
+on--only place in town where the village sports can git action. Joey
+offers to buy, and does. Stuff tastes kind o' moldy to me, so I asks
+have they got any American beer. They have. It's bottled and warm, but
+it's beer and tastes like home. It goes down so slick I buy another
+round, and then one more, lettin' in a thirsty-lookin' stranger on the
+third round. That makes seven bottles altogether. Then I think mebbe I
+better pay up now before I lose track. Looey, guess what them seven
+bottles o' suds come to in American money."
+
+"M-m-m! Well, say about three and a half or four dollars."
+
+"That's what I figgered," mourned Tim. "But them highbinders want
+thirty-two dollars and twenty cents, American gold."
+
+"What!"
+
+"Sad but true. Seems the stuff sells here for four bucks and sixty cents
+a bottle. Thinkin' I'm gittin' rooked because I'm a tenderfoot, I raise
+a row to oncet and start to climb the guy. Other folks mix in and things
+git lively right off. But after I've dropped a couple o' fellers Joey
+winds himself round me and begs me not to make him arrest me, and also
+tells me I'm all wrong--that's the regular price. So o'course that makes
+me out a cheap skate unless I come acrost, and I do the right thing."
+
+"Lucky you had the money on you," said McKay, eying him a bit oddly.
+
+"I didn't," chuckled Tim. "All the dough I had was one pore lonesome
+ten-spot--the one I got from ye yesterday, Cap. But I don't tell 'em
+that. I jest wave my hand like thirty-two plunks wasn't nothin' in my
+young life, and start to work meself out o' the hole. After the two guys
+on the floor are brought back to their senses I order up drinks for all
+hands and git popular again. Then I git out the bones."
+
+"Oh! I see!" McKay laughed silently.
+
+"Sure. Remember they told us on the boat that these guys will gamble on
+anything? And that a feller without shoes on may be some rubber worker
+packin' a roll that would choke a horse? Wal, I make a few passes with
+them dice o' mine and their eyes light up like somebody had switched on
+the current. Then I scrabble me hand around in me pants pocket, like I
+was peelin' a bill off a roll so big I didn't want to flash the whole
+wad, and haul out that pore li'l' ten and ask would anybody like to play
+a man's game.
+
+"They would. I'll say they would. And they got the coin to back up their
+play, too. Before I come home I was buyin' beer by the case instead o'
+the bottle. And it's all paid for, and I got more 'n a hundred dollars
+left, besides givin' Joey a fistful o' money jest for bein' a good
+feller. This ain't a bad town at all, gents. Outside o' that
+buckin'-broncho hammick and the man-eatin' ants I had a lovely evenin'."
+
+"How about Joao's lady friend?" quizzed Knowlton.
+
+"Huh? Oh, I didn't git to see her. When bones and beer are rollin' high
+and handsome I got no time for women. Besides, I found out she was
+mostly Injun and fat as a hog. Nothin' like that for li'l' Timmy Ryan.
+Oh, say, before I forgit it--I asked Joey about this Dutchman here, and
+he says--"
+
+McKay scowled, shook his head, pointed toward the closed door of
+Schwandorf. Tim lifted his brows, winked understanding, and went on with
+a break: "--that this guy Sworn-off is a reg'lar feller and knows this
+river like a book. Says he's one fine guy and a man from hair to heels."
+
+Following which he grimaced as if something smelled bad, adding in a
+barely audible whisper, "And that's the worst lie I ever told."
+
+"We met Mr. Schwandorf last night after you went," Knowlton said,
+easily, drawing down one eyelid. "Very likable sort of chap. He's going
+to help us get started upriver."
+
+"Uh-huh. When do we go? To-day?"
+
+"If possible."
+
+"Glad of it. This big-town sportin' life would be the ruination of a
+simple country kid like me. Yo-hum! Wonder how all our neighbors are
+this mornin'--the goat and the drunk and the two sick fellers. Kind o'
+quiet over that side o' the room."
+
+Thomaz entered just then with more coffee. Knowlton turned to him.
+
+"Are the sick men better to-day, Thomaz?"
+
+"Much better, senhor," the lad said, carelessly. "They are dead."
+
+"Huh?" Tim grunted, explosively.
+
+"Dead," the youth repeated. "They were taken out at dawn. Do not be
+alarmed. It was the swamp fever, which is not--what you say?--catching."
+
+"Humph! Sort of a reg'lar thing to die of fever here, hey?"
+
+Thomaz shrugged as if hearing a foolish question.
+
+"_Si._ Swamp fever, yellow fever, smallpox, beriberi--to-day we live,
+to-morrow we are dead."
+
+"True for ye. They's allays somethin' hidin' round the corner waitin' to
+jump ye, no matter where ye are. If 'tain't one thing, it's another."
+
+Despite his philosophical answer, however, Tim fell silent, his eyes
+going to the doors of the rooms where Death had stalked last night while
+he was gambling. Like most men in whose veins red blood runs bold and
+free, he had no fear of the sort of death befitting a fighter--sudden
+and violent--but a deep repugnance for those two assassins against which
+a victim could not fight back--disease and poison. The Brazilian youth's
+nonchalant fatalism aroused him to the fact that here both those forms
+of death were very near him; the one in the air, the other on the
+ground--fever and snakes.
+
+For the moment he was depressed. Then curiosity awoke.
+
+"If this here, now, Javary fever ain't catchin', how does a feller git
+it?"
+
+"Mosquitoes," McKay enlightened him. "The _anopheles_. It bites a man
+who has fever, then bites a well man and leaves the fever in him. Inside
+of ten days he's sick, unless he takes a huge dose of quinine right
+away. Mosquito attacks perpendicular to the skin. That is, it stands on
+its head. If you ever notice one of them biting that way get busy with
+the quinine."
+
+"Huh! Fat chance a feller's got o' seein' just how all these bugs bite
+him. And one muskeeter standin' on its head does all that, hey?"
+
+"So they say. Also they say it's only the female that bites."
+
+"Yeah. I believe it. I been stung more 'n once by females before now.
+How about the yeller fever? Git that the same way?"
+
+"Same way, only a different mosquito--the _stegomyia_. When you begin to
+vomit black you're gone. And if you get beriberi you're gone, too. First
+symptoms of that are numbness of the fingers and toes. Muscular
+paralysis goes on until your heart stops."
+
+"Uh-huh. Nice cheerful place to die in, this Ammyzon jungle. Aw well,
+what's the odds?"
+
+Wherewith he inhaled more coffee, flipped his cigarette butt at a small
+lizard on the floor not far away, yawned once more, and swaggered out to
+the piazza, bawling:
+
+ "And when I die
+ Don't bury me a-tall,
+ But pickle me bones
+ In alky-hawl--"
+
+When his roar had subsided and the two former officers had sat silent a
+moment, smiling over his nocturnal adventures, the door of Schwandorf's
+room opened abruptly and the German stepped out.
+
+"_Morgen_," he grunted, striding to the table. "Thomaz!"
+
+"_Si_, Senhor Sssondoff." The youth faded away into the kitchen
+quarters.
+
+"Always feel grumpy until I eat," grumbled the blackbeard. "None of this
+coffee-cigarette breakfast for me. A real meal, coffee with gin in it, a
+cigar--then I feel human. Sleep well?"
+
+His bold gaze never flickered as it encountered Knowlton's.
+
+"Fine. If you snored I didn't know it. Didn't hear the bodies taken out
+this morning, either."
+
+"Bodies! Oh! Those fellows dead?" He tilted his head toward the doors
+behind which the sick men had lain. "Glad of it. Best for them and
+everybody else. Hate to have sick people in the place."
+
+The Americans said nothing. They lit new cigarettes and waited for the
+other to become "human." And when his substantial breakfast was down,
+his gin-flavored coffee had disappeared, and his big cigar was aglow, he
+did.
+
+"Well, gentlemen, have you decided to take good advice and let your
+Raposa alone?" he asked, affably.
+
+"Who ever follows good advice?" Knowlton countered. Schwandorf chuckled.
+
+"_Niemand._ Nobody. So you will go." He shook his head solemnly. "I have
+said all I can without offense. But if you persist I can only help you
+to start. If possible I should like to go with you up the river to the
+place where you will take to the bush; but I must go to Iquitos, in
+Peru, on the monthly launch which is due in a day or two, so all my
+business is in the other direction. If now I can aid in the matter of a
+crew--"
+
+"That is what we were about to ask of you."
+
+"So. Then let us be about it. I have been thinking, since you showed
+your determination last night, and have made inquiries about men. There
+are now in Nazareth, the little Peruvian town across the river, several
+men from whom you can pick an excellent crew. Men of the river and the
+bush, not worthless loafers like these townsmen here. Men who are not
+afraid of hell or high water, as the saying is. Not remarkable for
+either beauty or brains, but good men for your work--by far the best you
+can obtain. I would suggest a large canoe and six or eight of those men
+as crew."
+
+The others smoked thoughtfully. Then McKay said, "We should prefer
+Brazilians."
+
+"Not if you knew the people hereabouts as well as I. It, of course,
+makes no personal difference to me what sort of crew you get, but I tell
+you that these men are best. What does it matter which side of the river
+they come from? Men are men."
+
+"True," McKay conceded.
+
+"Can't be too fussy here," Knowlton added. "Let's see the men."
+
+All rose. But then Schwandorf suggested:
+
+"No need of your going to Nazareth. Better stay here, unless you want to
+go through a great deal of ceremonious foolishness over there. It's
+Peruvian ground and the barefooted ignoramuses of officials may insist
+on showing their importance by demanding your papers and all that. I can
+go across, get the men, and be back here before you'd be half through
+the preliminaries. Saves time."
+
+"All right, if it's not too much trouble."
+
+"A good deal less trouble than if you went, to be frank. I'm known, and
+I can go straight about the business. So sit down and wait. Thomaz! My
+hat!"
+
+Out he tramped to the piazza, where he paused a moment to run a swift
+eye over the disheveled figure of Tim, who had fallen sound asleep in a
+chair. Then, without a further word or glance, he descended the ladder
+and swung away down the street. The Americans, watching him from the
+doorway, observed that children in his path hastened to get out of it,
+and that he spoke to nobody.
+
+"Prussian," rasped McKay.
+
+"M-hm! Done time in the Kaiser's army, too, even if he has been here
+since before the war. But he's treating us pretty white."
+
+The captain made no answer. Their eyes followed the big figure until
+they saw it go sliding away toward Peru in a canoe propelled by two
+languid townsmen. Then McKay dropped a hand on Tim's shoulder. The
+red-lashed eyes flew open instantly.
+
+Briefly, quietly, Knowlton told of what had passed while he napped, then
+asked what information he had gleaned from Joao.
+
+"He says," answered Tim, "this guy is a queer duck. Been around here
+quite a while, but Joey don't know what's his game. He goes off on trips
+upriver, stays quite a while, comes back unexpected, and nobody knows
+where he's been or why. He don't use Brazilian boatmen--gits his men on
+the other side. And the Peru boys themselves dunno where he goes, or,
+anyways, they say they don't.
+
+"Two of 'em come over here awhile back and got drunk, and Joey tried to
+pump 'em, but all the dope he got was that this here Fritz goes away
+upstream to a li'l' camp, and from there he goes off into the bush
+alone, and the Peru guys jest hang around the camp till he gits back.
+Sounds kind o' fishy to me, and Joey says it does to him, too, but he
+couldn't work nothin' more out o' the drunks because about that time
+Sworn-off himself comes buttin' in and asks these guys what they think
+they're doin' on this side the river, and they beat it back to Peru toot
+sweet. He's got their goat, all right, and I wouldn't wonder if he's got
+Joey's, too. Anyways, Joey tells me he's off this geezer and advises me
+to lay off him, too, though he can't name a thing against him."
+
+"Queer," said Knowlton, looking again at the canoe out on the water.
+
+"Gun running?" suggested McKay.
+
+"Nope," Tim contradicted. "I thought o' that, but Joey says they's
+nothin' to it; they watched this sourkrout close, and he don't never git
+no guns from nowheres. Besides, they's nobody up there to run guns to
+but Injuns, and them Injuns are so wild they don't want no guns; they
+stick to the bow and arrer and such stuff, which they sure know how to
+use. Whatever his game is, he plays a lone hand as far's this town
+knows. Got no pals here, and nobody wants to walk on his corns."
+
+"May be perfectly all right, too," mused Knowlton. "A little gold cache
+or something--though he said there was none in this region. Oh, well,
+what do we care? We have our hands full with our own business, and all
+assistance is appreciated."
+
+An hour drifted past. Men of the town lounged by, looking curiously at
+the strangers, some nodding and voicing a friendly, "_Boa dia._" Women,
+too, watched them from windows and doors, and children slyly peeped
+around corners until something more important--such as a cat, a goat, or
+a gorgeous butterfly--came their way. Tim went inside and slicked up a
+bit by buttoning and lacing his clothes and combing his rebellious hair.
+At length a long boat put out from the farther shore and came surging
+across the sun-gleaming river.
+
+"Handle themselves well," McKay approved, noting the easy grace of the
+crew. In the bow a tall, slender fellow stood with arms folded,
+balancing himself to the sway of the rather clumsy craft and watching
+the water ahead. In the stern, on a little platform whence he could look
+over the heads of the others and catch any signal from the lookout, a
+squat, dark-faced steersman lounged against his crude rudder. Between
+these two the paddlers stood, each with one foot on the bottom of the
+long dugout and the other on the gunwale, swinging in nonchalant unison
+as their blades moved fore and aft. Under the curving roof of a
+rough-and-ready cabin, open at the sides to allow free play of air,
+Schwandorf lolled like some old-time barbarian king.
+
+Down to the landing place trudged the three Americans, and there the
+employers and the prospective employees looked one another over with
+interest. Eight men had come with Schwandorf, and a hard gang they were.
+The bowman, hawk nosed, slant eyed, black mustached, with hairy chest
+showing under his unbuttoned cotton shirt, had the face and bearing of a
+buccaneer chieftain; and the effect was intensified by a flaring red
+handkerchief around his head and the haft of a knife protruding from his
+waistband. The rowers behind him, though of varying degrees of
+swarthiness and height, all had the same sinewy build, the same bold
+stare, the same devil-may-care insolence of manner; and though none but
+the lookout wore the piratical red around his brow, more than one knife
+hilt showed at their waists. The steersman, whose copper-brown skin and
+flat face betokened a heavy strain of Indian blood, gazed stolidly at
+the Americans with the unwinking, expressionless eyes of a snake. Back
+into the minds of McKay and Knowlton came Schwandorf's words, "Men not
+afraid of hell or high water." They looked it.
+
+"Here they are," announced the German, stepping ashore deliberately.
+"Jose, the _puntero_"--his hand indicated the lookout--"Francisco, the
+_popero_"--pointing to the steersman--"and six _bogas_. Good men."
+
+McKay ran a cold eye along the line of faces, his gaze plumbing each.
+Under that chill scrutiny the third man's stare wavered and dropped.
+That of the next also veered aside. The rest fronted him eye to eye.
+
+"Two of them will not do," he asserted, in the brusque tone of a captain
+inspecting his company. "Numbers Three and Four--fall out!"
+
+Literal obedience would have put Three and Four into the river,
+wherefore they stood fast. But, though they did not quite understand the
+meaning of the words, they grasped the fact that they were not wanted.
+One laughed impudently, the other slid a poisonous glance at the
+bleak-faced officer. The squat Francisco scowled. So did Schwandorf.
+
+"No man who cannot look me in the eye is needed on this trip," McKay
+declared. "Also, six men are enough. If necessary we will bear a hand at
+the paddles ourselves. Jose, you have been told by Senhor Schwandorf
+what we want?"
+
+"_Si._"
+
+"You can start at once?"
+
+"_Si._"
+
+"What pay?"
+
+"We leave that to you."
+
+"Um! A dollar a day for each man?"
+
+"Money or goods?"
+
+"American gold."
+
+"_Si. Bueno._"
+
+"Very well. Take those two men back to Nazareth, get what belongings you
+need, return here, and report to me at the hotel. I am captain.
+Understand?"
+
+"_Si_--Capitan."
+
+"All right. On your way!"
+
+As the boat drew out the two rejected men bade the Americans an ironical
+"_adios_," and one spat in the stream. In the faces of the others,
+however, showed something like respect for the crisp-spoken captain, and
+Jose snarled something at the ill-mannered Three and Four.
+
+"You might need those men," mumbled Schwandorf.
+
+"Guess not," McKay answered, serenely, turning toward the hotel. "Come
+on, boys. Let's get our stuff ready to ride."
+
+Less than two hours later their rooms were vacant, their duffle was
+stowed in the long dugout, the Peruvian crew stood arrogantly eying the
+Brazilians who had gathered to witness the departure, and the Americans
+were bidding good-by to Remate de Males in general and its German
+resident in particular.
+
+"Mr. Schwandorf, we thank you for your efficient aid," said Knowlton,
+extending a hearty hand. "You have helped us to get going with all
+dispatch, and we trust that we can repay the favor soon."
+
+"You owe me no thanks," was the curt reply. "I would expect you to do as
+much for me if our positions were reversed. I wish you luck."
+
+"Get aboard, Tim!" McKay ordered, setting the example himself. Tim
+obeyed, first giving the important Joao d'Almeida Magalhaes Nabuco
+Pestana da Fonseca a real American handgrip and getting in return a
+double embrace from that worthy official. Whereafter he winked and
+grinned expansively at several women garbed in violent hues of red,
+yellow, and green, frowned slightly at Schwandorf, lit the last cigar he
+was to smoke for many a long day, and, as the dugout began to move,
+erupted into a more or less musical farewell to the females of the
+species:
+
+ "The Yanks are goin' away,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ They're movin' on to-day,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ The Yanks are goin' away, they say,
+ Leavin' the girls in a heartless way,
+ Rinkydinky-parley-voo!"
+
+With one final wave of his cigar to the gesticulating Joao and the
+grinning women he turned his back on the town and faced the little-known
+river and the inscrutable jungle. But neither his eyes nor his thoughts
+traveled beyond the bow of the boat. Through narrowed lids he studied
+the swaying paddlers and the piratical Jose. And in his mind echoed the
+whispered warning of Joao, delivered during the effusive embrace at
+parting:
+
+"Comrade, watch those _bastardos Peruanos_."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+IN THE NIGHT WATCH
+
+
+Day by day the long canoe crawled into the vast unknown. Day by day the
+down-flowing jungle river pushed steadily, sullenly against its prow, as
+if striving to repel the invasion of its secret places by the
+fair-skinned men of another continent. Day by day it slid past in
+resentful impotence, conquered by the swinging blades of the Peruvian
+_bogas_. And day by day the close companionship of canoe and camp seemed
+to weld the voyagers into one compact unit.
+
+Through hours of blazing sun, when the mercury of the thermometer which
+Knowlton had hung inside the shady _toldo_ cabin fluctuated well above
+100 degrees, the hardy crew forged on. Through drenching rains they
+still hung doggedly to their work, suspending it only when the water
+fell in such drowning quantities that they were forced to tie up hastily
+to shore and seek cover in order to breathe. When sunset neared they
+picked with unerring eye a spot fit for camping, attacked the bush with
+whirling machetes, cleared a space, threw up pole frameworks, swiftly
+thatched them with great palm leaves, and thus created from the jungle
+two crude but efficient huts--one for themselves and one for their
+_patrones_. When night had shut down and all hands squatted around the
+fire in a nightly smoke talk they regaled their employers with wild
+tales of adventures in bush and town, some of which were not at all
+polite, but all of which were mightily interesting. And despite all
+discomforts, fatigue, and the minor incidents and accidents which often
+lead fellow travelers in the wilderness to bickering and bitterness, no
+friction developed between the men of the north and the men of the
+south.
+
+Not that the Peruvians were at all obsequious or servile. They were a
+reckless, lawless, Godless gang, perpetually bearing themselves with the
+careless insolence which had characterized them at first, blasphemous of
+speech toward one another--but never toward the North Americans.
+Disputes arose among them with volcanic suddenness, and more than once
+knives were half drawn, only to be slipped back under the tongue-lashing
+of the hawk-nosed _puntero_, Jose, who damned the disputants completely
+and promised to cut out the bowels of any man daring to lift his
+blade clear of its sheath. Five minutes afterward the fire eaters
+would be on as good terms as ever, shrugging and grinning at their
+passengers--particularly Tim, who, shaking his head disgustedly, would
+grumble:
+
+"Aw, pickles! Another frog fight gone bust!"
+
+Yet Tim, for all his disparagement of these abortive spats, knew full
+well that any one of them held the makings of a deadly duel and that
+Jose's lurid threats were no mere Latin hyperbole. He realized that the
+red-crowned bowman ruled his crew exactly as any of the old-time
+buccaneers whom he resembled had governed their free-booting gangs--by
+the iron hand; and that, though these men sailed no Spanish Main and
+flew no black flag, the iron-hand government was needed. He saw also
+that the rough-and-ready courtesy of this crowd toward their passengers
+was due largely to the attitude of Captain McKay, who had enforced their
+respect at the start by his soldierly bearing and retained it ever since
+by his military management.
+
+For the captain, experienced in directing men, conducted himself at all
+times as a commanding officer should: he saw all, said little, treated
+Jose as a subordinate officer, and left the handling of the crew
+entirely to him. His aloofness forestalled any of that familiarity
+which, with such a gang, would have led to contempt. On the other hand,
+his avoidance of any assumption of meddlesome authority prevented the
+irritation and dislike which free men inevitably feel for the
+self-important type of leader. Thus he cannily steered himself and his
+mates between the two rocks which might have wrecked the expedition
+before it was well started. And Knowlton, ex-lieutenant, and Tim,
+ex-sergeant, seeing and understanding, followed his example.
+
+So the days and nights rolled by, the miles of never-ending jungle shore
+fell away behind, and, save for the occasional outbreaks between members
+of the crew, all was serene. To all appearances the Peruvians were
+whole-heartedly interested in serving their employers faithfully, and
+the North Americans were gliding onward with no thought of insecurity.
+Yet appearances frequently are deceptive.
+
+In the heat of the day--in fact, before the broiling sun neared the
+zenith--Tim and Knowlton habitually fell asleep inside the _toldo_, not
+to awake until two hours before sunset, when, according to the routine
+agreed upon, the night's camping place would be sought and two or three
+of the Peruvians would go into the bush with rifles, seeking fresh meat.
+McKay never slept during the day's traverse. Nothing escaped his eye
+from the time when he emerged from his mosquito net in the misty morning
+until he entered it again by firelight. The men in the boat; the
+floating alligators and wading birds of the water; the flashing parrots,
+jacamars, toucans, trogons, and hummers of the air; the yard-long
+lizards and nervous spider monkeys of the tangled tree branches
+alongshore--all these he watched quietly as the boat forged on. And the
+sinister Francisco, watching him in turn, and the paddlers throwing
+occasional glances his way, came to regard him as the only alert member
+of the trio. Wherein they erred.
+
+The truth was that every one of the three adventurers was on his guard.
+Tim had not forgotten the last words of his boon companion, Joao, and at
+the first opportunity he had quietly passed on that warning. Moreover,
+McKay and Knowlton, without discussing the matter, had meditated on the
+unexpected assistance of Schwandorf, the speed with which the crew had
+been obtained, the promptness of Jose to accept the first payment
+offered, and other things. Wherefore it had come about that at no hour
+of the twenty-four was every eye and ear closed. And the real reason why
+red Tim and blond Knowlton slept by day was that they thus made up the
+slumber lost at night.
+
+Not that either of them patrolled the camp in sentry go. So far as the
+Peruvians knew, they slept as soundly as McKay. But, lying in their
+hammocks, they divided the night watches between them on a schedule as
+regular as that of a military camp, though the shifts necessarily were
+longer. As sunset came always at six o'clock and all hands sought their
+hanging beds two hours later, Tim's "tour of duty" lasted until one in
+the morning. When the phosphorescent hands of his watch pointed to that
+hour he stealthily reached out and jabbed Knowlton, sleeping beside him.
+When a barely audible "All right" reached his ears he was officially
+relieved.
+
+Night followed night, became a week, lengthened into a fortnight. Still,
+so far as the crew was concerned, nothing happened. A little rough
+banter among them as they smoked their last cigarettes, then sleep and
+snores; and that was all until morning. Men less experienced in night
+vigils than the ex-soldiers would have abandoned their watches long
+before this--if, indeed, they had ever adopted them. But these three
+were schooled in patience. Moreover, neither Tim nor Knowlton had ever
+before penetrated the jungle, and at times the light of the waxing moon
+revealed to their eyes strange things which they never would have seen
+by day. So the tedium of the long hours of wakefulness might be broken
+at any moment.
+
+Once they camped close to a conical hillock of compact earth, some four
+feet high and almost stone hard, from which radiated narrow covered
+galleries--the citadel and viaducts of a community of termites. Tim,
+still harboring vivid recollections of his ant battle at Remate de
+Males--though by this time he had trained himself to sleep in his
+hammock, where he was comparatively safe--looked askance at it when told
+what it was, and was only partly reassured by the information that
+termites were eaters of wood rather than of flesh. After sleep had
+embraced the rest of the camp he still was uneasy, lifting his net at
+long intervals and squinting at the moonlit mound as if expecting a
+horde of pincer-jawed insects to erupt from it and charge him. And
+during one of these inspections he saw something totally unexpected.
+
+From the black shadows of the forest had emerged another shadow, so
+grotesque and misshapen that it seemed a figment of indigestion and
+weird dreams--a thing from whose shaggy body protruded what appeared to
+be only a long tubular snout where a head should be, and which looked to
+be overbalanced at the other end by a great mass of hair. It stood stone
+still, and for the moment Tim could not decide which end of it was head
+and which was tail, or even whether it were not double-tailed and
+headless. Then, slowly, the apparition moved.
+
+Into that hard-packed earth it dug huge hooked claws, and from its
+tapering muzzle a wormlike tongue licked about, gathering the outrushing
+white ants into its gullet. For minutes Tim lay blinking at it,
+wondering if he really saw it.
+
+Then, picking up his rifle, he slipped outside his net and advanced on
+the creature.
+
+The animal turned, sat back on its great tail, lifted its terrible
+claws, and waited. Six feet away, just out of its reach, Tim stopped and
+stared anew. Then he grinned.
+
+"You win, feller," he informed the beast. "What ye are I dunno, but any
+critter that's got the guts to ramble right into camp and offer to gimme
+a battle is too good a sport for me to shoot. Help yourself to all the
+ants in the world, for all o' me. I'm goin' back to bed. Bon sewer,
+monseer."
+
+Wherewith, still grinning, but warily watching, he backed until sure the
+big invader would not spring at him. Knowing nothing of ant bears, he
+did not know it was hardly a springing animal.
+
+Its claws looked sufficiently formidable to disembowel a man--as,
+indeed, they were, if the man came near enough. But when Tim had
+withdrawn and the sluggish brute had decided that it would not need to
+defend itself, it sank to all-fours and passed stiffly away into the
+shades whence it had come.
+
+On another night, when Tim slept, Knowlton detected a creeping,
+slithering sound which made him slip off the safety catch of his
+heavy-bulleted pistol and peer at the hut where slept the crew. No man
+was moving there. Still the sound persisted. Lifting his net, he spied
+beyond the hut of the Peruvians a moving mass on the ground--a
+cylindrical bulk which looked to be two feet thick, and which glided
+past like a solid stream of dark water flowing along above the dirt. Its
+beginning and end were hidden in the bush, and not until it tapered into
+nothing and was gone did he realize fully that he had been gazing at an
+enormous anaconda. Then he kicked himself for not shooting it. But
+before long he congratulated himself for letting it go.
+
+Perhaps an hour later the startled forest resounded with an agonized
+scream, so piercing and so appallingly human that all the camp sprang
+awake. The outcry came but once, sounding from some place not far off,
+near the water's edge, and in the direction toward which the huge
+serpent had disappeared. Before the watcher had time to tell the others
+of what he had seen, one of the boatmen discovered the rut left in the
+soft ground by the reptile. Thereafter Knowlton kept his own counsel,
+listening to the excited curses of the men and observing their pallor
+and their nervous scanning of the shadows. Jose said the screech
+undoubtedly was the death shriek of some animal caught and crushed in
+the snake's tremendous coil. McKay concurred with a nod. And when
+Knowlton casually said it was tough that nobody had been awake to shoot
+the thing as it passed the camp, Jose emphatically disagreed.
+
+A bullet fired into that fiendish giant, he averred, would have meant
+death to one or more men; for the serpent's writhing coils and lashing
+tail would have knocked down the sleeping-hut and shattered the spines
+of any men they struck. No, let Senor Knowlton thank the saints that the
+awful master of the swamps had gone its way unmolested. For the rest of
+that night Knowlton kept his watch openly, accompanied by Jose and three
+of the paddlers, who refused to sleep again until they should be miles
+away from the vicinity of that dread monster.
+
+Two nights afterward the camp was aroused again. Tim alone saw the start
+of the disturbance, and he kept mum about it because he did not choose
+to let the Peruvians know he had been on the alert. Out from the gloom
+and straight past the huts a thick-bodied, curve-snouted animal came
+charging madly for the river, carrying on its back a ferocious cat
+creature whose fangs were buried deep in its steed's neck--a tapir
+attacked by a jaguar. With a resounding plunge the elephantine quarry
+struck the water and was gone. The tiger cat, forced to relinquish its
+hold or drown, swam hurriedly back to the bank below the encampment,
+where it roared and spat and squalled in a blood-chilling paroxysm of
+baffled fury. And though every man was awakened, not one left the flimsy
+shelter of his net. Nor did anyone so much as speak until Tim, wearying
+of the noise, announced his intention to "go bust that critter in the
+nose and give him somethin' to yowl about."
+
+The proposal met with instant and peremptory veto.
+
+"As you were!" snapped McKay. "Let him alone! You wouldn't have a
+Chinaman's chance in that black bush. A jaguar is bad all the time, and
+when he's mad he's deadly. Never fool with one of those beasts, Tim.
+I've met them before and I know what they can do."
+
+To which Jose agreed with many picturesque oaths, declaring that a
+jaguar was no mere beast--it was a devil. Tim, grumbling, obeyed orders.
+The jaguar, hearing their voices, stopped its noise and probably
+reconnoitered the camp. But no man saw the brute, and its next roar
+sounded from some spot far off in the jungle.
+
+Other things, too, passed within Tim's range of vision from time to time
+in the moonlit hours: a queer bony creature which he took for some new
+kind of turtle, but which really was an armadillo; a monstrous hairy
+spider which slid like a streak up his net, hung there for a time,
+decided to go elsewhere, and departed with such speed that the man
+inside rubbed his eyes and wondered if he was "seein' things that
+ain't"; a couple of vampires which flitted in from nowhere like ghoulish
+ghosts, wheeled and floated silently on wide wings, seeking an exposed
+foot protruding from the hammocks, found none, rested a moment on the
+roof poles, chirping hoarsely, and veered out again into the night.
+
+To Knowlton's watch came a strange owl-faced little monkey with great
+staring eyes and face ringed with pale fur--one of those night apes
+seldom seen by man; a small troop of kinkajous, slender, long-tailed
+animals which looked to be monkeys, but were not, and which leaped
+deftly among the branches like frolicsome little devils let loose to
+play under the jungle moon; a big scaly iguana, its back ridged with saw
+teeth and its pendulous throat pouch dangling grotesquely under its jaw;
+and more than one deadly snake and huge alligator, the first gliding
+past with venomous head raised and cold eye glinting, the second lying
+quiescent except for occasional openings of horrific jaws.
+
+To the ears of both the hammock sentinels came the mournful sounds of
+living things unseen. From the depths beyond drifted the weird plaint of
+the sloth, crying in the night, "Oh me, poor sloth, oh-oh-oh-oh!" Goat
+suckers repeated by the hour their monotonous refrains, "Quao quao," or
+"Cho-co-co-cao," while a third earnestly exhorted, "Joao corta pao!"
+("John, cut wood!"). Tree frogs and crickets clacked and drummed and
+hoo-hooed, guaribas poured their awful discord into the air, and on one
+bright breathless night there sounded over and over a call freighted
+with wretchedness and despair--the wail of that lonely owl known to the
+bushmen as "the mother of the moon," whose dreadful cry portends evil to
+those who hear it.
+
+Sometimes the air shook with the thunderous concussion of some great
+falling tree which, long since bled to death by parasitical plant
+growths, now at last toppled crashing back into the dank soil whence it
+had forced its way up into a place in the sun. Other noises, infrequent
+and unexplainable, also drifted at long intervals from the mysterious
+blackness. And in all the medley of night sounds not one was cheerful.
+The burden of the jungle's cacophonic cantanta ever was the
+same--despair, disaster, death.
+
+Then came the fifteenth day. It dawned red, the sun fighting an
+ensanguined battle with the heavy morning mists and throwing on the
+faces of the early-rising travelers a sinister crimson hue. Before that
+sun should rise again some of those faces were to be stained a deeper
+red.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+COLD STEEL
+
+
+Some two hours after the start, while Knowlton and Tim loafed at the
+fore end of the cabin, enjoying the comparative coolness of the early
+day, another boat hove in sight up ahead--a longish craft manned by
+eight paddlers and without a cabin.
+
+As it came into view its bowman tossed his paddle in greeting. The
+Peruvians ignored the salutation. The bowman, after shading his eyes and
+peering at the flamboyant figure of Jose, resumed paddling without
+further ceremony, evidently intending to pass in silence. But then McKay
+arose, waved a hand, and told Jose to steer for the newcomers. Jose,
+with a slightly sour look, gave the signal to Francisco, and the course
+changed.
+
+The other canoe slowed and waited. Its men watched the tall figure of
+McKay. Tim and Knowlton scanned the bronzed faces of those men and liked
+them at once. The paddlers evidently were Brazilians, but of a different
+type from the sluggish townsmen of Remate de Males--alert,
+active-looking fellows, steady of eye, honest of face, muscular of
+arm--in all, a more clean-cut set of men than the Peruvians. All three
+of the Americans noticed that no word was exchanged between the two
+crews.
+
+"_Boa dia, amigos!_" spoke McKay. "Who are you and whence do you come?"
+
+"We are rubber workers of Coronel Nunes, senhor," the bowman answered,
+civilly. "We go to make a new camp. This land is a part of the
+_seringel_ of the coronel, and we left his headquarters yesterday."
+
+"Ah! Then the headquarters is above here?"
+
+"One more day's journey," the man nodded.
+
+"I thank you. Good fortune go with you."
+
+"And with you, senhor. May God protect you."
+
+With the words the Brazilian glanced along the line of Peruvian faces
+and his eyes narrowed. Though his words were only a respectful farewell,
+his expressive face indicated that McKay might be badly in need of
+divine protection at no distant date. As his paddle dipped and his men
+nodded their leave-taking, Francisco, the _popero_; sneered raucously:
+
+"Hah! Mere _caucheros_! Workers! Slaves!"
+
+And he spat at the Brazilian boat.
+
+Fire shot into the eyes of the bowman and his comrades. Their muscles
+tensed.
+
+"Better be slaves--better be dogs--than Peruvian cutthroats!" one
+retorted. "Go your way, and keep to your own side of the river."
+
+"We go where we will, and no misborn Brazilians can stop us," snarled
+Francisco. To which he added obscene epithets directed against
+Brazilians in general and the men of Coronel Nunes in particular.
+
+The unprovoked insults angered the Americans as well as the Brazilians.
+Knowlton leaped through the _toldo_ and confronted Francisco.
+
+"Shut your dirty mouth!" he blazed.
+
+For reply, the evil-eyed steersman spat at him the vilest name known to
+man.
+
+An instant later, his lips split, he sprawled dazedly on his platform,
+perilously close to the edge. Knowlton, the knuckles of his left fist
+bleeding from impact with the other's teeth, stood over him in white
+fury. Francisco's right hand fumbled for his knife. Knowlton promptly
+stamped on that hand with a heavy boot heel.
+
+"Good eye, Looey!" rumbled Tim's voice at his back. "Boot him some more
+for luck. Hey, you! Back up or I'll drill ye for keeps!" This to a pair
+of the Peruvian paddlers who had come scrambling through the cabin.
+
+After one searching stare into Tim's hard blue eyes and a glance at his
+fist curled around the butt of his belt gun, the _bogas_ backed up. A
+moment later they were thrown boldly into their own part of the boat by
+Jose, who blistered them with the profanity of three languages at once.
+Then McKay came through and took charge.
+
+"That'll do, Tim! Same goes for you, Merry! Jose, I'll handle this. You,
+Francisco! Get up!"
+
+The curt commands struck like blows. Every man obeyed. And when the
+squat steersman again stood up McKay went after him roughshod. In the
+colloquial Spanish of Mexico and the Argentine, in the man talk of
+American army camps, he flayed that offender alive. Jose himself,
+efficient man handler though he was, stared at his captain in awe. And
+Francisco, though not given to cringing, skulked like a beaten dog when
+the verbal flagellation was finished.
+
+Turning then to the Brazilians, McKay formally apologized for the
+insults to them.
+
+"It is nothing, senhor," coolly answered the bowman--though his glance
+at the Peruvians said plainly that it would have been something but for
+the swift punishment by the Americans. "Again I say--may God protect
+you! Adeos!"
+
+The Brazilian boat glided away. The Peruvian craft crawled on upstream
+in silence.
+
+When the next camp was made all apparently had forgotten the affair. The
+men badgered one another as usual, though none mentioned Francisco's
+split mouth; and Francisco, himself, albeit sulky, betrayed no sign of
+enmity. After nightfall the regular camp-fire meeting was held and at
+the usual time all turned in. One more night of listening to the sounds
+of the tropical wilderness seemed all that lay ahead of the secret
+sentinels.
+
+Sleep enveloped the huts. Snores and gurgles rose and fell. Tim himself,
+for the sake of effect, snored heartily at intervals, though his eyes
+never closed. Through his mosquito bar he could see only vaguely, but he
+knew any man walking from the crew's quarters must cast a very visible
+shadow across that net, and to him the shadow would be as good a warning
+as a clear view of the substance. But the hours crept on and no shadow
+came.
+
+At length, however, a small sound reached his alert ear--a sound
+different from the regular noises of the bush--a stealthy, creeping
+noise like that of a big snake or a huge lizard. It came from the ground
+a few feet away, and it seemed to be gradually advancing toward his own
+hammock. Whatever the creature was that made it, its method of progress
+was not human, but reptilian. Puzzled, suspicious, yet doubtful, Tim
+lifted the rear side of his net, on which no moonlight fell. Head out,
+he watched for the crawling thing to come close.
+
+It came, and for an instant he was in doubt as to its character, for
+around it lay the deep shadow of some treetops which at that point
+blocked off the moon. It inched along on its stomach, its black head
+seeming round and minus a face, its body broad but flat--a thing that
+looked to be a man but not a man. Then, pausing, it raised its head and
+peered toward the hammock of Knowlton. With that movement Tim's doubts
+vanished. The lifting of the head showed the face--the face of
+Francisco, the face of murder. In its teeth was clamped a bare knife.
+
+Forthwith Tim applied General Order Number Thirteen.
+
+In one bound he was outside his net, colliding with Knowlton, who awoke
+instantly. In another he was beside the assassin, who, with a lightning
+grab at the knife in his mouth, had started to spring up. Tim wasted no
+time in grappling or clinching. He kicked.
+
+His heavy boot, backed by the power of a hundred and ninety pounds of
+brawn, thudded into the Indian's chest. Francisco was hurled over
+sidewise on his back. Another kick crashed against his head above the
+ear. He went limp.
+
+"Ye lousy snake!" grated Tim. "Crawlin' on yer belly to knife a sleepin'
+man, hey? Blast yer rotten heart--"
+
+"What's up?" barked McKay from his hammock.
+
+"Night attack, Cap. If ye're comin' out bring along yer gat. Hey, Looey,
+got yer gun on? Some o' these other guys might git gay. They're comin'
+now."
+
+True enough, the Peruvian gang was jumping from its hut. With another
+glance at the prostrate Francisco to make sure he was unconscious, Tim
+whirled to meet them, fist on gun.
+
+"Halt!" he roared. "First guy passin' this corner post gits shot. Back
+up!"
+
+The impact of his voice, the menace of his ready gun hand, the sight of
+Knowlton and McKay leaping out with pistols drawn, stopped the rush at
+the designated post. But swift hands dropped, and when they rose again
+the moonlight glinted on cold steel.
+
+"Capitan, what happens here?" demanded Jose, ominously quiet.
+
+"Knife work," McKay replied, curtly. "Your man Francisco attempted to
+creep in and murder Senor Knowlton. If you and the rest have similar
+intentions, now's your time to try. If not, put away those knives."
+
+"Knives! _Por Dios_, what do you mean?"
+
+"Look behind you."
+
+Jose looked. At once he snarled curses and commands. Slowly the knives
+slipped out of sight. The paddlers edged backward to their own shack,
+leaving their _puntero_ alone.
+
+"The capitan has it wrong," asserted Jose. "We awake to find our
+_popero_ being kicked in the head. We want to know why. If Francisco has
+done what you say I will deal with him. That I may be sure, allow me to
+look."
+
+"Very well. Look."
+
+Jose advanced, stooped, studied the ground, the position of Francisco's
+body, the knife still clutched in the nerveless hand. Tim growlingly
+vouchsafed a brief explanation of the incident. When Jose straightened
+up, his mouth was a hard line and his eyes hot coals.
+
+"_Si. Es verdad._ To-morrow we shall have a new _popero_."
+
+With which he stooped again, grasped the prone man by the hair, dragged
+him into the moonlit space between the huts, and flung him down. "Juan,
+bring water!" he ordered.
+
+One of the paddlers, looking queerly at him, did so. Jose deluged the
+senseless man. Francisco, reviving, sat up and scowled about him. His
+eyes rested on the three Americans standing grimly ready, shoulder to
+shoulder, before their hut; veered to his mates bunched in sinister
+silence beside their own quarters; shifted again to meet the baleful
+glare of Jose. His hand stole to his empty sheath.
+
+"Your knife, Francisco _mio_?" queried Jose, a menacing purr in his
+tone. "I have it. It seems that you are in haste to use it. Too much
+haste, Francisco. But if you will stand instead of crawling as before,
+you may have your knife again--and use it, too."
+
+Francisco, staring sullenly up, seemed to read in the words more than
+was evident to the Americans. He lurched to his feet, staggered, caught
+his balance, braced himself, stood waiting.
+
+"You know who commands here," Jose went on. "You disobey. You seek to
+stab in the night--"
+
+"Now or later--what is the difference?"
+
+"--and now the boat is too small for both of us." Jose ignored the
+interruption. "Here is your knife. Now use it!"
+
+He flipped the weapon at the other, who caught it deftly. Jose dropped
+his right hand to his waist. An instant later naked steel licked out at
+Francisco's throat.
+
+The steersman's knife flashed up, caught the reaching blade, knocked it
+with a scraping clink. For a few seconds the two weapons seemed welded
+together, their owners each striving to bear down the other's wrist.
+Then they parted as the combatants sprang back.
+
+Jose side-stepped twice to his right. Francisco, turning to preserve his
+guard, now had the light full in his face. But the moon rode so high
+that the steersman's disadvantage was negligible, and the next assault
+of the _puntero_ was blocked as before. And this time the wrist of the
+_popero_ proved a bit the better; he threw the attacking steel aside and
+struck in a slashing sweep at his antagonist's stomach.
+
+A convulsive inward movement of the bowman's middle, coupled with a
+swift back-step, made the slash miss by a hair's breadth. With the
+quickness of light Jose was in again. His knife hand, still outstretched
+sidewise, stopped with a light smack of flesh on flesh. Then it jerked
+outward. His steel now was red to the hilt.
+
+One more rapid step back, a keen glance at his opponent, and Jose stood
+at ease. From Francisco burst a bubbling groan. He staggered. His knife
+dropped. His hands rose fumblingly toward his neck. Suddenly his knees
+gave way and he toppled backward to the ground. The silvery moonlight
+disclosed a dark flood welling from his severed jugular.
+
+With the utmost coolness Jose ran two fingers down his wet blade,
+snapped the fingers in air, and spoke to his crew:
+
+"As I said, we shall have a new _popero_. To-morrow, Julio, you will
+take the platform."
+
+A rumble ran among the men. Their eyes lifted from Francisco to the
+Americans, and in them shone a wolfish gleam. The bowman turned sharply
+and faced them.
+
+"Who growls?" he rasped. "You, Julio?"
+
+"_Si, yo soy_," Julio answered, harshly, fingering his knife. "I will be
+steersman, but I steer downstream, not up. Francisco spoke the truth.
+Now or later--what is the difference? Let it be now!"
+
+A louder growl from the others followed his words. One stepped back into
+the shadow of the hut.
+
+"_Perros amarillos!_ Yellow dogs! You go upstream, fools! The Americans
+must be taken--"
+
+A raucous sneer from Julio interrupted him. Simultaneously the paddler's
+hand leaped upward, poising a knife.
+
+"The gringos stay here--and you, too, you Yanqui cur!"
+
+The poised knife hissed through the air at Jose.
+
+Out from the crew house shot a streak of fire and a smashing rifle
+report.
+
+Jose dodged, staggered, screeched in feline fury, the knife buried in
+his left arm.
+
+McKay grunted suddenly, fell, lay still.
+
+"God!" yelled Tim. "Cap's gone! Clean 'em, Looey!"
+
+With the words he leaped aside and pulled his pistol, just as another
+rifle flare stabbed out from the other hut and a bullet whisked through
+the space where he had stood. An instant later he was pouring a stream
+of lead at the spot whence the burning powder had leaped.
+
+Knives flashing, teeth gleaming, the other paddlers charged across the
+ten-foot space between the huts.
+
+Jose, his left arm helpless, but his deadly right hand still gripping
+his knife, hurled himself on Julio, who had seized a machete from
+somewhere.
+
+Knowlton slammed a bullet between the eyes of the foremost _boga_, who
+pitched headlong. He swung the muzzle to the other man's chest--yanked
+at the trigger--got no response. The gun was jammed.
+
+With a triumphant snarl the blood-crazed Peruvian closed in, slashing
+for the throat. Knowlton slipped aside, evaded the thrust, swung the
+pistol down hard on his assailant's head. The man reeled, thrust again
+blindly, missed. Knowlton crashed his dumb gun down again. It struck
+fair on the temple. The man collapsed.
+
+Tim was charging across the open at the crew house. Jose and Julio were
+locked in a death grapple. No other living man, except Knowlton, still
+stood upright. Stooping, he peered into the red-dyed face of McKay. Then
+he laid a hand on the captain's chest. Faint but regular, he felt the
+heart beating.
+
+"Thank God!" he breathed. With a wary eye on the battling Peruvians he
+swiftly raised the captain and put him into Tim's hammock. As he turned
+back to the fight Tim emerged from the other hut, carrying a body, which
+he dropped and swiftly inspected. At the same moment the fight of Jose
+and Julio ended.
+
+With a choked scream Julio dropped, writhed, doubled up. Then he lay
+still. Jose, his face ghastly, stared around him. His mouth stretched in
+a terrible smile.
+
+"So this ends it," he croaked, his gaze dropping to Julio. "_Adios_,
+Julio! The machete is not--so good as the knife--unless one has--room
+to--swing it--"
+
+He chuckled hoarsely and sank down.
+
+For an instant Knowlton hesitated, his glance going back and forth
+between McKay and Jose. Swiftly then he ran his finger tips over McKay's
+head. With a murmur of satisfaction he turned from his comrade and
+hurried to the motionless bowman, over whom Tim now bent.
+
+"Bleedin' to death, Looey," informed Tim. "Ain't cut bad excep' that
+arm. That flyin' knife must have got an artery. Can we pull him through?
+He's a good skate."
+
+"I'll try. You look after Cap. He's only knocked out--bullet creased
+him--"
+
+"Glory be! He's all right, huh? Sure I'll fix him up. Everybody else
+dead? I got that guy in the bunk house--drilled him three times."
+
+"Look out for that fellow over there. Maybe I brained him, but I'm not
+sure."
+
+Knowlton was already down on his knees beside Jose, working fast to loop
+a tourniquet and stop the flow from the pierced arm. With a handkerchief
+and his pistol barrel he shut off the pulsating stream.
+
+"Yeah, he's done," judged Tim, rising from the man whom Knowlton had
+downed at last. "Skull's caved in. What 'd ye paste him with?"
+
+"Gun. Cursed thing stuck."
+
+"Uh-huh. Them automats are cranky. Say, lookit the mess Hozy made o'
+that guy Hooley-o."
+
+Knowlton glanced at Julio and whistled. Jose's oft-repeated threat to
+disembowel a refractory member of the crew had at last been literally
+fulfilled.
+
+But the lieutenant had seen worse sights in the shell-torn trenches of
+France, and now he kept his mind on his work. Wedging the gun to hold
+the tourniquet tight, he lifted his patient from the red-smeared mud and
+bore him to the nearest hammock in the crew quarters. Striding back, he
+found Tim alternately bathing McKay's head and giving him brandy. In a
+moment the captain's eyes opened.
+
+"Some bean ye got, Cap," congratulated Tim, vastly relieved at sight of
+McKay's gray stare. "Bullet bounced right off. Here, take another
+swaller. Attaboy! Hey, Looey, we better pack this crease o' Cap's, huh?
+She keeps leakin'."
+
+"Yep. Dip up the surgical kit. And give Jose a drink. I'll have to tie
+his artery, too. How do you feel, old chap?"
+
+"Dizzy," McKay confessed. "What's happened?"
+
+"Lost our crew," was the laconic answer. "All gone west but Jose, and
+he's bled white. We'll have to paddle our own canoe now."
+
+For a time after his head was bandaged McKay lay quiet, staring out at
+the tiny battlefield and at his two mates working silently on the
+wounded arm of Jose. When they came back he spoke one word.
+
+"Schwandorf."
+
+"Yeah! He's the nigger in the woodpile, I bet my shirt. But why? What's
+his lay, d'ye s'pose?"
+
+"Perhaps Jose knows," suggested Knowlton. "But he's in no shape to talk
+now. Let's see. Schwandorf said he was going to Iquitos?"
+
+"Yes, but that doesn't mean anything."
+
+"Probably not. Well, maybe Jose can explain."
+
+There were some things, however, which Jose could not have told if he
+would, for he himself did not know them. One was that Schwandorf really
+had gone to Iquitos, where was a radio station. Another was that from
+that radio station to Puerto Bermudez, thence over the Andes to the
+coast, and northward to a New York address memorized from Knowlton's
+notebook, already had gone this message:
+
+ McKay expedition killed by Indians. Rand search most dangerous, but
+ if empowered I attempt locate him for fifty thousand gold payable
+ on safe delivery Rand at Manaos. Reply soon a possible.
+
+ KARL SCHWANDORF.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE DOUBLE-CROSS
+
+
+Noon, sweltering hot. A blazing sun pouring vertical rays down on a
+blinding river. A long canoe wearily creeping up the glaring waters,
+minus a lookout, heedless of the ever-present danger of sunken tree
+trunks; propelled by three sun-blistered white men, one of whom wore a
+bandage around his head; steered perfunctorily by a pallid pirate whose
+left arm hung in a sling. Atop the right bank an unbroken, endless
+tangle of jungle growth. Ahead, on the left shore, a gap gouged out of
+the forest and a number of boats at the water's edge.
+
+"Guess that's it," panted Knowlton, shielding his eyes and squinting at
+the clearing. "One more day's journey, the Brazilian chap said. We've
+been two and a half."
+
+"One day's journey for six hardened rivermen, senor," corrected Jose.
+"Not for three men doing six men's work and hampered by a cripple."
+
+"Aw, ye're no crip, Hozy," dissented Tim. "Any guy that can steer a tub
+like this here one-handed after losin' a couple gallons o' juice is in
+good shape yet, I'll say. If ye had both legs shot off and yer arms
+broke and yer head stove in, now, ye might call yourself sort o'
+helpless. Ease her over to the left a li'l' more, so's we'll hit the
+bank right at the corner o' that gap. Me, I don't want to take one
+stroke more 'n I have to. Every muscle in me is so sore it squeaks."
+
+"Same here," admitted Knowlton. "I'm one solid ache."
+
+Jose nodded. The clumsy craft veered a bit. The three put a little more
+punch into their lagging strokes, noting, as they neared the steep bank,
+that a couple of men had appeared at its top and were staring at them.
+Gradually the long dugout worked in to the muddy shore, where the
+paddlers stabbed their blades into the clay and held it firm.
+
+"Ahoy, up there! This the Nunes _seringal_?"
+
+From the edge, some thirty feet above, the taller of the two watchers
+answered:
+
+"_Si_, senhor. The headquarters of the coronel. Do you come to visit
+him?"
+
+"Right."
+
+"Then permit me to help you. The path is a little ahead. Pull up and tie
+to this stake."
+
+The tall fellow came dropping swiftly downward. At the same time the
+other Brazilian stepped back and was gone.
+
+With a dexterous twist the man of Nunes moored the boat to the
+designated stake. Then he reached a hand toward Tim to help him out.
+
+"I ain't no old woman, feller," Tim refused, and hopped aground
+unassisted. McKay and Knowlton followed. But Jose, after moving
+languidly forward and contemplating the sharp slope, hesitated and then
+shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"I am tired, senores," he said. "And perhaps it would be well for one to
+stay here and watch."
+
+The tall Brazilian's eyes narrowed.
+
+"There is no danger of loss," he asserted, with dignity. "We men of the
+coronel are not thieves."
+
+The slight emphasis of his last sentence might have been taken as an
+intimation that some one else not far away would bear watching. Jose's
+mouth tightened. For a moment Brazilian and Peruvian eyed each other in
+obvious dislike. Then, with a glance at his crippled arm, Jose shrugged
+again.
+
+"Better come along, Jose," McKay said. "Stuff's safe enough."
+
+"As you will, Capitan."
+
+He lounged to the edge, hesitated, wavered slightly. At once the
+Brazilian darted out a hand and gave him support. And while the four
+clambered up the slope he retained a grip on the Peruvian's arm, aiding
+him to the top. When they emerged on the level, however, he dropped his
+hand immediately. Jose gave him a half-mocking bow of thanks, to which
+he replied with a short nod. Then he stepped back and let the Peruvian
+precede him toward a number of substantial pole-supported houses a
+hundred yards away.
+
+"No love lost between them two," thought Tim, who had watched it all.
+"Good skate, though, this new feller. Ready to help a guy that needs it,
+whether he likes him or not; ready to knock his block off, too, if he
+needs that. Bet he'd be a hellion in a scrap. Dang good-lookin' lad,
+too."
+
+Wherewith he introduced himself.
+
+"Don't git sore because I growled at ye down below," he said, with a
+friendly grin. "Sounded rough, mebbe, but that's my style. I'm Tim Ryan,
+from the States. I bark more 'n I bite."
+
+The overture met with instant response--a quick smile and a twinkle in
+the warm eyes.
+
+"It is not words that give offense, senhor, but the way they are
+spoken--and the man who speaks them. One man may growl, but you like
+him. Another may speak smoothly, but you itch to strike him. Is it not
+so? I am Pedro Andrada, a _seringueiro_ who should be tapping trees
+instead of loafing here. But my partner and I have just come in from a
+long trip into the _sertao_--wilderness--and are resting."
+
+"Yeah? Was that yer buddy I seen with ye?"
+
+"My--ah--buddee? Partner? Yes, that was he--Lourenco Moraes, the best
+comrade one ever had. He has gone to tell the coronel of your arrival.
+Have you met with an accident downriver?"
+
+He moved a thumb meaningly toward the only remaining member of the crew.
+
+"Yeah," grimly. "Bad accident."
+
+Tim tapped his pistol significently, raised five fingers, winked, and
+twitched his head toward the Peruvian. Pedro lifted his brows, nodded
+quick understanding, pointed to the bad arm of Jose, and made motions as
+if pulling a trigger. Tim shook his head and enacted the pantomime of
+drawing and throwing a knife. Whereat the Brazilian, aware that Jose was
+not a prisoner and probably knowing that North Americans were not knife
+throwers, looked much puzzled. But their sign manual went no farther,
+for they now approached the house which evidently formed the dwelling
+and office of Coronel Nunes.
+
+At the foot of the ladder stood a broad-shouldered, square-jawed,
+thick-muscled, deeply tanned man, who, without speaking, pointed a thumb
+upward. Above, in the doorway, waited an elderly Brazilian of medium
+height and spare figure, standing with soldierly erectness and garbed in
+white duck of semimilitary cut. He beamed down at McKay and Knowlton,
+but as his black eyes encountered those of Jose they seemed suddenly to
+become very sharp. Then his gaze rested on Tim's broad face and he
+smiled again.
+
+"Enter, gentlemen," he invited. "_Esta casa e a suas ordenes_--this
+house is at your disposal."
+
+McKay, with a bow, climbed the ladder, followed by Knowlton. Jose, with
+a swaggering stare at the wide-shouldered man, who stared straight back
+without facial change, also went up. Tim came fourth and last, for Pedro
+stopped beside his countryman, who evidently was Lourenco.
+
+The travelers found themselves in a room which, in view of its distance
+from civilization, seemed palatial. Its floor was tight, its furniture
+modern, its walls decorated with a few excellent pictures, of which the
+largest was a superb view of the rugged harbor of Rio de Janeiro.
+Comfortable chairs were ranged along the walls, and the middle of the
+room was occupied by a massive square-cornered table on which lay a
+jumble of hand-written business papers, a number of books, a high-grade
+violin and bow. Beyond the table stood a swivel chair, evidently the
+usual seat of the coronel. Table and chair were so arranged that the
+master of this house sat always with his back to a wall and his face
+toward the door. And on a couple of hooks on that wall, ready for
+instant service, hung a high-power rifle.
+
+On their way up the river the Americans had passed, at long intervals, a
+few small rubber estates, whose headquarters consisted mainly of a crude
+shack or two, hardly better than the dingy houses of Remate de Males.
+This place was more imposing. They had observed, while crossing the
+cleared space, that it was at least half a mile square; that its
+warehouse for supplies was big and solid; that a goodly number of
+_barracaos_, or rubber workers' huts, surrounded the house of the master
+at a respectful distance; and that the owner's home was no one-room
+cabin, but big enough to contain six or eight rooms. This well-appointed
+reception room and the formal yet sincere courtesy of its owner showed
+that Coronel Nunes was no mere native of the frontier. Later they were
+to learn that he was a gentleman of Rio who, exiling himself from the
+capital after the death of his wife, had carved from this forbidding
+jungle a fortune in the rubber trade.
+
+With the correct touch of Latin punctilio McKay spoke the introductions
+and stated that they were on their way upriver to explore the
+hinterland. With equal politeness the coronel bowed and begged his
+illustrious guests to be seated. Then he touched a small bell. A door at
+one side opened and a white-suited negro appeared.
+
+"Cafe," the coronel ordered. As speedily as if these visitors had been
+long expected, the servant brought in a tray bearing cups of syrupy
+coffee. Each of the guests accepted one. Whereafter the decorum of the
+occasion was shattered by Tim, who, at the imminent risk of scalding
+himself, gulped his refreshment and vociferated his satisfaction.
+
+"O-o-oh boy! That hits right where I live! Gimme another one, feller,
+and make it man's size!"
+
+The black fellow struggled with his quick mirth and then laughed
+outright--the throaty, infectious laugh of his race. The coronel's eyes
+twinkled. And when Tim fished a damp cigarette from his shirt,
+nonchalantly scraped a match on his host's table, blew a cloud of smoke,
+and sprawled back with one leg dangling over a chair arm, formality went
+a-glimmering.
+
+"_A quem madruga Deus ajuda_," laughed the coronel. "Or, as you North
+Americans put it, 'God helps those who help themselves.' Let us not be
+ceremonious, gentlemen. 'Tonio, bring more coffee. And cigars. And--"
+
+Down behind his table, where only the servant saw the motion, he
+twitched a finger as if pulling a cork. 'Tonio, his ebony countenance
+split by a grin, ducked his head and vanished into the other room.
+
+"How is the rubber market, sir?" asked Knowlton, seeking to divert
+attention from Tim.
+
+"Not so good," the old gentleman replied, with a deprecatory gesture.
+"In truth, it is very poor since the war--so poor that soon I shall
+abandon this _seringal_ and go out to spend the rest of my life on the
+coast. With rubber selling at a mere five hundred dollars a ton in New
+York and the artificial plantations of the Far East growing greater
+yearly, there is no longer much profit in bleeding the wild trees of our
+jungle. I really do not know why I stay here now, unless it is because I
+have become so much accustomed to this life."
+
+"Why, I understood that there was much money in rubber!"
+
+"You speak truth--there was. Now there is not. The world moves and times
+change. Years ago foreigners came into Brazil, helped themselves to the
+seed of our wild trees, and planted it in Ceylon and the Malay region.
+That seed now bears such fruit that the world is flooded with rubber.
+Ten years ago, senhores, a ton sold for six thousand five hundred
+dollars. Now, in this year nineteen-twenty, the price is only
+one-thirteenth of what it was in those days. It scarcely pays for the
+gathering. I hope you have not come expecting to make fortunes in
+rubber."
+
+"No. We are here to find a race of men known as Red Bones."
+
+The coronel's brows lifted. They kept on lifting, and he opened his lips
+twice without speaking. After a long stare at Knowlton he looked at
+McKay, at Tim, and finally at Jose. A frown grew on his face. And the
+Americans, following his look at the Peruvian, were surprised to see
+that Jose himself was staring blankly at the speaker.
+
+"Jose Martinez!" snapped the coronel, leveling a finger pistollike at
+the _puntero_. "What devil's game are you working now?"
+
+Jose recovered himself and lifted his coffee cup.
+
+"I do not understand you, Nunes," he replied, languidly. "I am but the
+humble _puntero_ of the crew engaged by these senores. My only work has
+been to earn my pay. And you may ask _el capitan_ whether I have earned
+it."
+
+"Ay, he has," corroborated McKay. "Killed two of his own crew in our
+defense."
+
+The coronel's jaw dropped. He blinked as if disbelieving his ears.
+
+"He--Jose? Not possible!" he stuttered. "Jose--this man--defended you
+against his companions?"
+
+"Exactly."
+
+The Brazilian slowly shook his head. Then suddenly he nodded as if an
+illuminating thought had crossed his mind.
+
+"I see. Jose is very well paid."
+
+"One dollar a day," was McKay's dry retort.
+
+At that moment 'Tonio re-entered with a larger tray than before, bearing
+more coffee, long cigars, and squat glasses in which glowed a golden
+liquid. Tim sat up with a grunt and helped himself with both hands. When
+the coronel's turn came he disregarded the drinks, but lit the cigar as
+if he needed it.
+
+"_De noite todos os gatos sao pardos_," he said. "At night all cats are
+gray. I am much in the dark, gentlemen. If you would be so good as to
+enlighten me--"
+
+He paused, looking sidewise again at Jose as if the _puntero_ had
+suddenly grown wings or horns.
+
+"All right," nodded Knowlton, biting and lighting his cigar. "We are
+somewhat in the dark ourselves as to why Jose has been so zealous, for
+he has been very taciturn since the recent fight at our camp. Perhaps
+Jose also is a bit hazy about our expedition--he looked rather surprised
+just now. So here is the situation."
+
+Briefly then he outlined the object of the search, stating that the
+identity of the mysterious Raposa was a matter of some concern to
+certain persons in the United States and that the expedition had been
+formed with the view of settling the question. From the time of the
+landing at Remate de Males, however, he narrated events more fully,
+giving complete details of Schwandorf's activities, Francisco's offense,
+and the final attack by the crew. While he talked the coronel's frown
+deepened. Also, Jose gradually assumed the expression of a thundercloud.
+And when the tale was done the _puntero_ exploded.
+
+"_Sangre de Cristo!_" he yelled. "_El Aleman_--the German--he told you
+we would go among the cannibals? We? Peruvians? _Madre de Dios!_ If ever
+I get within knife length of him! Nunes, you see, do you not?"
+
+The coronel nodded grimly.
+
+"I see that he planned to have all of you destroyed. Senhor Knowlton,
+that black-bearded and black-hearted man suggested that you take
+Mayoruna women? He told you they were shapely of body and tried to put
+into your minds the thought of making them your paramours? The snake!
+
+"He did not tell you, then, that the Mayoruna men allow no trifling with
+their women; that any alien man attempting to embrace one of them would
+be killed. But it is true. If you should succeed in establishing
+friendly relations with the men--which is not at all likely--you would
+forfeit all friendship, and your lives as well, by the slightest
+dalliance with any of the women.
+
+"He told you that more than one man has risked his life to win a
+Mayoruna woman? That is true. But he gave you a false impression as to
+the way in which the risk was incurred. He did not tell you that
+Peruvian _caucheros_ have sometimes raided small isolated _melocas_ of
+the Mayorunas, shooting down the men and carrying off the girls to be
+victims of their bestial lust. He did not tell you that for this reason
+any Peruvian is considered their enemy and is killed without mercy
+wherever found. Yet he tried to send you with Peruvian guides into their
+country. He knew the Peruvians would be killed on sight--and you with
+them."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+FIDDLERS THREE
+
+
+Black looks passed among the men as the duplicity of Schwandorf lay
+plain before their eyes. Tim growled. Jose hissed curses. The coronel
+whirled to him.
+
+"Jose! What was his object in trying to destroy you and your crew? You
+have been his man. You know much about him. He wanted to stop your
+mouth, yes? Dead men tell no tales."
+
+The _puntero's_ eyes glittered. For a moment the others thought he was
+about to reveal important secrets. Then his face changed.
+
+"I know no reason why we should be killed," he declared.
+
+"I do not believe you," the coronel declared, bluntly.
+
+Jose shrugged, calmly drank the coronel's wine, lighted the coronel's
+cigar, leaned back in the coronel's chair, and eyed the coronel with
+imperturbable insolence.
+
+"See here, Jose," demanded McKay, "you've had something up your sleeve
+all along. Now come clean! What is it?"
+
+Jose puffed airily at the cigar, saying nothing.
+
+"What orders did Schwandorf give you?"
+
+This time the reply came readily enough.
+
+"To take you twenty-four days up the river and put you ashore. To
+prevent any trouble before that time."
+
+"Ah! And after that?"
+
+"Nothing. At least, nothing to me. What may have been said to the other
+men I do not know. Schwandorf came to me last, after he had picked all
+the others."
+
+"And what do you know about Schwandorf?"
+
+"What is between me and Schwandorf will be settled between me and
+Schwandorf. My duty to you senores lies only in handling the crew. Now
+that there is no crew my duty ends. Also, Capitan, I would like my pay
+now."
+
+"You quit?"
+
+"Why not? I have done my best. I can do no more. I am crippled. I am of
+no further use to you. Give me my pay, a little food, a small canoe, and
+I go."
+
+"It is possible, Senhor Jose," spoke the coronel, with ironic
+politeness, "that you may not go so soon. You have killed two men
+recently. You refuse to reveal some things which should be known about
+the German. Perhaps the law--"
+
+Jose burst into a jeering laugh.
+
+"Law? You speak of law? There is no law up the river but the law of the
+gun and the knife. And if there were, senor, what then? I killed in a
+fair fight. I killed men who would do murder. I killed on the west bank
+of the river--Peru. Neither you nor any other Brazilian can lay hand on
+me. And though I now have only one good arm, it will not be well for
+anyone to try to hold me. My knife and my right hand still are ready."
+
+"By cripes! the lad's right!" Tim blurted, impulsively. "And I'll tell
+the world I'm for him. He's got a right to keep his mouth shut if he
+wants to. He don't owe us nothin'. Mebbe he's got somethin' up his
+sleeve, at that; but he stuck with us in the pinch, and--"
+
+"And we'll give him a square deal, of course," Knowlton cut in. "Jose,
+your own wages to this point, at a dollar a day, are eighteen dollars.
+The wages of the five other men to the place where they--quit--would
+aggregate seventy-five dollars. Grand total, ninety-three. The others
+chose to take their pay in lead instead of gold, so their account is
+closed. Therefore I suggest that their pay go to you as _puntero_,
+_popero_, and good sport. What say, Rod?"
+
+"Make it a hundred flat," McKay agreed.
+
+"Right. A hundred in gold. Satisfy you, Jose?"
+
+"Indeed yes, senor. I did not expect such generosity."
+
+"That's all right, then. We'll fix you up before we move on, and--Say!
+Are you in Schwandorf's pay, too?"
+
+Jose hesitated. Then he replied:
+
+"Since you mention it, I will admit that _el Aleman_ offered me certain
+inducements to make this journey. I now see that he had no intention of
+meeting his promises. But you can leave it to me to collect from him
+whatever may be due."
+
+Even the coronel nodded at this. The gleam in the Peruvian's eyes
+presaged unpleasantness for Schwandorf.
+
+"You gentlemen, of course, will not attempt to continue your journey for
+the present," the coronel suggested. "You are fatigued and I shall
+greatly appreciate the pleasure of your companionship. New arrangements
+also will be necessary in the matter of a boat and men."
+
+"We've been wondering about getting another boat and a new crew,"
+Knowlton said, frankly. "The canoe we have is too big for three men to
+handle, and I'll admit we're tired. Jose, too, is in no shape to travel
+yet--"
+
+"Jose, of course, is my guest also," the old gentleman interrupted. "The
+question of new men can be solved. But there is time for everything, and
+now is the time for all of you to rest. As our proverb has it, '_Devagar
+se vae ao longe_'--he goes far who goes slowly."
+
+McKay arose, glass in hand.
+
+"To our host," he bowed. The toast was drunk standing. Whereafter the
+host tapped the bell twice and 'Tonio reappeared with a tray of fresh
+glasses. A toast to the United States by the coronel followed, and as
+soon as the black man arrived with a third round the Republic of Brazil
+was pledged. Then the coronel directed the servant:
+
+"'Tonio, if Pedro and Lourenco are outside, ask them to move the
+belongings of the gentlemen from the canoe. And make ready rooms for the
+guests."
+
+'Tonio disappeared down the ladder. The coronel raised the violin,
+tendered it to the others, accepted their pleas to play it himself, and
+for the next half hour acquitted himself with no mean ability. Snatches
+of long-forgotten operas and improvisations of his own flowed from the
+strings in smooth harmony, hinting at bygone years amid far different
+surroundings for which his soul now hungered and to which he would
+return. Pedro and Lourenco, transporting the equipment, passed in and
+out soft-footed and almost unnoticed. At length the player, with a
+deprecatory smile and a half apology for "boring his guests," extended
+the instrument again toward the visitors. And McKay, silent McKay, took
+it.
+
+Sweet and low, out welled the haunting melody of "Annie Laurie." Tim,
+who had listened with casual interest to the coronel's music, now
+grinned happily. And when the plaintive Scotch song became "Kathleen
+Mavourneen" he closed his eyes and lay back in pure enjoyment. "The
+River Shannon" flowed into "The Suwanee River," and this in turn blended
+into other heart-tugging airs of Dixieland. When the last strain died
+and the captain reached for his half-smoked cigar the room was silent
+for minutes.
+
+Then, to the astonishment of all, Jose spoke:
+
+"Senores, there was a time when I, too, could draw music from the
+violin. If I may--" His eyes rested longingly on the instrument.
+
+"_Certamente_, if you can use the arm," the coronel acquiesced. With a
+little difficulty Jose drew his arm from the sling, balanced his left
+elbow on the chair arm, and poised the violin. A half smile showed in
+the eyes of the coronel as he glanced at his guests. He, and they as
+well, expected a discordant, uncouth attempt to scrape out some obscene
+ditty of the frontier.
+
+But as Jose, after jockeying a bit, began drifting the bow across the
+strings, the suppressed smiles faded and eyes opened. Here was a man
+who, as he said, once could play. And he wasted no time on airs composed
+by others and known to half the world. Under his touch the mellow wood
+began to talk, and in the minds of the listeners grew pictures.
+
+City streets, blank-walled houses, patios, the rattle of the hoofs of
+burros over cobbles, the shuffle of human feet, the toll of bells from a
+convent tower. Gay little bits of music, laughter, flashing eyes, a
+voluptuous love song repeated over and over. A sudden wild outbreak,
+fighting men, shots, the clash of steel--again a tolling bell and a
+requiem for the dead. A horse galloping in the night. Mountain winds
+crooning mournfully, rising to the scream of tempest and the crash of
+thunder. Dreary uplands, the hiss of rain, the sough of drifting snow,
+the patient plod of a mule along a perilous trail. And then the jungle:
+its discordant uproar, its hammering of frogs, its hoots and howls, the
+dismal swash of flood waters. A monotonous ebb and flow of life,
+punctuated by sudden flares of fight. Then a long, mournful wail--and
+silence.
+
+His bow still on the strings, Jose sat for a minute like a stone image,
+his eyes straight ahead, his pale face drawn, his red kerchief glowing
+dully in the semishadow like a cap of blood. For once his face was empty
+of all insolence, changed by a pathetic wistfulness that made it tragic.
+Then, wordless, he lowered the violin, held it out to the coronel,
+fumbled absently at his sling, and slowly incased his wounded arm. When
+he looked up his old mocking expression had come back and he once more
+looked the reckless buccaneer.
+
+For a time no one spoke. Each felt that he had glimpsed something of
+this man's past; felt, too, that he who now was a bloody-handed borderer
+had once been a _caballero_, moving in a much higher circle. Certainly
+he could not play like this unless he had been of the upper class in his
+youth. The coronel's face was thoughtful as he took back the violin.
+When at length he began to talk, however, it was on a topic as remote as
+possible from music and present personalities--the reconstruction of
+Europe as the result of the World War.
+
+With this and kindred subjects, aided by the attentive ministrations of
+'Tonio, the afternoon passed swiftly. Dinner proved a feast, the _piece
+de resistance_ being tender, well-cooked meat which the Americans took
+for roast beef, but which really was roast tapir. More cigars, coupled
+with the fatigue of the past two days of paddling, eventually caused the
+visitors to seek their rooms, where McKay and Knowlton paired off and
+Tim took Jose as his "bunkie."
+
+When Tim awoke the next morning he found himself deserted.
+
+To Knowlton, who drew from the small gold-chest the hundred dollars
+allotted to Jose and handed it to him before redressing his wound, the
+_puntero_ quietly revealed his intention to go before sunrise.
+
+"Say nothing, senor," he requested. "You need know nothing of it, if you
+like. I am here to-night--I am gone to-morrow--that is all. I am of no
+further use to you, I am unwelcome in this house of Nunes, and I go. Oh,
+have no fear for me! I have my gun, my knife, and my good right arm, and
+I can take care of myself very well. No doubt the coronel will be
+astonished to find that on leaving to-night I have neither cut anyone's
+throat nor stolen anything--ha! I have a black name on this river, and
+it is well earned, perhaps. Yet few men are as bad as those who dislike
+them think they are. I may borrow a small canoe, but any Indian would do
+the same. An unoccupied canoe is any man's property.
+
+"Before our ways part, senor, let me say that as Jose Martinez never
+forgets his enemies, so he never forgets friends. Where some men would
+have turned me loose like a sick dog with my eighteen dollars, you and
+Senor McKay give me a hundred. And far more than that, you saved my life
+at a time when many men would have said, 'Bah! let the bloody one die!
+He is nothing but scum of the border and leader of that murdering crew.'
+You had only to let me lie a few minutes longer and you would be rid of
+me. No, Jose does not forget.
+
+"That is all, except--if you will, in parting, take the hand of a man
+known as a killer and other things--"
+
+Knowlton gripped that hand with swift heartiness. He would have
+protested against such a departure, but the other's steady gaze
+betokened inflexible purpose. So he merely said:
+
+"Then good luck, old chap! And if you meet Schwandorf give him our
+affectionate regards."
+
+"_Si_, senor," was the sardonic answer. "I will do that thing. And here
+is something that may be of interest to you. I happen to know that
+before we left Remate de Males a swift one-man canoe left Nazareth, and
+that the man in it was an Indian who is in the German's control. It went
+upstream while we were loading your supplies, and it has not returned.
+By this time it must be many hours above this place. I do not know what
+message that Indian carries, nor where he goes. But he is a short man,
+and his left leg is crooked. If you meet such a one make him talk.
+Good-by, senor."
+
+Just how and when the _puntero_ cat-footed his way out that night none
+ever knew but himself. But before the next dawn he had vanished from the
+Brazilian shore.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+BY THE LIGHT OF STORM
+
+
+"One thing I can't understand," Knowlton said, toying with his coffee
+cup the next morning, "is why Schwandorf should double-cross us. We
+never did anything to him. Another thing I don't quite get is how he
+expected to have the Peruvians wiped out when he knew blamed well they
+were aware of the enmity of the cannibals. They'd hardly be likely to go
+into the bush with us under those circumstances."
+
+"My guess is this," McKay replied. "He set a trap. He is on a friendly
+footing with some of the savages above here, no doubt. He dispatched
+that Indian messenger to stir them up with some false tale and bring
+them to some place where they'd be pretty sure to get us. He primed the
+crew to jump us at the same place, perhaps. Then the crew would kill us
+or we'd kill them, and whichever side won would be smeared by the
+Indians. Sort of a trap within a trap. Why he did it doesn't matter
+much. He double-crossed us, he double-crossed the crew, he
+double-crossed Jose. First thing he knows he'll find he's double-crossed
+himself."
+
+"Yeah," Tim grunted. "He better beat it before we git back!"
+
+"He wanted no killing before we reached the cannibal country," McKay
+went on, "because then it would all be blamed on the savages and he
+could show clean hands. Francisco's vengefulness tipped over his cart."
+
+"Still, he might have known we'd stop here for a call on the coronel,
+and that there was a big chance for us to be warned here about the feud
+between Mayorunas and Peruvians."
+
+"That probably was provided for. Crew doubtless had orders to prevent
+any such visit, by lying to us or in other ways. We probably would have
+gone surging past here at top speed."
+
+"Wal, it don't git us nothin' to talk about things that 'ain't
+happened," interposed the practical Tim. "Question is, where do we go
+from here? And how?"
+
+All eyes went to the coronel, who sat languidly smoking his morning
+cigar.
+
+"Coronel, we are in your hands," McKay said, bluntly. "Your men, I
+presume, are all out at work in various parts of the bush. We want a
+crew and, if possible, guides. Can you help us?"
+
+The coronel flicked off an ash and spoke slowly:
+
+"I have two men, senhores, who have no peers as bushmen. They are the
+two whom you saw yesterday. Frankly, they are most valuable to me, and I
+hesitate about sending them on so dangerous a mission as yours. Yet they
+might succeed where most men would fail, for they have repeatedly gone
+into the bush on risky journeys and returned unharmed. Their adventures
+would fill books.
+
+"The older of these two, Lourenco Moraes, has been more than once among
+the cannibals of this region, and so he knows something of them.
+Naturally he did not live long among them; he left them as soon as he
+could. But he has the faculty of extricating himself from hopeless
+positions--or perhaps it would be better to say that his cool head and
+good fortune together have preserved him thus far. '_Tanta vez vae o
+cantaro a fonte ate gue um dia la fica_'--the pitcher may go often to
+the spring, but some day it remains there.
+
+"Pedro Andrada, the younger, is not so steady and cool-headed as
+Lourenco. Yet he is a most capable man, and the two together--they are
+always together--make a very efficient team."
+
+"I bet they do," Tim concurred, heartily. "I like that Pedro lad fine."
+
+"So do I," the coronel smiled. "Now, gentlemen, I will not order these
+men to go with you. If they go it must be of their own choice. They have
+only recently returned from a hazardous mission and they are entitled to
+rest. Yet I have little doubt that they will jump at the chance to risk
+their lives in a new venture. If they choose to go, I suggest that you
+place yourselves entirely in their hands and give them free rein. You
+would look far for better men."
+
+"And we're lucky to get them," Knowlton acquiesced. "To them and to you
+we shall be greatly indebted."
+
+"Not to me, senhor," the coronel demurred "I do nothing but bring you
+men together. Theirs is the risk. 'Tonio! Find Pedro and Lourenco. Shall
+we go into the office, gentlemen?"
+
+Chairs scraped back and an exodus from the dining room ensued. Outside,
+the lusty voice of the negro bawled. Soon he was back, and at his heels
+strode the lithe Pedro and the quiet Lourenco. They ran their eyes over
+the group, then stood looking inquiringly at their employer.
+
+"Be seated, men. Roll cigarettes if you like," said the coronel. Coolly
+they did both. Pedro, catching Tim's friendly grin, flashed a quick
+smile in return. Lourenco, unsmiling, looked squarely into each man's
+face in turn and seemed satisfied with what he saw. Both then glanced
+around as if missing some one.
+
+"Your friend Jose has left us," the coronel informed them, dryly,
+interpreting the look. "He disappeared in the night."
+
+"Ah! That is why one of our canoes is gone," said Pedro. "We are ready
+to start."
+
+"You mistake," the old gentleman laughed. "We do not want him back.
+Nothing else is missing."
+
+Whereat Pedro looked slightly surprised. Lourenco's lips curved in a
+faint grin. Neither made any further comment.
+
+The coronel plunged at once into the business for which they had been
+summoned. Succinctly he stated the purpose of the North Americans in
+coming here, pointed out their need of guides--and stopped there. He
+said nothing of the dangers ahead, mentioned no reward, did not even ask
+the men whether they would go. He merely lit a fresh cigar and leaned
+back in his chair.
+
+A silence followed. Again Lourenco looked searchingly into the face of
+each American. Pedro contemplated the opposite wall, taking occasional
+puffs from his cigarette. At length Knowlton suggested, tentatively:
+
+"We will pay well--"
+
+Both the bushmen frowned. The coronel spoke in a tone of mild reproof:
+
+"Senhor, it is not a matter of pay. These men can make plenty of money
+as _seringueiros_."
+
+"Pardon," said Knowlton, and thereafter held his tongue.
+
+Deliberately Lourenco finished his smoke, pinched the coal between a
+hard thumb and forefinger, and spoke for the first time.
+
+"May I ask, senhor, if you are the commander?" His gaze rested on McKay.
+
+"I am."
+
+"And do I understand that we shall at all times be subject to your
+orders?"
+
+"In case any orders are necessary--yes. But I assume that you will not
+need commands."
+
+A quiet smile showed in the bushman's eyes. He glanced at Pedro. The
+latter met the look from the corner of his eye, without wink, nod, or
+other sign. But when Lourenco turned again to McKay he spoke as if all
+were arranged.
+
+"When do we start, Capitao?"
+
+Tim slapped his leg and cackled.
+
+"By cripes! there ain't no lost motion with these guys. Hey, Cap?"
+
+McKay smiled approvingly.
+
+"We shall get on together" he said. "Lourenco and Pedro, this is not a
+one-man party. We are three comrades, who now become five. If at any
+time one man needs to command, I, as senior officer, will take that
+command. Otherwise we are all on an equal footing."
+
+"Just so," Lourenco agreed. "If it were otherwise you would still be
+three men--not five. Since that is plain, let me say frankly that your
+big canoe had best stay here, also everything you do not need in the
+bush. Two light canoes are faster, easier to handle and to hide. Pedro
+and I have our own canoe and will provide our own supplies. We will pick
+out a three-man boat for you and load it with what you select from your
+equipment. After that every man swings his own paddle."
+
+"_Cada qual por si e Deus por todos._ Each for himself and God for us
+all," Pedro summarized.
+
+"That's the dope," applauded Tim. "Now say, Renzo, old feller, what d'ye
+know about these here, now, Red Bones up above here? And have ye got
+anything on that Raposy guy?"
+
+Lourenco shook his head.
+
+"I know little of the Red Bone people, for I have never met them. That
+is one reason why I now should like to meet them. I have heard of them,
+yes; and the things I have heard are not pleasant. Yet it may be that
+the tales are worse than the people. I have also heard terrible stories
+of the light-skinned cannibals, the Mayorunas; yet I have been among the
+cannibals and found them not so bad--though it is true that they eat the
+flesh of their enemies; I have seen it done. But it makes a very great
+difference how they are approached and who the men are who approach
+them. It is possible that we may go unharmed among even _los Ossos
+Vermelhos_--the Red Bones. We shall see.
+
+"Of the Raposa I think I do know something. I have seen him."
+
+Everyone except Pedro sat up with a start.
+
+"You have seen him?" exclaimed the coronel. "When? Where? How? Why have
+you not spoken of it?"
+
+"Because, Coronel, I forgot it until now. It meant nothing to us--yes,
+Pedro was with me--except that it was one more queer thing in the bush.
+In time I might have remembered it and told you. But you know we have
+been busy."
+
+"True. But go on."
+
+"It was only a little time ago. We were returning from the scouting trip
+on which you sent us to locate new rubber trees. We were
+seven--eight--seven--"
+
+"Eight days' journey from here," prompted Pedro.
+
+"_Si._ We were in our canoe when a sudden storm broke and we got
+ashore to wait until it was over. The place was on an _ygarape_--a
+creek--about two days away from the river. The trees were large and the
+ground free from bush. In a flash of lightning we saw a man peering out
+at us from a hollow tree.
+
+"He was naked and streaked with paint--that was all we saw in the
+flashes that came and went. The rain was heavy, and we stayed where we
+were until it ended. Then we ordered that man to come out.
+
+"He came, and he held bow and arrow ready to shoot. We, too, were ready
+to shoot, but we held back our bullets and he held back his arrow. We
+saw that his paint was red and that it traced his bones; that his skin
+was that of a tanned white man and his hair was dark with a white streak
+over one ear. No, we did not notice the color of his eyes--the light was
+not good and he stood well away from us.
+
+"We looked around for other men, but saw none. We asked him who he was
+and what he wanted, but he gave no answer. He looked at us for a long
+time, and we at him. Then he began walking away sidewise, watching us
+steadily, holding his arrow always ready. Finally he disappeared among
+the trees and we saw him no more. But we heard him, senhores; twice
+before we lost sight of him he spoke out in a queer voice like that of a
+parrot. And the thing he said was, 'Poor Davey!'"
+
+McKay thumped a fist on his chair.
+
+"Davey! David Rand!"
+
+"Perhaps so, Capitao. I do not know. But he spoke English."
+
+"By thunder! David Rand! Merry, where's that picture?"
+
+Knowlton was already unbuttoning his pocket flap. Quickly he produced
+the photograph.
+
+"That the fellow?"
+
+Lourenco studied the face. The eagerly anticipated affirmative did not
+come.
+
+"I cannot say surely. This is a full-faced, clean-shaven man with hair
+close trimmed. That one's face was gaunt, covered partly with beard and
+partly by long hair, and we were not close to him, as I have said. I
+would not say the two were the same until I could have a better look at
+the wild man."
+
+"You didn't follow him?"
+
+"No. Why should we? He had done nothing to us and we let him go his way.
+We did look at his hollow tree, though. But it was only an empty tree,
+not his home; a place where he had stepped in out of the storm. We had
+other things to do, so we got into our canoe again and paddled off."
+
+"You can find the place again?"
+
+"Yes. But I much doubt if we shall find him there."
+
+"Never mind. We've something to start with now, and that's worth a lot.
+Get busy with your boats and supplies, boys, right away. Tim and Merry,
+let's dig out our essentials and start. We're on a hot trail at last.
+Let's go!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+OUT OF THE AIR
+
+
+Again the sun fought the mists of a new day, casting a pallid, watery
+light on the livid green roof of the limitless jungle. High up under
+that roof, more than a hundred feet above the ground, the morning alarm
+clock went off with a scream, the sudden chorus of monkeys and macaws
+awaking after a few hours of silence. Down on the eastern shore of the
+river, in a little natural port where the shadows still lay thick, men
+stirred under their black mosquito nets, yawned, and waited for more
+light before starting another day's journey.
+
+To three of the five men housed under those flimsy coverings the somber
+hue of their nets was new. On leaving Remate de Males the insect bars
+had been clean white; and though they had grown somewhat soiled from
+daily handling, they never had approached the drab dinginess of the
+barriers draping the hammocks of the Peruvian rivermen. In fact, their
+owners had been at some pains to keep them as clean as possible, folding
+them each morning with military precision and stowing them carefully.
+Wherefore they were somewhat taken aback when informed that nice white
+nets were decidedly not the thing in this part of the world.
+
+"Up to this place, senhores, they have done no harm," Pedro said, before
+leaving the coronel's grounds. "But from here on they will not do at
+all. The weakest moonlight--yes, even starlight--would make them stand
+out in the darkness like tombstones. A few days more and we shall be in
+the cannibal country. And it is an old trick of those eaters of men to
+skulk along the shore by night, watching a camp until all are asleep,
+and then sneak up with spears ready. A rush and a swift stab of the
+spears into those white nets, and you are dead or dying from the
+poisoned points. I would no more sleep under a white net than I would
+lie in my hammock and blow a horn to show where I was. Your light nets
+must stay here. We will find dark ones for you."
+
+Thus the voyagers learned another of those little things on which
+sometimes hinges life or death. Even McKay, with his experience of other
+jungles, had never thought it necessary to drape himself in invisibility
+at night. But when his attention was called to it he recognized its
+value at once, and the white nets were forthwith abandoned.
+
+Now, on the first morning out from the Nunes place, the three Americans
+stretched themselves in lazy enjoyment after a night passed without a
+sentinel. The stretching evoked sundry grunts due to the discovery that
+their muscles still were lame. The long steamer journey from their own
+land, followed by the daily confinement of the Peruvian canoe, had
+afforded scant opportunity for keeping themselves fit, and the sudden
+necessity for doing their own paddling had found every man soft. But
+they now were hardening fast, and the steady swing of the paddles was
+proving a physical joy. These were men ill accustomed to sitting in
+enforced idleness for weeks on end.
+
+Matches flared under the nets and cigarette smoke drifted into the air,
+rousing to fresh activity the mosquitoes humming hungrily outside.
+Gradually the shadows paled and the weak light reflecting from the
+fog-shrouded water beyond grew into day. The nets lifted and the
+bloodthirsty insects swooped in vicious triumph on the emerging men. But
+again matches blazed, flame licked up among kindlings, a fire grew, and
+in its smoke screen the voyagers found some surcease from the bug
+hordes. Soon the fragrance of coffee floated into the air.
+
+Tim yawned, coughed explosively, and swore.
+
+"Fellers can't even take a gape for himself without gittin' these cussed
+bugs down his throat," he complained, and coughed again. "Gimme some
+coffee! I got one skeeter the size of a devil's darnin' needle stuck in
+me windpipe."
+
+"A devil's darning needle? What is that, Senhor Tim?" inquired Pedro,
+passing him a cup of hot coffee. When the liquid--and the "skeeter"--had
+passed into Tim's stomach he enlightened the inquirer.
+
+"Ye dunno what's a devil's darnin' needle? Gosh! I'm s'prised at ye. I
+seen lots of 'em right on this here river. He's a bug about so long"--he
+stuck out a finger--"and he's got jaws like a crab and a long limber
+tail a with reg'lar needle in the end, and inside him is a roll o' tough
+silk--tough as spider web. And he's death on liars. Any time a feller
+tells a lie he's got to look out, or all to oncet one o' them bugs'll
+come scootin' at him and grab him by the nose with them jaws. Then he'll
+curl up his tail--the bug, I mean--and run his needle and thread right
+through the feller's lips and sew his mouth up tight. Then he flies off
+lookin' for another liar."
+
+"_Por Deus!_ And the liar starves to death?"
+
+"Wal, no. O' course he can git somebody to cut the stitches. But the
+needle is a good thick one and it leaves a row o' holes all along the
+feller's lips. Any time ye see a guy with li'l' round scars around his
+mouth, Pedro, ye'll know he's such an awful liar the devil bug got him."
+
+McKay coughed. Knowlton blew his nose into a big handkerchief. Lourenco
+squinted sidewise at Tim, who was solemn as an owl. Pedro, his eyes
+twinkling, bent forward and scrutinized Tim's mouth.
+
+"You have been fortunate, senhor," he said, simply--and stepped around
+to the other side of the fire.
+
+"Huh? Say, lookit here, ye long-legged gorilla--"
+
+Knowlton exploded. McKay and Lourenco snickered.
+
+"It's on you, Tim!" vociferated Knowlton. "You dug the hole yourself.
+Now crawl in and pull it in after you."
+
+Tim snorted wrathfully, but his eyes laughed.
+
+"Aw, what's the use o' trying to educate you guys?"
+
+"You swallowed a mosquito just now, but I cannot swallow that devil
+bug," Pedro grinned.
+
+Tim rumbled something, solaced himself with a cigarette, then squatted
+and joined the others in their frugal breakfast of coffee and
+_chibeh_--a handful of farinha mixed with water in a gourd. When it was
+finished McKay, who never smoked in the morning until he had eaten,
+filled a pipe and suggested:
+
+"Guess we'd better plan our campaign. We didn't take time yesterday. In
+case we find no trace of the Raposa at the place where you fellows saw
+him, what's your idea?"
+
+Lourenco, puffing thoughtfully, stared into the fire.
+
+"There will be time enough to decide that, Capitao, after we have
+visited that place," he said, slowly. "Still, perhaps it is best to make
+some plan; it can be changed at any time."
+
+For a moment longer he looked at the dying flame. Then, dropping his
+cigarette stub into it, he continued:
+
+"If I were going alone to find a man among the Red Bones, I should go
+first to the Mayorunas and work through them to make sure of a friendly
+reception by the other people. I would--"
+
+"Why, that's the very thing Schwandorf suggested!"
+
+"Yes? I have not heard what he said. Tell me."
+
+McKay did so. Lourenco smiled.
+
+"Sometimes, Capitao, the devil puts into the hands of men a weapon which
+is turned against himself. So it is now. That _Allemao_, Schwandorf,
+never expected you to reach the people you seek, but the plan is good.
+It would not be good if you followed it exactly as he laid it out, but
+things have changed; and what you could not do with Peruvian companions,
+or alone, you perhaps can do with us. I will show you.
+
+"It happens that I have been twice among the cannibals living in a
+certain _maloca_ which I can find again. Perhaps you know that those
+people live in scattered _malocas_, each ruled by its own chief--"
+
+"Yes, we know about that."
+
+"Good. Now if we went to any _maloca_ where we were not known we might
+be killed at once. But at that _maloca_ of which I speak I am known to
+the chief and all his fighting men, for I once led them on a raid into
+Peru. So they will remember me--"
+
+"What's that?" Knowlton interrupted, in amazement. "You led a cannibal
+tribe on the warpath?"
+
+"Just so, senhor. It is a long story, but these are the facts:
+
+"There was in Peru a gang of killers, robbers--and worse--who called
+themselves the Peccaries. They raided one of the coronel's camps where I
+was in charge, killed all my gang except myself and one other, and used
+us two as slaves and beasts of burden.
+
+"The other man died from poison. I lived only to revenge myself on those
+foul outlaws. There was much rubber of the coronel's, worth much money
+at that time, in the camp they had raided. So, after driving me like a
+beast to their stronghold in the hills of Peru, they came back with
+boats and Indian porters to get out that rubber.
+
+"On that return journey I tried to kill the leader, who was called El
+Amarillo--yellow-skinned. I failed, and he had me nailed with long
+thorns to a tree where I might hang in torment for days, dying slowly.
+See. Here are the marks."
+
+All three of the Americans had noticed on the previous day that each of
+Lourenco's hands was disfigured by a scar which looked as if a spike had
+been driven through. Now he held those hands forward for their
+inspection. Then he pulled off his loose shirt and rolled up his
+trousers. They saw other scars in the big muscles before the armpits, in
+the soft flesh under the ribs, in the thighs and calves.
+
+"The dirty Hun!" Tim grated.
+
+"That was not all, Senhor Tim. They also put fire ants on me, which bit
+so cruelly that I nearly lost my mind from pain. Then they went on,
+intending to have more sport with me when they came back with the
+rubber. But after they left me two hunters of the cannibal tribe who had
+been following a tapir's track found me and took me down from the tree.
+
+"Now the Peccaries before this had stolen some women from a Mayoruna
+_maloca_ and were treating them like dogs--I saw one of those women
+brutally murdered while I was captive in the outlaw camp. I managed to
+tell the two hunters I could lead them to the Peccary stronghold and
+give them revenge. They carried me to their _maloca_--I could not
+walk--and told their chief what I had said. The chief caused my hurts to
+be cured, and then I kept my promise.
+
+"I guided the savages to the outlaw camp; they surrounded it, and in the
+fight that followed every Peccary was killed except their leader. Now
+that cannibal chief has not forgotten me--"
+
+"Wait a minute," protested Knowlton. "Did that Peccary leader escape?"
+
+"No. He was kept alive until a big herd of peccaries was met. Then,
+because he called himself 'King of the Peccaries,' he was nailed to a
+tree, as I had been, and told to make the peccaries take out the thorns.
+The wild pigs tore him into ribbons with their tusks."
+
+Calmly he donned his shirt again. Tim, staring at him, twitched his
+shoulders as if a chill had gone down his back.
+
+"Ugh!" muttered Knowlton.
+
+"So now," Lourenco resumed, "if I can find that chief again--he may have
+been killed in some tribal fight before now--he may be friendly to all
+of us. Or he may not. Savages cannot be relied on with much certainty.
+But if any of the Mayorunas will help us, he will. It is worth trying."
+
+"And if he is not friendly--" Knowlton paused.
+
+"We do not come back," Pedro finished. "Have you a better plan?"
+
+All shook their heads.
+
+"Laurenco's idea is excellent," said McKay. "I was thinking along the
+same line, though I did not know he had any such friendly relations with
+a chief. That makes it all the more advisable to try it, unless we find
+the Raposa first. We, of course, will not land at the place where
+Schwandorf told us to go ashore, seven days from here."
+
+"By no means," Lourenco concurred. "In five days we leave the river and
+travel along the _ygarape_. If we go to the _maloca_ it will be from
+another direction than the river."
+
+He began preparing to travel. The others also went about the work of
+breaking camp. By the time the canoes were loaded the mists had lifted
+and the river lay open and empty before them. In the bush around and
+beyond, gloom still lay thick and the forest life yelped, howled,
+clattered, and wailed. But out on the water it was broad day, and far
+overhead sounded the harsh cries of unseen parrots flying two by two in
+the sunlight above the matted branches. The world of the pathless tropic
+wilderness, ever dying, ever living, was about its daily business. The
+five invaders were about theirs.
+
+As the paddlers dipped, however, Knowlton held back.
+
+"Say, Rod, we didn't tell these fellows about Schwandorf's Indian. Hold
+up a second, men."
+
+While all rested on their paddles he spoke of the mysterious messenger
+dispatched from Nazareth. Pedro and Lourenco contemplated the river,
+then frowned.
+
+"That may be of importance, senhores," said Lourenco. "It may change
+everything for us. We saw a lone Indian go past the coronel's place,
+traveling fast, three days before you came. I would give much to know
+where he is now and what word he carries. A short man with a bad left
+leg, you say. We shall keep watch for such a man. Perhaps we may meet
+him."
+
+Wherein he predicted more accurately than he knew.
+
+The canoes swung out and the paddlers settled into the steady stroke to
+which they were growing accustomed. Hour after hour they forged on, the
+Brazilians adjusting their speed to that of the Americans, who had not
+yet attained the muscular ease of habitual canoemen. The miles flowed
+slowly but surely behind them, the sun rolled higher and hotter, the
+silence of approaching noon crept over the jungle on either side. Then,
+as the time drew near when they would land for a more hearty meal than
+that of the morning, Pedro pointed ahead.
+
+Up out of the bush on the Peruvian shore rose a vulture. It flapped
+sullenly away as if disappointed. The bushmen, quick to note anything
+that might be a sign, paid no attention to the bird's flight, but marked
+with unerring eye the spot whence it had taken wing.
+
+"Let us cross, comrades, and see what we may see," Pedro called. "If
+nothing is there, we can eat."
+
+But something was there. All saw it before they landed--the stern of a
+small, speedy canoe almost concealed in a narrow rift at the bottom of
+the bank. In the soil of the rising slope were the prints of bare feet.
+And Pedro, scanning the tracks narrowly after he and the others reached
+shore, asserted, "These were not made to-day."
+
+Up the bank they climbed, silent and watchful. At the top Lourenco took
+the lead. In under big trees the five passed in file. A short distance
+from the edge Lourenco stopped, looking at the ground. The others spread
+out and stared at the thing he had found.
+
+Between the buttress roots of a tall tree was a crude shelter of palm
+leaves. Before this lay the scattered bones of a man. The skull had been
+crushed by a mighty blow.
+
+The bones were picked clean--had been stripped and torn asunder days
+before, and the vulture which had just left had gotten nothing for its
+belated visit. Among them were remnants of cloth, a belt and a machete,
+and strands of coarse black hair. A few feet away lay a cheap "trade"
+gun. Lourenco inspected the weapon and laid it back.
+
+"Did he shoot before he was downed?" asked Knowlton.
+
+"No. The gun is loaded. His death came from above." The bushman ran his
+eye up the towering tree, then pointed to a large dark object on the
+ground near by.
+
+"Castanha--Brazil-nut tree," he explained. "That heavy nut fell and
+smashed the Indian's skull like an egg. Indian, yes. His gun, his
+shelter, and his hair show that. And"--stooping and pointing at one of
+the bones--"that bone shows who he was. See, Capitao."
+
+McKay looked down on a leg bone. At some time the leg had been broken
+and badly set, if set at all. The bone was crooked.
+
+"A short Indian with a crooked leg. Schwandorf's messenger!"
+
+"_Si._ No man will ever receive the message he bore. He camped here days
+ago. Now he camps here forever."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE ARROW
+
+
+Slowly, silently, two canoes glided along the still, dark water of a
+gloomy creek over-arched by the interlaced limbs of lofty trees.
+
+The first, propelled by the slow-dipping blades of two Brazilian
+bushmen, seemed to be seeking something; for it nosed along with
+frequent pauses of the paddles, during which it drifted almost to a stop
+while its crew searched the solemn jungle depths reaching away from the
+right-hand shore. The second, carrying three bronzed and bearded men of
+another continent, was only trailing the leader. It moved and paused
+like the first, but the recurrent scrutiny of the farther gloom by its
+paddlers was that of men who saw only a meaningless, monotonous bulk of
+buttresses and trunks and tangle of looping lianas. In this dimness and
+bewildering chaos the trio might as well have been blind. The eyes of
+the tiny fleet were in the first boat.
+
+The progress of the dugouts was almost stealthy. Not a paddle thumped or
+splashed, not a voice spoke. They moved with the alert caution born not
+of fear, but of wary readiness for any sudden event--like prowling
+jungle creatures which, themselves seeking quarry, must be ever on guard
+lest they become the hunted instead of the hunters.
+
+For the past two days they had moved thus. The last fresh meat had been
+shot miles down the river, where a well-placed bullet from the rifle of
+McKay had downed a fat swamp deer. Since that day not a gun had been
+fired. The rations now were tough jerked beef and monkey meat, slabs of
+salt pirarucu fish, and farinha, varied by tinned delicacies from the
+stores of the Americans. Henceforth gunfire was taboo unless it should
+become necessary in self-defense.
+
+At length the fore canoe halted with an abruptness that told of back
+strokes of the blades hidden under water. McKay, bowman of the trailing
+craft, also backed water, while his mates held their paddles rigid. The
+two boats drifted together.
+
+"This is the place," Lourenco said, speaking low.
+
+The Americans, scanning the shore, saw nothing to differentiate the spot
+from the rest of the wilderness growth. Yet Lourenco's tone was sure.
+Pedro's face also showed recognition of his surroundings. With no
+apparent motion of the paddles--though the wrists of the paddlers moved
+almost imperceptibly--the canoe of the bushmen floated to the bank. They
+picked up their rifles, twitched their bow up on land, and turned their
+faces to the forest.
+
+"Stay here," was Pedro's subdued command, "until you hear the bird-call
+which we taught you down the river."
+
+He and Lourenco faded into the dimness and were gone.
+
+"Beats me how them guys find their way 'round," muttered Tim. "I could
+land here twenty times hand-runnin', but if I went away and then come
+back I'd never know the place."
+
+"It's all in the feel of it," was McKay's low-toned explanation. "They
+find places and travel the bush as an Indian does--by a sixth sense.
+Take them to New York City, guide them around, then turn them loose--and
+they'd be hopelessly lost in ten minutes."
+
+The others nodded agreement and sat watching. In the shadows no creature
+moved. Afar off some bird cried mournfully like a lost soul condemned to
+wander forever alone in the grim green solitudes. No other sound came to
+the listeners save the ever-present hum of the big forest mosquitoes, to
+which they now had become indifferent. For all they could see or hear of
+their two guides, they might as well have been alone. Yet they knew the
+Brazilians were not far away, threading the maze with sure step and
+scouting hawk-eyed for any sign of danger.
+
+At length a long soft whistle sounded in the bush ahead. Any Indian
+hunter hearing that sound would straightway have begun scanning the high
+branches, for the liquid call was that of the mutum, or curassow turkey.
+But the waiting trio knew it for Pedro's signal that all was clear. At
+once they slid their canoe to shore, lifted its bow to a firm grip on
+the clay, and, after plumbing the shadows, quietly advanced in squad
+column.
+
+A few steps, and they halted suddenly and whirled. A voice had spoken
+just behind them. There, squatting leisurely between the root buttresses
+of a huge tree, Lourenco looked up at them in amusement. They had passed
+within rifle length of him without seeing him.
+
+"Of what use are your eyes, comrades?" he chaffed. "In the bush one
+should see in all directions at once. You were looking at that patch of
+sunlight just ahead, yes? But danger lurks in the shadows, not in the
+glaring light."
+
+Without awaiting an answer, he arose and took the lead. At the edge of
+the small sunlit space beyond he halted.
+
+"You were heading for the right place," he added then. "Look around. Do
+you see anything?"
+
+Swiftly they scrutinized the gap left by the fall of a great tree whose
+gigantic trunk had bludgeoned weaker trees away in its crushing descent.
+Seeing nothing unusual, they then peered around them. Tim suddenly
+snapped up his rifle.
+
+"Holler tree there--and a man in it! Hey! come out o' there!"
+
+"Your eyes improve," Lourenco complimented. "But the man is Pedro."
+
+Tim lowered the gun as Pedro, grinning, came out of his concealment.
+
+"That is the tree of the Raposa," Lourenco went on. "The lightning
+flashing in from above showed us the man. But now, senhores, I think we
+must tramp the bush for some time before we find that Raposa again.
+There is no trace of him here."
+
+"Hm!" said Knowlton. Striding to the hollow tree, he peered about inside
+it. The cavity was almost big enough to sling a hammock in, but it was
+empty of any indication of habitation, human or otherwise. A temporary
+refuge--that was all.
+
+"No sign anywhere around here, eh?" queried McKay.
+
+"We have found none. We shall look farther, but I have small hope. If
+you senhores will make the camp this time we shall start at once and
+stay out until dark. Build no fire until we return. And if you hear the
+call of the mutum, pay no attention to it; we may use it to locate each
+other if we separate, and also perhaps as a decoy. Any wild man, red or
+white, hearing that call would seek the bird making it, for a fine fat
+mutum is well worth killing. Keep quiet and be on guard."
+
+"Right. Go ahead."
+
+The bushmen turned at once and stole away. The others returned to the
+canoes, transported the necessary duffle to the base of the hollow tree,
+made camp with a few poles, and squatted against the trunk to smoke,
+watch, and wait. Several times they heard mutum calls receding in the
+distance. Then came silence.
+
+The sun-thrown shadows in the gap crawled steadily eastward. Knowlton
+tested the feed of his automatic, which, since its balkiness in the
+fight with the Peruvians, he had kept carefully oiled and free from the
+slightest speck of rust. Tim arose at intervals and paced up and down in
+sentry go, eyes and ears alert--a useless activity, but one which
+provided an outlet for his restless energy. McKay let his gaze rove over
+the small area visible from their post, studying the contours of the
+towering trunks, the prone giant whose fall had opened the hole in the
+leafy roof, the parasitical vines twined about other trees, the thin,
+outflung buttresses supporting the mighty columns--all familiar sights
+to him, but the only things to occupy his vision. So limned on his brain
+did the scene become that after a time he could close his eyes and see
+it in every important detail.
+
+It might have been two hours after Pedro and Lourenco had departed--the
+shadows had grown much longer--when over McKay stole the feeling that he
+was being watched. He glanced at his companions and found that neither
+of them was looking at him. Knowlton, sitting with hands clasped around
+updrawn knees, was dozing. Tim, though wide awake, was staring absently
+at a fungus. The captain's eyes searched the short vistas all about,
+spying nothing new. Still the feeling persisted. Then all at once his
+roaming gaze stopped, became fixed on a point some forty feet away.
+
+There rose a rough-barked red-brown tree, and from it, near the ground,
+projected a blackish bole. McKay was very sure the protuberance had not
+been there before. He had stared steadily at that tree more than once,
+and its shape was quite clear in his mind. Was that bump an insensate
+wood growth now revealed for the first time by the changing sun slant,
+or--
+
+For minutes he watched it. It did not move. Then Tim, restless again,
+rose directly in McKay's line of sight, yawned silently, swung his gun
+to his shoulder, and began another slow parade of his self-appointed
+post. When he had stepped aside McKay looked again for the puzzling
+bole.
+
+It was gone.
+
+With a bound the captain was up and dashing toward the tree, drawing his
+pistol as he ran. But within three strides he went down. A tough vine,
+unnoticed on the ground, looped snakily around one ankle and threw him
+hard. His gun flew from his hand. As he fell a tiny whispering sound
+flitted past, followed by a small blow somewhere behind him. Ensued a
+gruff grunt from Tim and the swift clatter of a breech bolt.
+
+Raging, McKay kicked his foot loose and heaved himself up. Empty handed,
+he continued his rush for the tree. But when he reached it he found
+nothing behind it. If anything had been there it now was gone, and the
+vacant shadows beyond were as inscrutable as ever.
+
+Feet padded behind him and Tim and Knowlton halted on either side. A
+moment of silent searching, and Tim broke into reproach.
+
+"Cap, don't never do that again! If ye take a tumble in my line o' fire,
+for the love o' Mike stay down till I shoot! I come so near drillin' ye
+when ye hopped up that I'm sweatin' blood right now."
+
+In truth, the veteran was pale around the mouth and his broad face was
+beaded with cold drops.
+
+"I seen more 'n one time in France when I felt like shootin' my s'perior
+officer, but I never come so near doin' it as jest now. I had finger to
+trigger and had took up the slack, and a hair's weight more pull would
+have spattered yer head all around. And besides givin' me heart failure
+ye let that guy git away. We'll never find him--"
+
+"You saw him?" McKay cut in.
+
+"I seen somethin' beyond ye--couldn't make out what 'twas, but from the
+way ye was goin' over the top I knowed it must be a man. And then when
+the arrer come--"
+
+"Arrow?"
+
+"Sure. Missed ye when ye took that flop, and stuck in the tree over
+yonder. What'd ye rush the guy for, anyways? Whyn't ye drill him from
+where ye was?"
+
+In the reaction from his sudden fright Tim was as wrathfully ready to
+"bawl out" his captain as if he were some raw rookie. McKay, with a cool
+smile, explained his abrupt action, meanwhile reconnoitering the dimness
+for any further sign of the vanished assailant. None showed.
+
+While Tim stood vigilant guard the other two stooped and moved around
+the base of the tree, narrowly examining the ground. Beyond it they
+paused at one spot, fingered the soil lightly, and lit a match or two.
+
+"No ghost," said Knowlton. "Barefoot man. Didn't leave much trace, but
+enough to show he was here. Let's look at that arrow."
+
+Back to the hollow tree they went, retrieving McKay's pistol on the way.
+About a yard above the earth a long shaft projected from the bark.
+Knowlton reached for it, but McKay held him back and drew it out.
+
+"M-hm! Thought so!" he muttered. "Poisoned."
+
+"Oof! Nice, gentle sort of a cuss," rumbled Tim. "That smear on the
+point--is that poison?"
+
+"Poison. Quickest and deadliest kind of poison. Mixes instantly with
+blood. Paralysis--convulsions--death. The least scratch and you're gone.
+Wicked head on this thing, too: looks like a piece of serrated bone. See
+all those little barbs along the edges? War arrow, all right."
+
+"Meanin' that we'll be jumped pretty soon by more Injuns. If that guy's
+on the warpath he ain't alone."
+
+"Wouldn't be a bad idea to take cover," nodded McKay. Turning the
+five-foot shaft downward, he plunged its head into the soft ground and
+left it sticking there, harmless.
+
+"Tim, go down and guard the canoes. Merry, lie in between these roots
+and keep watch off that way. I'll go over to that tree where the spy
+hid."
+
+For another hour the camp was silent. Each in his covert, finger on
+trigger, the trio watched with ceaseless vigilance, expecting each
+instant to detect dusky forms crawling up from tree to tree. Yet nothing
+of the sort came. Nor did any hostile sound reach them. Somewhere
+parrots squawked, somewhere else the puppylike yapping of toucans
+disturbed the solitude; nothing else.
+
+The wan light faded. The sun crawled up the trees, leaving all the
+ground in shadow. Then, not far off, sounded the soft whistle of the
+mutum. Suspicious, the watchers held their places until, with another
+whistle, Pedro came into view, followed by Lourenco.
+
+McKay arose, met them, and briefly explained the situation. They nodded,
+but seemed undisturbed.
+
+"We can start a fire now, Capitao," Lourenco said. "Night comes and we
+are hungry. There will be no danger before another dawn."
+
+With which he leaned his rifle against a tree and started immediate
+preparations for a meal. Pedro continued on to the canoes, made sure
+they were drawn up high enough to remain in place in case of any sudden
+rain, and returned with Tim. Around them now resounded the swiftly
+rising roar of the nightly outbreak of animal life. The sun vanished. At
+once blackness whelmed all except the little fire.
+
+"See anything while you were out?" asked McKay.
+
+"We found no trace of the Raposa," Lourenco evaded.
+
+"What do you plan to do now?"
+
+"Eat--smoke--talk--sleep."
+
+McKay eyed the bushman keenly, feeling that he was holding something
+back. But, feeling also that this pair knew what they were about, he
+bided his time. When all had eaten and tobacco smoke was blending with
+that of the burning wood, Lourenco drew the arrow from the ground and
+studied it. Then he passed it to Pedro, who, after a critical
+examination, held it in the blaze until the deadly head was burned away.
+
+"A big-game arrow of the cannibal Mayorunas," said Lourenco. "The point,
+with its sawtooth barbs, is made from the tail bone of the araya, the
+flat devilfish of the swamp lakes. That fish, as you perhaps know, has a
+whiplike tail armed with that bone; and if he strikes the bone into your
+flesh it breaks off and stays in the wound, and you are likely to die."
+
+"But in that case death comes from gangrene," McKay remarked. "This
+point has been dipped in wurali poison."
+
+"You have seen such arrows before, Capitao?"
+
+"Seen the poison before, yes. Over in British Guiana. The Macusi Indians
+make it from the wurali vine, some bitter root or other, a couple of
+bulbous plants, two kinds of ants--one big and black with a venomous
+bite, the other small and red--a lot of pepper, and the pounded fangs of
+labarri and couanacouchi snakes. They boil all this stuff down to a
+thick syrup, and that's the poison. The man who makes it is sick for
+days afterward."
+
+"Our cannibals make that poison in much the same way. Yet Guiana is many
+hundreds of miles from here, and our Indians know nothing of those
+Macusi people. Queer, is it not, that the same plan should be used by
+savages thousands of miles apart?"
+
+"Rather odd. Must have started from some common source hundreds of years
+ago and spread around. Queerest thing is, though, that a poison so
+deadly doesn't spoil meat for eating."
+
+"Huh?" exclaimed Tim. "Mean to say them cannibals can kill us by
+scratchin' us with a poison arrer and then stummick us afterwards?"
+
+"Exactly. You'd taste just as sweet as ever, Tim--maybe more so. Cheer
+up! They say it doesn't hurt much to die that way; you're paralyzed so
+quick you just sort of fade out."
+
+Tim shook his head, his abhorrence of poison strong as ever. Knowlton
+spoke.
+
+"I've heard that this wurali poison is much overrated, that it will kill
+only birds and monkeys, not men."
+
+"_Por Deus!_ Whoever said that was a fool trying to appear wise!" Pedro
+snorted. "We have seen the poison death, and we know."
+
+McKay also shook his head.
+
+"Experiments have been made with the wurali of the Macusis," he stated.
+"It was tried on a hog, a sloth--and a sloth is mighty hard to
+kill--also on mules, and on a full-grown ox weighing almost half a ton.
+It killed every one of them."
+
+A momentary silence followed. Tim gazed sourly at the arrow, now
+harmless but still sinister.
+
+"Urrrgh!" he growled. "Cap, ye had a narrer squeak--come near gittin' it
+from in front, and behind, too. Wisht I could have drilled that guy."
+
+The bushmen grinned. And Lourenco's next speech was amazing.
+
+"Be thankful you did not. That bullet might have killed us all."
+
+After enjoying their puzzled expressions a moment he continued.
+
+"We are nearer to a Mayoruna _maloca_ than I thought. Not the one I
+intended to seek, but a smaller one. It is about three days' journey
+from here, and to reach it we must go through the bush. The man who left
+this arrow here to-day is from that _maloca_.
+
+"A week ago his brother went hunting, and he has not returned. So this
+young savage and three of his comrades now are searching the bush for
+some sign of him. To-day they separated, each going in a different
+direction, agreeing to meet again to-night at a place less than half a
+day's journey from here. This man circled around and worked along this
+creek, knowing his brother would hardly go beyond the water. He spied
+our canoes, then sought the men who had come in them and found you.
+
+"He watched you for some time, and if you had not rushed at him he would
+have slipped away without attacking you, for he was alone and he saw
+your guns. But when you, Capitao, suddenly leaped at him he darted away,
+then stopped long enough to send an arrow at you. After that he dodged
+out of sight and ran to the camp of his three friends. He is there now,
+telling about you."
+
+"Great guns! You chaps are wizards!" cried Knowlton. "How do you know
+all this?"
+
+"Because we met him while on our way back here. He was running hard, and
+we heard him, so we blocked him. After we convinced him that we were
+friendly we talked for some time--I can speak their tongue--and he told
+us about you. He was sure you were enemies to him and his people, and
+believed also you had killed his missing brother, and he was going first
+to rejoin his companions and then hasten to the _maloca_ to bring all
+their fighters against you. It was well that we met him in time. It was
+well, too, that you did not shoot him--or even shoot at him. His
+companions would have learned of it, and then--death for us all."
+
+"And now what?"
+
+"Now, comrades, we all go to the _maloca_ of that man. We meet him and
+the other three to-morrow at the place where we talked to him to-day. I
+told him we were going to visit that other chief whom I knew, and,
+though he was at first suspicious of a trap, he finally agreed to lead
+us to his own chief. So in the morning we march. Now let us sleep."
+
+Knowlton and McKay glanced at each other and nodded.
+
+"Luck's with us so far," said the captain.
+
+"Right. We just march right into Jungle Town with bodyguard and
+everything. Pretty soft! Wonder if they'll turn out the tomtom band to
+drum us in."
+
+Tim said nothing. He squinted again at the headless arrow, then
+inspected the breech bolt of his rifle.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE WAY OF THE JUNGLE
+
+
+Dawn came, dismal, damp, and chill. Moisture dripped drearily from the
+upper reaches, and under the dense canopy of leaves and limbs the gloom
+and the fog together made a murk wherein the early-rising bushmen were
+scarcely visible to the North Americans ten feet away. Yet day had come,
+or was coming; the noise of the animal world left little doubt of that.
+
+By the light of a sullen smoky fire and oil-smeared torches Pedro and
+Lourenco made up their packs, cording them roughly with bark-cloth
+strips brought from headquarters. The Americans, after eating a more
+solid meal than the Brazilians seemed to require, also rolled their
+blankets, hammocks, nets, and other paraphernalia; strapped the outfits
+into the army pack harnesses which they had transported for thousands of
+miles and never yet used; crammed their web belts with cartridges; slung
+their sheathed machetes down their left thighs; looked to their guns;
+and announced themselves ready to go.
+
+While the northerners made these final preparations their guides slipped
+away for a time. Pedro, on his return, announced that the canoes had
+been concealed. Lourenco, bringing back the freshly filled canteens of
+the ex-army men, delivered with them the marching orders of the day.
+
+"If you thirst, comrades, drink only from your canteens. If the canteens
+fail, never fill them from flowing water unless the Indians also drink
+from the stream. There are always small pools to be found, and, though
+their water may be warm and stale, it is not likely to be poisoned, as
+the streams may be.
+
+"To-day, and every day after we meet the cannibals, make no suspicious
+moves. Do not speak harshly. Do not laugh or sneer at them. They are
+unreasoning and easily insulted, and lifelong foes when angered. Let me
+do the talking.
+
+"Do not hold a gun in a threatening manner or draw pistols unless you
+must fight. Then kill.
+
+"Above all, pay no attention to their women.
+
+"Now we go. I lead."
+
+He turned and strode away into the fog as easily and surely as if
+cat-eyed and cat-footed. Pedro swung nonchalantly after him. The others
+followed in order, hitching at their backstraps.
+
+The ghostly haze about them now was paler, but through the interstices
+overhead came no glint of sunshine, nor even the glow of a clear dawn.
+The whole sky evidently was overcast, and around the marching men the
+gloom still lay thick. Yet Lourenco's eyes seemed to bore through the
+shades and the dark shroud blurring the trunks, for his steady gait did
+not falter. The little file hung close together, for all knew that any
+man straggling would be instantly lost.
+
+Worming around gigantic columns, crawling over rotting trunks long laid
+low, changing direction abruptly when blocked by some great butt too
+high to be scaled, sinking ankle-deep in clinging mud, the venturesome
+band wound along through the wilderness. Repeated glances at his compass
+showed McKay that the general trend of the march was southeast; but the
+impassable obstacles encountered at frequent intervals necessitated not
+only detours, but sometimes actual back-tracking.
+
+"Walk four miles to advance one," was his thought. And for some time it
+seemed that such was the case. But then the ground changed, the light
+improved, the trees thinned, and the undergrowth became more dense--and,
+paradoxically, the rate of progress improved.
+
+This was because the smaller growth gave the two leaders a chance to cut
+their way straight onward instead of dodging about; and cut they did.
+Their machetes swung with untiring energy, opening a path through what
+seemed an impenetrable tangle. Now every yard of movement was a yard
+gained. But the ground was rising and the struggle up some of the sharp
+slopes winded more than one man.
+
+Then the slope dipped the other way, and they slipped down into a ravine
+where water gleamed darkly. Here a halt was called while the leaders
+sought for a fallen tree. Tim squatted and mopped his face for the
+hundredth time.
+
+"Gosh! This is what I call travelin'!" he panted. "Flounderin' round in
+mud soup, bit to death by skeeters and them what-ye-call-'em
+flies--piums--sweatin' yerself bone dry and totin' forty thousand
+pounds, on yer back, not to mention hardware slung all over ye--this
+ain't no place for a minister's son or a fat guy, I'll tell the world.
+And this is only the start!"
+
+A call from Pedro forestalled any answer. The trio struggled along to
+the spot where the guides waited at the butt of a slanting tree trunk
+spanning the gulf. As they reached it Pedro walked carefully up the
+trunk, carrying a long slender sapling, which he lowered and fixed in
+the bottom of the stream. Then, steadying himself with the upper end of
+this pole, he continued his journey to the other side, where he flipped
+the sapling back to Lourenco. One by one the others crossed, slipping,
+almost losing balance, but managing to evade a fall. Tim, walking the
+precarious bridge and looking down, saw that the surface of the water
+was dotted with the heads of venomous snakes.
+
+"Are you following your trail of yesterday?" demanded McKay.
+
+"No, Capitao. Yesterday we circled. To-day we go as nearly straight as
+possible."
+
+"And you can find the appointed place by this new route?" The captain's
+tone was dubious.
+
+"Certainly. Else I should go the other way. Come."
+
+Up another bank they toiled, and on through rugged country which seemed
+momentarily to become higher and harder to traverse. In the minds of the
+Americans grew suspicion that, for the first time, the Brazilians were
+bluffing; it seemed impossible for any man to keep his sense of
+direction in such a maze. But they said no word and followed on.
+
+At length the leader paused and sent the long call of the mutum floating
+through the trees. No answer came. After a moment the line moved on,
+each man peering ahead with sharper gaze, each holding a little tighter.
+To the Americans, at least, the thought of possible ambush loomed large.
+
+Four man-eating savages, hidden in this labyrinthine tangle and armed
+with arrows whose slightest scratch meant death, could strike down every
+man of this expedition without even a wound in return; for of what avail
+were high-power guns, automatic pistols, and machetes against invisible
+enemies? Yet there was assurance in Lourenco's confident air, and
+reassurance in the thought that these tribemen would be unlikely to
+assail a band avowedly on its way to visit their chief.
+Besides--Knowlton smiled grimly--even if the Mayorunas hungered for
+human flesh it would be more economical of labor to let the meat travel
+to the slaughterhouse on its own legs than to kill it here and carry it
+home.
+
+Again the mutum whistle drifted away. Again no answer came. For a short
+distance farther the file continued its march. Then, in a small opening
+where the uptorn roots of a tree rose like a wall at one side, it
+halted.
+
+"The place of meeting," Pedro said. All peered around. None saw anything
+but the upstanding roots, the forest jumble, the misty serpentine
+lianas. None heard any sound but their own hoarse breathing, the solemn
+drip of water, the insect hum, and the occasional melancholy notes of
+birds. The place seemed bare of life. Yet upon McKay came again that
+feeling of being watched.
+
+Slowly, deeply, Lourenco spoke. The words meant nothing to his mates.
+They were like no words they knew. His eyes roved about as he talked,
+and it was evident that he saw no more than did the silent men behind
+him. But they guessed that he said he and they were there as agreed,
+with peace in their hearts, and that he was telling the men of the
+wilderness to come forward without fear. And they guessed rightly.
+
+As quietly as a phantom of the mist a man took shape at the edge of the
+tree roots. Tall, straight, slender, symmetrically proportioned, with
+unblemished skin of light-bronze hue, straight black hair, and deep dark
+eyes, he was a splendid type of savage. Face and body were adorned with
+glossy paint--scarlet and black rings around the eyes, two red stripes
+from temple to chin, wavy lines on arms and chest. He held a bow longer
+than himself, with a five-foot arrow fitted loosely to the string and
+pointed downward, but ready for instant use. Diagonally across his body
+ran a cord supporting a quiver, from which the feathered shafts of
+several arrows projected above his left shoulder. Around his waist
+looped another cord from which dangled a small loin mat. Otherwise he
+was totally nude--a bronze statue of freedom.
+
+Lourenco spoke again in the same quiet tone. The savage stepped warily
+forward. At the same moment three other naked men appeared with equal
+stealth from tree trunks which had seemed barren of all life. Like the
+first, each of these held an arrow ready, but pointing downward; and
+each moved with the slow, velvety step of a hunting jaguar. Their eyes
+searched those of these strange men of another world who, wearing
+useless clothing, carrying heavy weapons of steel, burdening themselves
+with queer weights on their backs, now invaded the wilderness which they
+and their fathers had roamed untrammeled for centuries. The invaders in
+turn studied the faces of the Mayorunas, of whom so many gruesome tales
+were told. For long silent minutes primitive and civilized man probed
+each other for signs of treachery--and found none.
+
+Tim, forgetting the orders of the day, spoke out abruptly. At the gruff
+jar of his voice the wild men started and raised their weapons.
+
+"Say, are those guys cannibals? I was lookin' to see some ugly mutts
+with underslung jaws and mops o' frizzy hair, like them Feejee Islanders
+ye see pitchers of. Barrin' the paint, I've seen worse-lookin' fellers
+than these back home."
+
+With which he gave the savages a wide, unmistakably approving grin.
+
+"Shut up!" muttered McKay.
+
+Lourenco, unruffled, made instant capital of Tim's remarks.
+
+"My comrade of the red hair," he said in the Indian tongue, "has never
+before seen the mighty warriors of the Mayorunas, and is astonished to
+find them such handsome men. He says his own countrymen are not so good
+to look upon."
+
+Slowly the menacing arrows sank. As the savages studied Tim's wholesome
+grin and absorbed the broad flattery of Lourenco a slight smile passed
+over their faces. They stood more at ease. The whites sensed at once
+that, for a moment, at least, a friendly footing had been established,
+and relaxed from their own tension.
+
+Once more Lourenco spoke, motioning toward the farther distances. The
+Indian who had first appeared now replied briefly. Two of the others
+stepped back to their trees and lifted long, hollow tubes.
+
+"What's them?" demanded Tim.
+
+"Blowguns," Pedro answered. "They use them for small or thin-skinned
+game. See, the two blowgun men carry also short darts in their quivers,
+and small pouches of poison."
+
+"Uh-huh. They like their poison a dang sight better 'n I do. Say, are
+them guys goin' to march behind us? I don't want no poison needles
+slipped into my back, accidental or other ways."
+
+Two of the savages were walking toward the rear of the line. Knowlton,
+exasperated, snapped out:
+
+"They'll walk where they like, and you'll do well to give us more
+marching and less mouth. You nearly spilled the beans just now, and if
+Lourenco hadn't said something that pleased these fellows we all might
+be in the soup this minute. Pipe down!"
+
+"Aw, Looey, I only said these guys were good-lookin'. Ain't no fight in
+words like that."
+
+"You heard the orders this morning. Let Lourenco do the talking. That
+goes! We're skating on thin ice--so thin that if it breaks we drop plump
+into hell. Less noise!"
+
+"Right, sir," was the sulky answer. "I'm deaf and dumb."
+
+"March," added McKay. The head of the column already was on the move,
+led by the tallest Indian and a blowgun man, behind whom walked the two
+Brazilians. The whole line took up the step in turn and passed on into
+the unknown.
+
+Again McKay consulted his compass at intervals, finding that now the
+route led more to the south, though there still was an easterly trend.
+After a time, however, the telltale needle informed him that they were
+proceeding almost due east, and glances at the surroundings showed that
+on their right was a densely matted mass of undergrowth. Not long
+afterward another interwoven brush wall blocked the way, and this time
+the leader veered to the west. Not until an opening appeared did he
+resume his southward course. It dawned on McKay that the savages, having
+no bush knives, were accustomed to follow the line of least resistance.
+This obviously increased the distance traveled.
+
+The men of Coronel Nunes, too, perceived this. A halt was called, during
+which Lourenco talked with the guide, tapped his machete, and evidently
+protested against needless detours. The leader, with a few words,
+pointed south. Lourenco nodded and replied. The march was resumed, and
+when the next impenetrable tangle was encountered the Indians in the van
+stepped aside, the machetes of the Brazilians flashed out, and a way was
+cut straight through. From that time on the long knives came into
+frequent play and a direct course was maintained.
+
+Suddenly, with a grunt of warning, the tall tribesman stopped. The plan
+of chopping through instead of going around had brought the Indians into
+a part of the forest which they had not heretofore traversed in their
+search for the missing hunter. Now they stood in a small trough between
+the knolls, under good-sized trees around which grew little brush. The
+ground was soft, almost watery. In the damp air, faint but unmistakable,
+hung the odor of death.
+
+The savages at the rear came forward at once. All four of them spread
+out and, sniffing the air, advanced up the trough. A cry broke from one
+of them. The others, and the white men, too, hastened to the spot whence
+the call had come.
+
+Scattered about in the soft muck were bones, two skulls, bits of tawny
+fur, a long bow, several big-game arrows. Around them the ground was
+marked with many tracks. Most of the imprints were of the vultures which
+had stripped the bones, but there were others--those of a barefoot man,
+of a great cat, and of a couple of wild hogs. The peccary tracks went
+straight on, but those of the man and the cat showed that a fierce
+struggle had occurred. And one of the two grinning skulls was that of a
+jaguar.
+
+The story was plain. The hunter, following fast on the trail of the
+hogs, had suddenly met the jaguar. He had shot it; one arrow, blood
+stained for more than a foot above the barb, proved that. But in the few
+seconds of life left to it the animal had sprung and fatally torn the
+man. Then, as usual, had dropped the black scavengers of the sky to rend
+them both.
+
+Silently the men of the bush and the men of the north looked down at the
+brief history written in the mud--a story only a week old, yet ancient
+as human life itself--primitive man and ferocious brute destroying each
+other as in the prehistoric days when saber-toothed tiger and troglodyte
+hunted and slew for the right to live. And as it had been then, so it
+was now. The living read the tale of tragedy and passed on, leaving the
+bones behind them. Only, before they went, the Mayorunas threw the
+remnants of the jaguar aside and piled the bones of their dead comrade
+together in one place. Then, bearing with them his bow and arrows, they
+resumed their way without a word.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+A DUEL WITH DEATH
+
+
+Rain came and went.
+
+The first night's camp of the strangely assorted company was a wet one,
+for well on in the day the skies poured down the watery weight which had
+been troubling them once morning. Yet even in such miserable weather the
+four tribesmen of the Mayorunas declined to sleep in the same camp with
+the whites. They accepted the food tendered them, but when it was eaten
+they withdrew to some covert of their own to spend the night. Whereby
+the whites knew that, though their guides now could no longer suspect
+them of killing the lone hunter, they still were not accepted as
+friends.
+
+"Did ye say them guys had a trick of jabbin' men in their hammicks at
+night, Renzo?" was Tim's significant question after the Indians had
+departed.
+
+"Have no fear," Lourenco assured him. "They have promised to take us
+safely to their chief."
+
+"How much is the word of a cannibal worth?" asked Knowlton.
+
+"Worth everything, so long as you do nothing to make them forget it,
+senhor. Being uncivilized, they are not liars."
+
+The lieutenant eyed him sharply, half minded to regard the answer as
+insolent. But there was no insolence in the Brazilian's straightforward
+gaze, and McKay laughed approvingly.
+
+"Well spoken!" was the captain's comment.
+
+"Among those people there are but two great crimes," Lourenco added.
+"They are, to speak falsely or to be a coward."
+
+"Wherein a goodly portion of the so-called civilized world would fail to
+measure up to the standards of these cannibals," McKay said. "By the
+way, have you asked them about the Raposa?"
+
+"No, Capitao. It is as well not to put into their heads the idea that we
+are hunting anyone here. I shall say nothing of that matter until we
+reach the chief who knows me."
+
+"Good idea."
+
+With that the talk ended and all sought their hammocks, dog tired from
+the day's travel. No watch was kept, for, as Pedro quaintly phrased it,
+"We now are in the hands of God and the cannibals." Nor was any watch
+needed.
+
+Daybreak brought sunlight. While the breakfast coffee was being boiled
+the four wild men appeared silently and simultaneously, one bringing a
+red howling monkey and another a large green parrot as their
+contributions to the morning meal. Neither bird nor animal showed any
+wound except a slightly discolored spot surrounding a skin puncture no
+larger than if made by a woman's hatpin--the marks left by poisoned
+darts from the ten-foot blowguns. When the meat was cooked they offered
+portions to the whites, of whom Tim alone refused.
+
+"I'd as quick eat a rat killed with Paris green," he growled. "No
+poisoned meat gits into my stummick if I know it."
+
+"Bosh!" scoffed McKay. "It's perfectly wholesome--though it's tough as a
+rubber boot."
+
+"And I might tell you, senhores, that among these people it is an insult
+to refuse any food offered you," added Lourenco. "I advise you to forget
+about the poison hereafter and eat what is put before you, even if it
+stinks."
+
+His advice was emphasized by the evident displeasure of the tribesmen,
+who, though saying nothing, looked rather grimly at the man who had
+despised their provisions. But Lourenco then smoothed over the matter by
+telling them that the red-haired man was sick at the stomach that
+morning--which, at that particular moment, was not far from the truth.
+
+Soon the triglot column was once more on its way across the hill
+country, which hourly grew higher and rougher--a constant succession of
+ridges and ravines. Lourenco, pointing out the absence of water marks on
+the trees of the uplands, said that now the land of the great annual
+floods had been left behind; for even the sixty-foot rise of waters in
+the rainy season could not reach to these hilltops. With the entry into
+this terra firma the travelers had also found the sun again, the dank
+mist of yesterday having vanished. Nevertheless, the going was fully as
+hard as on the previous day, because of the density of the bush and of
+the labor of crossing the narrow but deep streams flowing at the bottom
+of nearly every clove. Few words were exchanged, every man needing his
+breath for the work of walking.
+
+As before, the keen machetes of the Brazilians opened a direct route
+through all opposing undergrowth. When a brief halt was called at noon
+the Mayorunas, who seemed to know exactly where they were despite the
+fact that they had never before followed this straight course, informed
+Lourenco that much circuitous traveling had already been saved, and that
+by tramping hard until sundown they might succeed in reaching the tribal
+_maloca_ that night. But McKay vetoed the idea of a forced march.
+
+"This gait is fast enough and hard enough," he declared. "No sense in
+exhausting ourselves to save a few hours' time. Also, we don't want to
+go staggering into the Mayoruna village with our tongues hanging out and
+our knees wabbling. First impressions are lasting with such people, and
+they might get an idea we were weaklings."
+
+To which all except the savages, who did not understand the language of
+the white man, assented approvingly.
+
+Yet it was the Mayorunas themselves who delayed arrival at their
+_maloca_--the Mayorunas and a monkey. When the sinking sun was still two
+hours high, and while the leader was forcing the pace as if determined
+to reach home that night whether the rest liked it or not, the monkey
+upset any such plan.
+
+He was a big gray monkey, and he was high up in the branches of a tall
+matamata tree, where he deemed himself safe from the many creatures
+laboring along the ground below. Wherefore he chattered impudently down
+at them and, as the tall Indian guide halted, showed his teeth
+derisively. The savage grunted. The man behind him also grunted and
+lifted his blowgun. But the leader growled at him and the blowgun sank.
+
+With a swift sweep of the hand the guide drew from his quiver one of
+those long, poisoned arrows and fitted it to the bow cord, which he had
+laid on the ground. With two toes of each foot he held the cord firmly
+on the soil. His right hand lightly grasped the arrow and aimed it up at
+the insolent primate. His left drew the bow up, up, into an arc.
+
+_Twang!_ the cord thrummed as his lifted toes released it. The arrow
+whirred aloft. Then a snarl of chagrin from the marksman blended with
+the grunts of his mates. The arrow had failed to reach the quarry.
+
+It had missed, however, by a mere hand's breadth--missed only because it
+struck the limb directly under the monkey, where it hung by the tip from
+the bark. Muttering something which may have been a Mayoruna
+malediction, the savage moved aside a step or two, drew another arrow,
+and set it to the cord with more care than before. But while he did this
+the monkey was not idle.
+
+Chattering in rage, the animal leaned down, worked the arrow loose from
+the bark, and threw it aside. The deadly shaft turned in air, then
+plunged aimlessly earthward. At that instant all below were watching the
+guide, who in turn was looking at his toes and placing the new arrow in
+position. Unseen, the other missile hurtled down--and ripped across the
+back of the marksman's left hand.
+
+For an instant the tall cannibal stood as if petrified, staring at his
+cut hand and the shaft now sticking upright in the ground beside him.
+Then, in simple symbolism, he reversed the new arrow and stabbed it also
+into the dirt. Dropping his bow, he lay down on his back.
+
+"Yuara will draw bow no more. Yuara goes to join the spirits of the
+dead," he said, calmly.
+
+Mechanically Lourenco translated the words. McKay sprang forward.
+
+"No!" he disputed. "Not without a try for life, anyhow! Merry, sling a
+tourniquet! Quick!"
+
+Knowlton jumped to the side of Yuara, tied a handkerchief above the
+elbow, twisted it tight. McKay whipped from a pocket a keen-bladed
+knife. In one swift ruthless slash he laid open the arm from elbow to
+knuckles.
+
+"Keep that tourniquet tight!" he snapped. "If the blood once gets past
+it he's gone. Tim, get out the salt bag! Lourenco, tell this fellow to
+breathe deep and keep it up!"
+
+While Tim burrowed into his pack for the salt, Lourenco spoke, as much
+for the benefit of the other tribesmen as for that of Yuara; for the
+three Mayorunas stood in ominous silence, watching the outrush of blood
+caused by the knife of the white man.
+
+"The white man of the black beard, who is very wise, will save Yuara to
+draw many a good bow if Yuara will do as he says. Let Yuara breathe
+deeply, that the spirit of life remain in him to fight against the demon
+of death. Even now the poison rushes out of the arm of Yuara."
+
+"Yuara cannot live," was Yuara's cool reply. "Where once the poison has
+entered, there follows death."
+
+"Is Yuara then a coward, that he will die without a fight? Then he is no
+Mayoruna, for no Mayoruna is a coward. Let Yuara die if he will. His
+comrades shall carry to their _maloca_ the tale that, although the white
+man would have saved him, he died like an old woman, because he had not
+the will to live!"
+
+Fire shot into the eyes of the prostrate man. He ground his teeth and
+struggled to rise and throttle the insulting Brazilian.
+
+"No, not that way," Lourenco went on at once. "Yuara can fight the death
+demon only by drawing into himself the air in which is the spirit of
+life. The wise white man has stopped the poison at the place where the
+cloth is tied, and he knows the air spirits will help Yuara if Yuara
+will breathe deep and long. If he will not, then the white man's
+medicine cannot save him. Yuara's life or death is in his own hands."
+
+In his heart Lourenco had faint hope that the injured man would live.
+But he knew the rest of the cannibal tribe must soon hear the tale of
+this incident from the three now present, and he was preparing an
+excellent excuse for the failure of McKay to save him. Whether Yuara
+lived or not, the Mayorunas now would know that the whites had done
+their utmost for him, and that very fact might make a vast difference.
+
+Yuara, though his eyes still flamed, sank back under McKay's restraining
+weight and obeyed orders. After the first couple of breaths he settled
+into his task and his chest rose and fell rhythmically.
+
+"Here's yer salt, Cap. What'll I do with it?"
+
+"You come here and hold this tourniquet. Don't let it slip! Merry, fill
+this chap's mouth with salt. Lourenco, tell him to hold it as long as
+possible, then swallow it. Now, Merry, fix up a good strong salt
+poultice. The rest of you make camp. We've got a stiff fight on our
+hands, and we can't go farther until we've either won or lost."
+
+The Brazilians glanced at the sun shadows and remained where they were.
+According to their experience, Yuara should be dead within ten minutes
+at most. Time enough to make camp when they knew how this venture would
+result. The Mayorunas also stood fast and watched for the shadow of
+death to blanch the face of their stricken mate.
+
+But the minutes dragged past and Yuara's eyes did not grow dim. His
+first resignation over and his fighting blood aroused, he was battling
+grimly against fate. At times his deep respirations were broken by
+sudden gasps, and spasmodic quivers shook his whole body. But he
+breathed on, paying no heed to the burning pain of his ripped and salted
+arm.
+
+"By cripes! he's puttin' up a man's scrap!" blurted Tim. "Stay with it,
+old feller. Ye'll win out yet!"
+
+And as more minutes passed and the wounded man still breathed, a murmur
+of wonderment passed among the cannibals and the men of Nunes. Yuara
+should be dead, yet he was not even paralyzed. Such a thing had never
+before been known in this bush.
+
+Lourenco touched Pedro's arm.
+
+"Find a spot where we can make camp," he said. "I must stay here to
+speak to the wild men if words are needed."
+
+Reluctantly Pedro went away. Soon he was back with news of a suitable
+place. He found all bending closer over Yuara, whose breathing had
+become stertorous and whose eyes seemed fixed.
+
+"Going!" was the bushman's thought. But the others would not have it so.
+
+"How 'bout a shot o' booze to jolt his heart, Cap?" suggested Tim, whose
+whole soul was in the fight.
+
+McKay nodded. Knowlton quickly produced brandy and poured a stiff dose
+down Yuara's throat. It took hold at once, and light came back into the
+Indian's eyes.
+
+"Got a good chance yet," McKay asserted. "Don't loosen that tourniquet.
+Let the arm mortify, if necessary, but hold that blood away from the
+heart at all costs. I'll chop his arm off at the shoulder before I'll
+give in."
+
+His hard-set face showed he meant it.
+
+Lourenco spoke to the Mayorunas, urging that camp be made at once. He
+and Pedro strode away, and all three of the Indians followed.
+
+"Really think he'll pull through, Rod?" Knowlton asked, then. "If he
+does you're a miracle worker."
+
+"It's an experiment," McKay confessed, watching Yuara with unswerving
+intentness. "Never saw this done, but it's worth a try--and I honestly
+believe it will work. I saved an Indian over in Guiana once by cutting
+off his arm as soon as he was hit, but I want to keep this fellow's arm
+for him if possible. Feed him some more salt."
+
+Time passed unheeded. Sounds of labor not far off told that camp was
+being built. Presently the absent five returned, two of the Mayorunas
+carrying a crude but strong litter constructed from saplings and
+giant-fern leaves. McKay rose stiffly on cramped legs.
+
+"All right. You can move him," he consented.
+
+Carefully Yuara was lifted to the litter and transported to the new
+camp. There the Americans found not only the open shed, or _tambo_,
+usually constructed by the Brazilians, but also a somewhat similar
+shelter erected by the Indians. In the latter stood two stout crotched
+stakes, firmly braced--the handiwork of Pedro and Lourenco. And to
+these, with tough bush rope, the Indians fastened the litter of Yuara,
+thus forming a rude but effective hammock.
+
+While McKay and Knowlton continued their ministrations to the stricken
+man the rest of the camp work was completed, the Mayorunas making
+hanging beds for themselves from withes, leaves, and bush cord, and the
+Brazilians slinging the hammocks of their own party and opening packs.
+
+Night fell and the wounded man lived on. Supper was eaten, pipes smoked,
+the regular activities of the early hours of darkness gone through--and
+Yuara lived on. His deep breathing had become automatic, and his eyes
+stared straight up in concentration on his battle with the death demon.
+
+At length he was seized with violent nausea which convulsed him for a
+time. But when the spasms passed he lay back more easily, and a faint
+smile flitted over his face as he looked at the white men.
+
+"Been expecting that," said McKay. "Might loosen that ligature now--just
+a few seconds.... Tighten it! All right." Alter watching the sick man a
+little longer he added: "Now I'm going to eat and smoke. Feel like
+taking a drink, too, but guess I won't. The Indian will pull through
+now, I think."
+
+When he had returned to the Indian hut with pipe aglow, Knowlton asked
+him, "Now tell us how you doped out this cure."
+
+"Combination of various things. Salt is a partial antidote to venom in
+the blood, and I got it into him in three ways--by mouth absorption, by
+the stomach, and by the salt poultice, which drew out some of the poison
+from the forearm and helped neutralize what remained. Ripping his arm of
+course let out a lot of bad blood. Ligature above the elbow stopped most
+of the rest--though some sneaked past that point, I'm pretty sure.
+
+"Big thing, though, was the deep breathing. Remember I told you about
+the experiments that killed mules and an ox? Another experiment was
+this--opening the windpipe of a poisoned mule after the heart stopped,
+inserting a pair of bellows, and starting artificial respiration. After
+four hours of this the mule came to life and stayed alive--though he was
+a wreck for a year afterward.
+
+"I just put all these together, made the Indian do his own
+breathing--and here he is. I'm going to sit up awhile longer and watch
+him, but the critical period is over. You chaps can turn in."
+
+But none turned in until midnight, when no doubt remained that
+Lourenco's prophecy would come true--that Yuara would live to draw bow
+again. Then, when the slashed arm had been thoroughly cleansed and
+bound, Lourenco spoke once more to the savages.
+
+"The medicine of the wise white man and the air spirits have saved Yuara
+from the death demon. Yuara has fought as a man of his tribe should
+fight, and so has lived when he would have died. To-morrow Yuara shall
+once more see his people, the first man of the Mayorunas to come back
+from the death of poison. And he and his comrades shall tell of the
+white man's wisdom, without which he now would lie cold on the ground."
+
+"So shall it be," Yuara himself faintly answered. "Yuara, son of Rana,
+second chief of the men of Suba, will not forget."
+
+"_Por Deus!_" exclaimed Lourenco. "Comrades, this man is no common
+hunter, but son of a subchief. Capitao, you have done good work to-day."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE CANNIBALS
+
+
+Through the long, dim shadows of early morning the little column passed
+on the last leg of its journey to the _maloca_ of Suba, chief of this
+outlying tribe of the Mayorunas. At its head marched Yuara, his left arm
+incased in bandages, his face drawn and pallid, his stride stiff and
+springless, but still carrying his weapons and stoically setting the
+pace as befitted the son of a subchief. He had had no sleep; he had lain
+in the gates of death; his arm ached cruelly; yet a warm glow shone in
+his hollow eyes as he reflected on the fact that in all the unwritten
+history of his people he was the first man to survive the inexorable
+power of the wurali. As long as he lived this fact would lift him above
+the level of all his fellows. Even the chief could not boast of such a
+superhuman feat.
+
+The undergrowth this morning was not so thick as it had been, and the
+machetes of Lourenco and Pedro stayed in their sheaths. The ground, too,
+was more level and the footing more firm. After some three hours of
+walking the Americans found that they had come into a faint path.
+
+Somewhat to the bewilderment of the white men, who expected the Indians
+to increase their speed now that the way home lay under their feet, the
+leading pair slowed their gait. Moreover, they scanned the trail with
+intent care and watched the trees along the way. At length, with a
+warning grunt, Yuara stepped out of the path and began a detour. His
+comrade and the Brazilians followed. The Americans stopped.
+
+"What's the idea?" demanded McKay, looking along the innocent-appearing
+path.
+
+"Probably a man trap, Capitao," answered Pedro. "Follow us."
+
+"Let's see the trap first."
+
+Lourenco called to Yuara, who stopped and grunted two words.
+
+"_Si_, it is a trap. A pit, Yuara says."
+
+Yuara spoke again, and Lourenco added: "He says we must not touch it. It
+is there just before you, covered so cunningly that it looks exactly
+like the rest of the ground. The cover is a framework of sticks balanced
+on a pole, and the instant a man steps on it it gives way. He falls into
+a nine-foot hole whose sides are dug inward, so that they overhang above
+him. There the cannibals find him and kill him. I fell into one of those
+holes when I first came into this Mayoruna country, so I know just how
+they are made."
+
+"So? How did you get out?"
+
+"There were two of us, and I stood on the other man's shoulders while he
+lifted me high enough to jump out. Then I tied bush rope to a tree and
+he climbed up the rope. Come. Yuara waits."
+
+After a short circuit around the danger point the party returned to the
+path, and as they went on Lourenco explained further concerning the pit:
+
+"Every approach to the _malocas_ has this kind of trap hidden in it, and
+others also. The Indians recognize the places by some secret signal
+known only to themselves--a certain kind of stick or vine or something
+of the kind, placed where it can be seen by those who understand. The
+traps are made to stop any enemies who try to sneak up on the _malocas_
+and catch these people unawares. Another kind of trap is a spring bow or
+a blowgun shot by a vine stretched across the path. Still another is a
+piece of ground studded with poisoned araya bones which pierce the bare
+feet of anyone walking on them. It is well for us that we now have
+friendly guides."
+
+"Quite so," McKay agreed, dryly.
+
+Some distance farther on the leader again left the path, and this time
+all filed after him without comment. Pedro pointed significantly at a
+thin, tight-drawn bush cord stretched across the path at the height of a
+man's ankle--the trigger which would discharge hidden death at anything
+touching it. At another point, perhaps a hundred feet farther along, a
+third and last detour was made, and this time the nature of the trap was
+not revealed by anything on the ground. No questions were asked.
+
+With the passing of these three menaces Yuara resumed his former pace
+and abandoned his circumspection. Before long came sounds of communal
+life--the barking of a dog and shouts of children. Then suddenly the
+forest thinned, and after a few more strides the marchers found
+themselves in a clearing.
+
+Before them rose a big round house, about forty feet high and a hundred
+feet in diameter, its sides composed of palm logs, and its roof a thick
+thatch of palm leaves, whence smoke oozed lazily through an opening at
+the peak. A single low door, not more than four feet high, opened toward
+a creek a few rods away at the right. Near this doorway a couple of
+naked children, boy and girl, were playing with the dog, while beyond
+them a number of women, also nude, were busy at some kind of work.
+
+As Yuara and his fellow-tribesmen entered the open space the boy shouted
+a greeting and started running toward them. Then, seeing the white men
+filing from the bush behind the warriors, the youngster stood as if
+shocked motionless. After one long stare he screamed and bolted for the
+shelter of the _maloca_. Other screams echoed his as the women also saw
+the bearded outlanders. They, too, dived through the doorway.
+
+Out from behind the house leaped three warriors, two of whom already had
+fitted arrows to their bows, while the third--a powerful
+fellow--clutched a four-foot war club. Weapons raised, faces contracted
+into fighting masks, they stared speechless at the spectacle of the
+subchief's son calmly leading gun-bearing whites among them.
+
+Knowlton, though his attention was riveted on the astonished warriors,
+caught the quiet snick of Tim's safe-lock being turned off.
+
+"None of that, Tim!" he warned. "Put that safety on again. And don't
+hold your gun as if you intended to use it."
+
+"Aw, I was jest tryin' her to make sure she was all right."
+
+"Put it on!" snapped the lieutenant. Another tiny click told him the
+order was obeyed.
+
+Out from the doorway darted another warrior, stooping low to avoid
+hitting his head. Others followed instantly, all armed and ready for
+action. The opening was still vomiting tribesmen when Yuara and the rest
+reached it. But none made a hostile move when it was seen that the son
+of the subchief was in command and that the strangers seemed friendly.
+Yuara spoke, briefly but authoritatively, and the weapons sank. Then,
+with a word to his three companions, he ducked through the doorway. The
+other three remained where they were.
+
+"We shall have to wait now, comrades, until Yuara tells his father and
+the chief about us," Lourenco said. "So let us take off our packs and
+rest."
+
+He set the example by laying his rifle on the ground, unslinging his
+pack, squatting beside it, and coolly rolling a cigarette. Apparently he
+was paying no attention whatever to the savages, who watched his every
+move. But McKay, glancing at him as he followed suit, saw that, for all
+his seeming unconcern, the Brazilian bush rover was keenly watchful and
+that his gun lay within reach of his hand.
+
+From within the tribal house sounded the monotonous voice of Yuara.
+After listening a moment Lourenco quietly addressed the nearest warrior.
+A slightly surprised looked passed over the cannibal's face. He replied,
+and a slow conversation ensued.
+
+Meanwhile the others looked over the array of savage fighting men.
+Except for difference of stature, build, and expression, they were as
+like as brothers. All were light skinned--hardly darker than the
+river-tanned whites themselves; all had straight-set eyes, with no hint
+of the slant often found among the Indians of the Amazon headwaters; and
+the cheek bones of all were fairly low. Their average stature was a
+little under six feet, and most of them had an athletic symmetry of
+physique. Their feet, McKay noticed, were small and shapely.
+
+All wore tall feather headdresses of parrot and mutum plumes. All had
+the scarlet and black rings around the eyes, the streaks from temple to
+chin, the wavy design on their bodies. And each wore in the cartilage of
+his nose a pair of small feathers slanting outward. At another time and
+under other circumstances the white men might have smiled at those nose
+feathers, which resembled odd mustaches; but as they studied the austere
+faces around them they found no occasion for merriment. Nor was the
+tension lessened by the sight of the weapons grasped in the strong hands
+of the warriors.
+
+Great bows and arrows, such as the hunters had borne, were supplemented
+here by the long clubs of heavy wood and by ugly spears. The clubs
+terminated in balls studded with jaguar teeth. The spears were triple
+pronged, each prong ending in a saw-toothed araya bone and each bone
+darkened by the fatal wurali. Frightful weapons they were--the one
+designed to smash skulls and tear out brains, the other to stab and
+poison at the same thrust.
+
+Lourenco stopped talking, and the others observed that now the wild men
+stood more easily, their holds on their weapons loosened.
+
+"I have shown them, Capitao, that I can speak their tongue, and told
+them we go to visit the chief Monitaya as friend," he explained. "They
+tell me Monitaya has grown great since last I saw him. Another tribe
+which lost its chief and subchiefs by a swift sickness has joined his
+own, and he now rules two big _malocas_ together. He is a powerful
+fighter, and if he is friendly to us we have a good chance of success.
+Ah! here is Yuara."
+
+The son of the subchief came through the doorway as he spoke, followed
+by an older man whose facial resemblance and ornaments indicated that he
+was the subchief himself. His headgear was more elaborate than that of
+his men, and around his shoulders and down his chest hung a brilliant
+feather dress, while a wide belt of green, blue, and black plumes
+encircled his hips. Yuara himself had inserted feathers in his nose and
+donned a headband of tall parrot plumes a trifle more ornate than those
+worn by the ordinary fighters, and somehow the simple addition seemed to
+transform him into a bigger, fiercer man. Also, his eyes now held a
+smoldering light which had not been there before.
+
+The older man, Rana, the subchief, glanced swiftly along the line of new
+faces. Then his gaze returned to McKay. His mouth set and his
+countenance turned hard. He spoke curtly to Yuara, who replied with one
+word. After another long, unpleasant look at McKay, who stared coldly
+back at him, Rana grunted a few words and re-entered the house.
+
+Lourenco, nonplussed by the frigidity of the subchief where he had
+expected gratitude or at least hospitality, glanced questioningly at
+Yuara. But the young man stood mute, looking straight ahead.
+
+"The subchief says we shall enter and see the chief. We must leave our
+guns outside."
+
+"Don't like that," muttered McKay. "That subchief looks ugly."
+
+"But we must obey or provoke a fight, Capitao. Besides, our rifles would
+be useless inside, as they would be instantly seized if we lifted them.
+So let us make the best of it. But I think you can carry your pistols
+with you; they are covered by the holsters, and I do not believe these
+people know what they are. And since Rana spoke only of guns, we will
+keep our machetes. Come."
+
+"Wait a second."
+
+McKay dived a hand into his haversack and brought forth a heavy hunting
+knife with a gaudy red-and-white bone handle, sheathed and attached to a
+leather belt.
+
+"Brought this along as a present for some Indian who might do us a good
+turn," he explained. "Been thinking of giving it to Yuara, but now I'll
+pass it to the chief. Might make a difference. All right, let's go."
+
+With confident tread, but with some misgiving, the five advanced,
+leaving guns and packs on the ground. One by one they bent low and got
+through the doorway. Yuara, with a word to a clubman and a motion to the
+equipment, followed the whites, trailed in turn by his three companions
+of the forest. The clubman, after a curious inspection of the packs,
+stood on guard among them, his bludgeon grasped loosely but
+suggestively, ready to prevent any undue inquisitiveness by the rest.
+But soon he found himself alone, for the other tribesmen transferred
+their attention and themselves to the interior of the _maloca_.
+
+Within the house the soldiers of fortune halted a moment, adjusting
+their vision to the sudden diminution of light. Except for the sunshine
+pouring in at the smoke hole above and at the tiny door behind, the only
+light in the big room came from small cooking fires scattered about the
+place, and for the moment details were withheld from the newcomers'
+sight. Then they found themselves in what seemed a labyrinth of poles
+and hammocks.
+
+Through this confusion Yuara passed with familiar step, and in his wake
+the travelers went to a central fire around which was a comparatively
+clear space. Beyond, in a big hammock dyed with the symbolic scarlet and
+black and tasseled with many squirrel tails, sat a fat, small-eyed,
+heavy-jawed man whose elaborate feather dress and authoritative air
+proclaimed him chief. Beside him stood Rana and another subchief, lean
+and somber-faced. Behind this bulwark of tribal might huddled the women
+and children, staring wide-eyed. As the visitors stopped and returned
+the chief's unwinking regard the warriors packed themselves at their
+backs, blocking all chance of exit.
+
+When the shuffle of feet had died and no sound was audible, Yuara began
+to talk. In his deliberate way he told the complete narrative of his
+journey, which previously he had sketched only in outline. His three
+companions corroborated his tale from time to time by nods, and when the
+discovery of the slain hunter's bones was described one of those three
+stepped forward and laid the dead man's weapons on the ground before the
+chief. As Yuara went on he touched his bandaged arm and pointed to McKay
+and Knowlton. And as he concluded he motioned toward Lourenco.
+
+Ignorant of the Indian language, but guessing the nature of his talk
+from his motions, the Americans stood patiently awaiting the next move.
+For a time all three of the chiefs remained silent; but all of them
+studied McKay, standing bolt upright with arms folded and the
+belt-wrapped knife partly concealed in the hollow of one elbow. Though
+it was evident that Yuara had given the captain full credit for saving
+his life, the faces of the head men showed no sign of friendliness. In
+fact, their expressions were distinctly ominous.
+
+At length the chief turned his eyes to Lourenco. The veteran bushman
+promptly stepped forward and said his say. At the end he turned, took
+from McKay the knife, unrolled the belt, and dangled the weapon before
+the eyes of the rulers. They stared at it in obvious ignorance of its
+character. Not until the Brazilian drew the blade from its sheath and
+the glint of steel struck their vision did they show recognition. Then
+Chief Suba grunted, his little eyes lit up, and he reached for it.
+
+For a few minutes he sat gloating over the gift, admiring the bone
+handle, hefting the weight of the long blade, while the subchiefs gazed
+in envy. When he looked up his face was beaming. But then the sour-faced
+subchief at his left hand muttered something, and Suba's visage
+darkened. His eyes rested again on McKay, went to the bandaged arm of
+Yuara, dropped to his knife--the first steel knife ever owned by him or
+any man of the Suba tribe--and rose again to the black-bearded captain.
+Abruptly then he spoke out.
+
+Lourenco stared in blank astonishment. After a puzzled moment he shook
+his head as if unable to believe he had heard aright. Suba, scowling,
+repeated what he had said. Lourenco shook his head again, this time in
+vehement denial, and began to talk. But Suba, rising with surprising
+agility for a man of his weight, stopped him imperiously and spoke with
+finality. Slowly the Brazilian nodded and turned to his captain.
+
+"I do not understand this, Capitao. But these are the words of the
+chief:
+
+"'The white man with the black beard tries a trick, but it does not
+deceive the free men of the forest. The thing which he thinks to be
+hidden in his own heart is known to Suba and his chiefs. It is known
+also to the chief Monitaya, and to his chiefs, and to his men also. The
+white man is bold. And now his own boldness shall be his death.
+
+"'Since the white man has said he goes to visit the chief Monitaya, and
+since by some demon's power the white man has saved the life of Yuara,
+who is a man of Suba, the men of Suba will allow him to go in peace from
+this place. But Suba will see that he and his companions go to Monitaya,
+who will know how to deal with his visitors. The men of Suba will take
+the strangers at once to the canoes and carry them to Monitaya.
+
+"'If the white man of the black beard and the black mind thought the men
+of the jungle blind to the foulness he would do here, he is a fool. It
+is useless for him or his men to lie and say they know not what Suba
+means. Let him look into his own heart and he will know well.
+
+"'Suba has spoken.'
+
+"Something is wrong, Capitao, but I do not know what it is. It will do
+no good to argue. Let us go at once."
+
+Suba snarled commands to the warriors. They trooped toward the door.
+Without another word or glance at the three chiefs Lourenco stalked
+after the Indians, and his comrades followed with stiff dignity.
+
+Outside, the savages picked up the rifles and packs and carried them to
+the creek, where small canoes lay. The five strangers were allowed to
+crowd themselves together in a four-man canoe, but their guns and packs
+were distributed among four other dugouts, into which armed paddlers
+entered. Other Indians brought provisions to the outgoing craft. In a
+very short time the leading canoe started off downstream, followed by
+the boat of the white men, behind which the other craft pressed close
+and vigilant.
+
+They swung in among the trees, and the _maloca_ of Suba was blotted out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+BLACKBEARD
+
+
+"Well," said Knowlton, after a period of silent paddling, "we have met
+the enemy and we are his'n. No harm done so far, though, and if old man
+Calisaya, or whatever his name is, wants to act nasty we can send him
+and a few others along the road to glory with our gats. We'll travel the
+same road, of course, but we'll take company with us."
+
+"_Si_, senhor," Pedro agreed. "And besides your pistols we still have
+our machetes. Yet I believe Lourenco's words to the chief Monitaya will
+make all well. But I cannot help wondering--" He glanced at McKay.
+
+"I'm wondering, too, Pedro," said the captain. "It's hardly possible
+that these people know why we're here, and hardly likely that they have
+any interest in the Raposa. Lord knows I've nothing else up my sleeve.
+It's a riddle to me."
+
+It remained a riddle to the rest, for no explanation could be gleaned
+from the Mayorunas. At the first halt, which did not come until nearly
+sundown, the Americans discovered that one of the men in the fore canoe
+was Yuara, who had been lying in the bottom of the craft and sleeping
+all the afternoon. From him Lourenco attempted to get information as to
+the reason for Suba's enmity--but in vain. The tall fellow spoke not a
+word in reply, and his face remained unreadable.
+
+Camp was made, and by Yuara's direction the packs of the adventurers
+were restored to them. The rifles, however, remained under guard of
+savages appointed by the subchief's son. When the night meal was out of
+the way nothing remained but to seek hammocks and sleep, for further
+attempts at conversation by Lourenco met with the same silent rebuff
+from every cannibal addressed. None showed active hostility by either
+look or manner, but it was plain that between wild and civilized men
+stood a wall--a wall not too high for the jungle dwellers to leap over
+in deadly action if occasion should be given. Wherefore the whites held
+themselves aloof, said little, and slept early.
+
+"I am glad Yuara is with us," Lourenco said. "As he promised, he does
+not forget what was done for him. He will keep this band in control, and
+unless I am much mistaken he will tell Monitaya all he knows of us,
+which surely will not do us any harm. At any rate, we can sleep in
+safety to-night. And since it does no good to puzzle about what is gone
+by or to worry about what has not yet to come to pass, let us sleep
+now."
+
+"Ho-hum!" yawned Tim. "Renzo, ye spill more solid sense to the square
+inch than any feller I seen in a long time. We're here because we're
+here; to-day's dead and to-morrer ain't born yet, and li'l' Timmy Ryan
+hits the hay right now. Night, gents."
+
+So, surrounded by man eaters, the trailers of the Raposa slept far more
+securely than on any night down the river when their companions had been
+supposedly civilized Peruvians. Whether a watch was kept by their guards
+during the night they neither knew nor cared, since they had no
+intention of attempting escape.
+
+They awoke to find the men of Suba diminished in number by half. Yuara,
+deigning to speak for the first time since leaving the _maloca_,
+explained that the absent men had gone hunting for their breakfasts.
+Before long the hunters came straggling back, bearing monkeys and birds,
+which were divided among their companions. None of this meat was offered
+to the prisoners, who ate unconcernedly from their pack rations. Tim,
+after watching the Indians sink their sharp-filed teeth into broiled
+monkey haunches and tear the meat from the bones, snorted and turned his
+back to them.
+
+"Look like a gang o' bloody-faced devils gobblin' babies," he muttered.
+"I'll believe now they're cannibals, all right."
+
+So uncomfortably apt was his simile that the others grimaced and turned
+their eyes elsewhere until the savage meal was finished. Then their
+attention became riveted on a queer proceeding at the canoe wherein
+Yuara had journeyed yesterday.
+
+To the gunwales amidships two of the men fastened a couple of small
+crotched posts. In the forks was laid a pole, crosswise of the boat, and
+from this, by slender fiber cords, four slabs of wood were hung.
+Strolling down to the canoe, the travelers found that athwart its bottom
+had been laid a crosspiece supporting two shorter crotched posts,
+between which stretched another transverse pole; and from this pole in
+turn the lower ends of the four slabs had been suspended. Now the
+savages joined the tips of each pair of slabs by carved end sections,
+and the contrivance seemed to be complete--a sort of grate, its bars
+sloping at an angle of forty-five degrees.
+
+As the Americans eyed the arrangement in perplexity, one of the crew
+picked up from the bow of the canoe a pair of mallets the heads of which
+were wrapped in hide. With these he struck the slabs in rapid
+succession. Out rolled four notes of astonishing volume--the first four
+notes of the musical scale. Again and again he ran them over, then
+stopped. The deep tones thrummed away along the creek and died.
+
+"By George! a big xylophone!" Knowlton exclaimed, admiringly.
+
+"It sure talks right out loud," said Tim. "Lot o' class to these guys,
+at that. Bet this is their brass band, and we'll go rip-snortin' into
+the next town like we was on parade. Oughter have some flags to hang up
+in the boats, and mebbe a drum corps to help out. Wisht I had a tin
+whistle or somethin' and I'd join the orchester. I can toot a whistle
+fine."
+
+"My favorite instrument is the old-fashioned dinner horn," laughed
+Knowlton. "But I think you're wrong--this is some kind of signaling
+apparatus."
+
+"You have it right, senhor," Lourenco affirmed. "I have heard this sort
+of thing used, though I never before saw the instrument itself. Those
+notes will carry at least five miles, and the cannibals send messages by
+striking the bars in different order. This run which we have just heard
+is always used first, and no message is sent until a reply is received."
+
+"Bush telegraph," nodded McKay. "First call your operator and then shoot
+the message in code. Pretty ingenious for a bunch of absolute savages."
+
+Lourenco turned to Yuara and asked a question. Yuara curtly replied.
+
+"He says, Capitao, that this is to tell Monitaya we come. But we now are
+too far off for Monitaya's men to hear. The bars are made ready before
+starting so that they can be used as soon as we are within hearing. He
+says also that we start now."
+
+The Mayorunas already were entering their canoes. With cool deliberation
+the whites gathered up their equipment and settled themselves for the
+journey at whose end lay either life or death. The boat of Yuara
+started, and once more the flotilla was on its way.
+
+For an hour or more it swung on among the forested hills before the
+telegraph instrument was put to use. Then it paused, and the sonorous
+voice of the xylophone spoke to the jungle. A period of waiting brought
+no reply.
+
+The canoe moved on for a mile. Again the mallets beat the wood in the
+ascending scale of the call. And then, faint, mellow, far off, sounded
+the answer.
+
+While every man sat silent the bars boomed out their fateful news. Slow,
+brief, deep as a bell tolling a dirge, a reply rolled back. And with the
+solemnity of a funeral cortege the canoes once more moved on, unhurried,
+inexorable, the measured swing of the paddles beating like a pulse of
+doom.
+
+At length the crew of Yuara held their paddles. Yuara himself turned
+toward the second canoe and talked a minute. A signal to his men, and
+his boat proceeded. All the others remained where they were.
+
+"He goes to Monitaya to speak of us," said Lourenco. "He will return. We
+have only to wait."
+
+"Yeah," grunted Tim, disgustedly. "We'll wait till night if he takes as
+long to go through his rigmarole as he done yesterday. If I got to fight
+I want to hop to it, not set round in the shade o' the shelterin' palm
+while them guys are heatin' up the stewpot. This waitin' stuff gits my
+goat."
+
+"You might sing us a song, senhor, to pass the time," Pedro suggested,
+with a tight-lipped smile.
+
+"Say, I'll do that, jest to show these guys I don't give a rip. And
+while their ears are dazzled by me melody I'm goin' to git me holster
+unbottoned and me masheet kinder limbered up. Git set. Here it comes:
+
+ "Ol' Hindyburg thought he was swell,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ He made the kids in Belgium yell,
+ Pa-a-arley-voo!
+ But the Yanks come over with shot and shell
+ And Hindyburg he run like hell,
+ Rinkydinky-parley-voo!"
+
+Under cover of his outbreak, which made the savages clutch their weapons
+and glare at him in mingled suspicion and amazement, there proceeded a
+furtive loosening of pistols and machetes.
+
+"A noble sentiment, and more or less appropriate," grinned Knowlton.
+"But don't give them another spasm for a few minutes, or they may rise
+up and kill us all in self-defense. They're on the ragged edge now."
+
+"Aw, them guys dunno how to appreciate good singin'. But I should worry;
+I got me gat fixed now like I want it."
+
+Time dragged past. The Americans and Brazilians smoked and exchanged
+casual comments on subjects far removed from their present environment.
+The Mayorunas watched them with unceasing vigilance, as if expecting a
+sudden break for life and liberty. Their chief had intimated that
+Monitaya would kill these men; and now was their last chance to try to
+dodge death. But neither the black-bearded McKay nor any of his mates
+manifested the slightest concern. And at last the canoe of Yuara came
+back.
+
+It came, however, without Yuara himself. The son of Rana had remained at
+the _malocas_ ahead, whence he sent the command to advance. Closely
+hemmed in by the men of Suba, the white men's boat surged onward at a
+brisk pace. Around a bend in the creek it went, and at once the domain
+of Monitaya leaped into view.
+
+Two big tribal houses, each considerably larger than the one of Suba,
+rose pompously in a wide cleared space beside the stream. Before them,
+ranged in a semicircle, stood hundreds of Mayorunas--men, women,
+children--all silently watching the canoes of the newcomers. In the
+center of the arc, like the hub of a human half wheel, a small knot of
+men waited in aloof dignity, four of them adorned with the ornate
+feather dresses of subchiefs, backed by a dozen tall, muscular savages,
+each armed with a huge war club. Before all stood a powerful,
+magnificently proportioned savage belted with a wide girdle of squirrel
+tails, decked with necklaces of jaguar teeth and ebony nuts, crowned by
+plumes which in loftiness and splendor surpassed all other headgear
+present--the great chief Monitaya.
+
+At the shore, beside a row of empty canoes, Yuara was waiting. He
+mentioned for his men to bring their dugouts to the regular landing
+place, and when they obeyed he gave commands. Then he turned and walked
+toward Monitaya.
+
+"I go," stated Lourenco, rising. "You stay here until called. Yuara has
+told his men to leave all weapons in the canoes."
+
+He walked away after the son of Rana, and if any misgiving was in his
+heart it did not show in his confident step. Halting before the big
+chief, he began talking as coolly as if there were not the least doubt
+of welcome for himself and those with him. Monitaya gave no sign of
+recognition, of friendliness, or of enmity. Proud, statuesque, he stood
+motionless, his deep eyes resting on those of the Brazilian.
+
+"Sultry weather," remarked McKay.
+
+"Just so, Capitao," agreed Pedro, narrow eyed. "We shall soon know
+whether we shall have storm."
+
+"Indications are for violent thunder and lightning soon," Knowlton
+contributed. "See those husky clubmen awaiting? Looks as if a public
+execution were about to be pulled off."
+
+"Yeah. But say, ain't that chief a reg'lar he-man, though! No
+pot-bellied fathead like that there, now, Suby guy. Hope I don't have to
+drill him. I bet I won't, neither. He looks like he had brains."
+
+Hoping Tim was right, but dubious, all watched the progress of the
+parley. Lourenco evidently was stating his case in logical sequence,
+recalling to the chief's mind the time when he had led him to revenge
+against the Peccaries of Peru, then going on to tell of the arrival of
+the strangers and the object of their search. Yuara's sudden, quick
+glance at him showed that the Raposa had been mentioned for the first
+time. A little later his face became slightly sullen, and the watchers
+guessed that Lourenco was now referring in somewhat uncomplimentary
+terms to the treatment received in the _maloca_ of Suba. Soon after that
+the Brazilian ended his speech.
+
+In a deep, quiet tone Monitaya spoke first to Lourenco, then to one of
+his subchiefs. The bushman beckoned to his waiting companions. At the
+same time the subchief stepped out and called two names. As McKay,
+Knowlton, Tim, and Pedro arose and stepped ashore with the weaponless
+men of Suba, out from the great human arc came two men. All advanced
+toward the chief. And though the Americans were studying the central
+figures as they walked, they also noticed that the pair of Mayorunas who
+had been summoned were lame. One walked with a stiff knee, the other as
+if a whole leg was paralyzed.
+
+"Squad--halt!" muttered McKay. A step and a half and the four stood
+aligned and alert, two strides from Monitaya.
+
+The eyes of the chief dwelt long on McKay, and they were hard eyes.
+Without shifting his gaze he grunted a few words. The two crippled
+Indians stumped forward and stared into McKay's face. Through a long
+minute the Americans felt a sinister tension grow in the air about them.
+Then, slowly, the cripples turned about and faced their ruler. In the
+tones of men sure of themselves, they spoke one word.
+
+With the utterance of that word the tension broke. Through the long line
+of watching tribesmen ran a murmur. The clubmen relaxed from their ready
+poise. The subchiefs glanced at one another as if disappointed. And the
+stern face of Monitaya himself was transformed by a wide, friendly
+smile.
+
+A sweeping gesture and the cordial timbre of the chief's voice told the
+Americans plainly what Lourenco translated a moment later.
+
+"We are welcome, comrades. We shall sleep in the _maloca_ of Monitaya
+himself and a feast shall be made for us. Our lives have just hung on
+one word, but now that the word is spoken we are safe. I cannot tell you
+more now, for I do not wholly understand this matter myself as yet--but
+I shall learn. Now is the time, Capitao to give presents, if you have
+any for the chief."
+
+"I have. But our packs are in the canoe, and I'll be hanged if I'll make
+a beast of burden of myself at this stage of the game."
+
+"I will have all the packs brought up, Capitao. The men of Suba took
+them from us at their _maloca_; now they shall restore them before all
+these people."
+
+He addressed Monitaya affably, then spoke more brusquely to Yuara. That
+young man, whose previous austerity now had dissolved into open
+friendliness, uttered four words. Immediately his men returned to the
+canoes and brought up not only the packs, but the rifles.
+
+From his blanket roll McKay brought forth a cloth-wrapped package out of
+which he drew a half-ax, its blade gleaming dully under a protective
+coating of grease, which he swiftly swabbed off. From his haversack he
+produced a heavy chain of ruby-red beads. Under the bright sun the beads
+glowed like living things, and the glittering steel flashed back a
+dazzling beam. The two gifts together had cost considerably less than
+ten dollars in New York, but to the chieftain they were priceless
+treasures; and as McKay, with a formal bow, extended them to him, his
+face shone with delight. Yet he made no such greedy grab for them as had
+been displayed by Suba when tendered the knife. His acceptance was
+achieved with a calm dignity which brought a twinkle of approval to the
+eyes of the white men.
+
+In the same dignified manner he led the way to the _maloca_ which
+evidently was the older of the two and which had always been his home.
+The semicircle of his subjects broke up into a disorderly crowd which
+streamed after him and his guests or surrounded the men of Suba with
+holiday greetings. Within the tribal house the adventurers proceeded to
+the central space where burned the chief's fire. There Monitaya ordered
+certain hammocks removed to make room for those of the visitors. Soon
+the travelers were seated at ease in their hanging beds, their packs and
+rifles lying on the ground beneath them, while near at hand clustered
+groups of Mayorunas, staring at them in naive curiosity.
+
+Pedro drew a long breath.
+
+"Senhores, that was a very close call," he declared. "As Lourenco says,
+our lives have hung on one word. What was that word, comrade?"
+
+"The word was, 'No,'" answered Lourenco. "Monitaya asked those two
+crippled men, 'Is this the man?' As you saw, they looked at the capitao,
+giving no attention to the rest of us. Then they said, 'No.' You will
+remember that the capitao was the one whom Suba also picked upon. As
+soon as Monitaya finishes talking with those men I shall ask him what
+all this means."
+
+The big chief was giving directions to a score of young fellows, who
+presently scattered to various parts of the house and accoutered
+themselves for hunting. Thereupon Lourenco approached Monitaya with the
+familiarity of former acquaintance, being received with a good-humored
+smile. For a time the two conversed. As they talked the smile of the
+ruler faded and his face grew dark, while into the Brazilian's voice
+came a wrathful growl. Finally both nodded. Lourenco returned to his
+hammock, frowning.
+
+"Capitao, it is all because of your black hair and beard. Through all
+the _malocas_ of the Mayorunas, far and near, has gone the word to watch
+for a big, black-bearded man who is neither a Brazilian nor a Peruvian,
+but of some country unknown to these people; and when such a man is
+caught, to kill him and his companions without mercy. And the reason for
+such a command is this:
+
+"For many moons the Mayorunas, especially those of the smaller and
+weaker _malocas_, have been losing women. From time to time sudden raids
+have been made by gangs of gun-carrying Peruvian Indians and
+_mesticos_--half-breeds--who shot down the defenders of the houses
+before they could reach their weapons, and carried off girls. This, of
+course, is nothing new here, for such things have happened occasionally
+for many years. But within the past five years there has been a
+difference in these attacks which has made them much more deadly.
+
+"These raids used to be made always at night, and they were few and far
+between. But of late they have come about also in the day, at times when
+almost all the men of the small _malocas_ were far out in the forest
+hunting meat and the women had little protection. Several chiefs have
+been killed by the raiders, who seemed to be acting according to an
+agreed plan, to be organized for this work, and to know when to strike
+and how to get away quickly. And what is more, the men who did this were
+not chance parties who came only to get women for themselves and then
+stayed away. The same men came back time after time.
+
+"A few of these were killed, but only a few; and all the dead were
+Peruvians. Being dead, they could tell nothing. But the Mayorunas felt
+that all these raids were directed by one mind. And they became sure of
+this when one captured girl escaped by killing a Peruvian with his own
+knife and returned to her own _maloca_. She said the raiders took her
+and the other girls to the big man with the black beard, who waited at a
+safe place a day's march from the tribal house.
+
+"A few weeks later another small _maloca_ several miles from here was
+attacked at night while two men of Monitaya were there, having stayed
+out too late on a hunting trip and taken refuge with their neighbors
+until day. Both these men were hit and crippled by bullets in the wild
+shooting that opened the attack. One was struck in the knee, the other
+in the lower part of the back. But both caught a glimpse of the leader's
+face and saw that he was the black-bearded man himself.
+
+"So you see, Capitao, why we have been near death. Suba and Monitaya
+both thought you were the man. We were lucky to escape alive from Suba,
+and still more lucky that hero were two men who knew the face of the
+blackbeard."
+
+"Schwandorf!" barked McKay.
+
+"Yes, Capitao, it must be the German--"
+
+"I know it's Schwandorf! And I know his game! He's a slaver!"
+
+"A slaver?"
+
+"That's it. Knew I'd seen that sneak before. He worked the same game in
+British Guiana eight years ago on a small scale. Had a gang of tough
+bush niggers from over in Dutch Guiana to do his dirty work. Stole
+Macusi girls--they're the best-looking Indians in B. G.--and sold them
+like cattle to gold miners. Cleaned up quite a pot before the English
+got on to him, but had to get out of the country on the hot foot--didn't
+have time to take his gold with him. His name wasn't Schwandorf over
+there, and he had no beard; he was thinner, too, and posed as a Russian;
+but he's the man. Must have made his get-away by the back door--down the
+Branco to the Amazon. Now he's running Mayoruna girls into Peru. He
+could sell them to rubber men or miners and make good money, eh,
+Lourenco?"
+
+"_Si._"
+
+"Sure. And that's why he wanted to kill off his Peruvians--they knew too
+much; probably were trying to bleed him for hush money. He must have a
+regular slave route and a gang of border cutthroats to do his
+raiding--men who don't go downriver. Murderer, slaver--wonder how many
+other crimes are on his soul."
+
+"Them two are enough," growled Tim. "And he 'ain't got no soul."
+
+"No soul," echoed Pedro. "You have said it, Senhor Tim. And if ever
+these people capture him he soon will have no body."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+FEVER
+
+
+In the _maloca_ of Monitaya a feast was in the making.
+
+Fires glowed all about the great room. Hunters came in, bearing birds or
+beasts which were placed before the tribal ruler for inspection and
+approval. Fishermen armed with tridents or crude harpoons arrived with
+sizable trophies of their skill. And at length two young bowmen advanced
+proudly with a freshly killed wild hog. After glancing at this the chief
+added to his usual nod a few words of praise which made the huntsmen
+grin with all their pointed teeth.
+
+Lourenco, squatting comfortably on a jaguar skin beside the lavishly
+decorated hammock of Monitaya, carried on a lazy-toned monologue which
+probably dealt with his various experiences since his last meeting with
+these people and which appeared to interest and amuse the chief. The
+others, lolling back in mingled fatigue and relief from tension, studied
+the interior of the place and watched the activities around them.
+
+As in the _maloca_ of Suba, the small forest of poles and hammocks
+seemed a higgledy-piggledy maze wherein was neither beginning nor end.
+Yet, as the newcomers took time to observe it, they presently found that
+the confusion was only apparent and that there existed an efficient and
+orderly arrangement. The hammocks, seemingly slung from any available
+pair of poles in utter disregard of one another, really were arranged in
+triangles. On the ground under the hanging beds lay woven grass mats and
+hides of the sloth and the jaguar; and in the space inclosed by each
+trio of hammocks burned a small fire. The hammocks were the beds of men,
+the mats and furs the couches of women and children, and each fire was
+the focal point of the family residing in that triangle.
+
+Above the hammocks, from transverse poles, were suspended the weapons of
+the men: the great bows, the long blowguns, the fighting spears whose
+deadly points now were sheathed in thick scabbards of grass, the
+unpoisoned fish spears and harpoons. From these poles also hung the
+quivers of arrows and darts and the small rubber-covered pouches wherein
+a little fresh poison was carried by warrior or hunter. Thus both the
+ground and the air were utilized, and by the compactness of the
+arrangement an entire family with its worldly goods, was enabled to live
+in a comparatively small space. Looking around the wide room and
+remembering the big half circle of Indians who had stood outside, the
+two ex-officers estimated that in this tribal house and its twin dwelt
+seven hundred people.
+
+Tim and Pedro, less interested in the Mayoruna domestic economy than in
+the Mayorunas themselves, were scanning the figures moving about in the
+reddish haze of smoke. Most of them were women, all nude and naively
+unconscious of any need of clothing. Like the men of the tribe, they
+bore the red and black rings and streaks on face and body; but, unlike
+the males, each wore a facial ornament in the shape of an oval piece of
+wood thrust through the lower lip. From time to time those near by
+glanced up from their work and gave the new men unmistakably friendly
+looks--particularly several young but well-grown girls who obviously
+were still unmated. In fact, these last smiled openly at the lithe,
+handsome Pedro, and red Tim was by no means overlooked.
+
+"I got me orders," said Tim, _sotto voce_, "and I'm danged if I crack a
+smile back at them girls. But I sure feel like grinnin'. Watch yourself,
+old-timer; they're tryin' to flirt with ye."
+
+Pedro, mindful of watchful eyes, turned his gaze to Tim's face before
+allowing himself to smile. Then he laughed.
+
+"Do not fear," he said. "My heart is still my own."
+
+"Same here. Specially when I remember these females would grin jest the
+same if them club swingers had spattered our brains all over the front
+yard awhile back. But I wisht sombody'd give the girls a nightie or
+somethin' to wear. I been around some and I seen quite a lot, but I
+ain't used to bein' vamped by a bunch of undressed kids with goo-goo
+eyes the size of a plate o' fish balls. I'm only a bashful country kid
+from N'Yawk."
+
+"Live and learn," chuckled Pedro. "And clothes really have nothing to do
+with modesty."
+
+"True for ye. Clothes is mostly a disguise, anyhow, specially with
+women, and an awful expense, besides. These guys are lucky, I'll say;
+they 'ain't got to buy their wives no fur coats or silk stockin's or
+nothin'. All the same, I got all I can do to hold me face straight when
+I see these li'l owl-eyes givin' us the glad look. I'd oughter stayed
+back in Remate de Males, where a feller can wink at a woman without
+gittin' all his pardners massacreed."
+
+"Perhaps it would not be fatal, now that we are guests of the chief. But
+it is best to take no chances."
+
+"Safety first. That's us. Grin at one of 'em and another might git sore
+because she missed out, and first thing ye know ye've started somethin'
+without meanin' to. Let's look at somethin' harmless--one o' them
+poisoned spears, f'r instance."
+
+At that moment Monitaya and Lourenco both arose, the chief to inspect in
+person the progress of the arrangements for the feast, the bushman to
+return to his companions with additional news.
+
+"Monitaya tells me," he said, "that his people have lost girls in other
+ways than by the murderous attacks of the gunmen. A number of young
+women who have gone into the bush near their _malocas_ to get urucu and
+genipapa, which they use to make the red and black body dyes, have
+disappeared. So have several who went to the creeks for their daily
+baths. Warriors who tried to trail them have found the footprints of a
+few men, but always lost them at water. The girls had been taken away in
+canoes. Even this tribe of Monitaya, which never has been attacked by
+night raiders because it is too strong, has not been safe from these
+stealthy woman stealings by daylight. Three girls have been taken from
+here within the past two moons, and others have disappeared from other
+_malocas_."
+
+"Hm! And Schwandorf hasn't been here recently," said Knowlton.
+
+"No. It must be that he has agents who work when he is not here, or else
+this is done without his knowledge. I have told Monitaya what I know of
+Schwandorf, and he agrees that the women are taken as slaves. I have
+also told him that when we return down the river we shall see that
+Schwandorf troubles the Mayorunas no more."
+
+"Excellent," McKay approved. "Have you asked him about the Raposa?"
+
+"Not yet. It does not pay to hurry business with these people. After the
+feast is out of the way I will talk further with him."
+
+No more was said for a time. The five lounged at ease, sniffing the
+savory odors arising from the reddish clay pots and pans in which fruit,
+fish, or fowl was frying in tapir lard, or meat was stewing. At length a
+number of tall, shapely women, apparently the handsomest of their sex in
+the tribe, laid a number of small mats in a semicircle on the ground
+before the chief, and placed thereon a steaming array of edibles. Furs
+were placed outside the line of mats. From somewhere appeared all four
+of the subchiefs, accompanied by Yuara. Thereupon Monitaya, with a
+smiling nod to his guests, squatted within the arc. Forthwith the
+visitors advanced in a body, disposed themselves comfortably on the
+furs, and assailed the viands with a vigor that brought a delighted grin
+to the face of their barbaric host.
+
+Fried bananas, tender fish, broiled parrot which was not so tender, a
+thick stew of somewhat odorous meat seasoned with tart-tasting herbs,
+roast wild hog, and other things at whose identity the whites could not
+even guess, all were chewed and washed down with generous draughts of a
+rather sour liquid resembling beer. Remembering Lourenco's previous
+warning, each man took care not to slight any portion of the meal or to
+show distaste with anything, whether it pleased the palate or not.
+Throughout the feast the tall women hovered near, bringing fresh
+supplies whenever a dearth of any edible appeared to threaten. And when
+at last the feasters were full to repletion Monitaya himself designated
+what he considered titbits to tempt them further.
+
+"Gosh! if I eat any more I'll bust, and I'm danged if I'll bust jest to
+satisfy this guy," asserted Tim. Wherewith he put one hand under his jaw
+and patted his stomach with the other, signifying that he was filled to
+the throat. Pedro lifted his elbows, dropped his jaw, and made motions
+as if gasping for air. The chieftain grinned widely. The grin became a
+chuckling when Tim, after a vain attempt to rise, lay back at full
+length on his rug and begged some one to make a cigarette.
+
+"Guess I'll have to follow Tim's example," confessed Knowlton. And he
+too stretched out. Pedro and Lourenco also sprawled back. McKay, after
+glancing around, compromised with his dignity by leaning on one elbow.
+The subchiefs and Yuara, with slight smiles, relaxed in various
+postures. Monitaya alone arose--not without some difficulty--and got
+into his hammock, where he beamed down at them.
+
+"Suppose this is a compliment to the chief," smiled McKay. "He thinks he
+has eaten us helpless."
+
+"Speakin' for li'l old Tim Ryan, that ain't no joke, neither. Lookit all
+the girls givin' us the laff. Who are them tall ones that's been rushin'
+the grub? Waitresses or somethin'?"
+
+"Those are the chief's wives," Lourenco explained.
+
+"Huh? Gosh! he's one brave guy, that feller! Two--four--six--eight--nine
+of 'em! Swell lookers, too. I s'pose he has his pick o' the whole crowd
+here."
+
+"He does not have to pick them Senhor Tim. They pick him. He and the
+subchiefs are the only ones who can take more than one wife. When a girl
+wishes to become the wife of the great chief or of a subchief, she works
+for months making feather dresses and necklaces and hammocks, and when
+these are done she gives them all to him. If he likes her well enough he
+accepts the gifts and allows her to be a wife to him."
+
+"Yeah? And she's flattered to death, I s'pose. Wisht they'd start
+somethin' like that up home, or, anyways, fix it so's a feller could get
+an even break. Way it is now, a feller blows in every dollar he's got,
+and then when he's fixin' to git the ring the girl leaves him flat for
+some other guy that 'ain't spent his dough yet. Yo-ho-hum! I'm goin' to
+take a snooze right there on the table. Wake me up, somebody, when the
+next mess call blows."
+
+And with no further ado he shut his eyes and drowsed.
+
+His companions lolled for some time, smoking and watching the family
+life of the ordinary members of the tribe, nodding now and then to some
+friendly-looking young fellow, but ignoring the mischievous glances of
+the girls. Monitaya himself lay back in his hammock and dozed. His
+wives, stepping nonchalantly among the strangers, cleared away the
+remnants of the feast by the simple process of eating them. Then they
+carried off the clay vessels.
+
+For another hour all hands rested. Then Monitaya sat up, stretched his
+big arms, looked casually around the house to see that all was well, and
+smiled down at his guests. Lourenco, rising to a squat, began a new
+conversation. After a while he turned to McKay.
+
+"The Red Bones and the Mayorunas are neither friendly nor hostile toward
+each other, and there is little communication between them," he
+reported. "From those _malocas_ to the town of the Red Bones is a
+journey of five long days, so the men of Monitaya hardly ever go there.
+
+"The Raposa whom we seek is known to the men of Monitaya, but he never
+has come here to the tribal houses. Hunters from this place have met him
+at times roving the wild forests, and some of the younger men fear him
+as the bad spirit of the jungle. The Mayorunas believe in two spirits or
+demons, one good and one bad, and the bad one is said to roam the
+wilderness, seeking lone wanderers, whom he kills and eats; the people
+sometimes hear this demon howling at night in the dark of the moon. So
+the young men have thought the Raposa might be this demon and have
+avoided him--it would do no good to try to kill a demon, and it would
+only make their own deaths more sure and horrible.
+
+"But the older men do not believe this. They say the wild man is of the
+Red Bone people, and that the reason why his bones are marked in red on
+his living body is that he is neither alive nor dead. If he were dead
+his body would be thrown into the water and left there until his bones
+were stripped by those cannibal fish, the piranhas, and then the bones
+would be dyed red and hung up in his hut, as is the custom among those
+people. If he were alive like other men he would not have those marks on
+his body, but would wear only the tribal face paint. The bone paint on
+him is a sign to all the _Ossos Vermelhos_ that he is alive, but dead,
+and is not to be treated like other men."
+
+"Crazy!" exclaimed Knowlton.
+
+"Yes. I think that is it. His body lives, but his mind is dead. Death in
+life."
+
+"Has he been seen lately?"
+
+The Brazilian repeated the question in the Indian tongue. The chief
+looked toward a certain hammock some distance off, called a name, raised
+an imperative hand. A slender savage came forward. To him the chief
+spoke, then to Lourenco, who, as usual, relayed his information.
+
+"This young hunter saw him six days ago while following a wild-hog trail
+far out in the bush toward the Red Bone region. He came on the fresh
+track of a man who was following the same hogs, and later he caught up
+with that man. It was the red-boned wild man, and the wild man was very
+lame, having a hurt foot. They stood and looked at each other, and then
+the wild man walked away, watching him closely and ready to shoot with
+his bow. After he disappeared in the forest this hunter heard a long,
+shrill laugh and words that sounded like 'Podavi.'"
+
+"Podavi--Poor Davy!" ejaculated Knowlton. "That's he, sure enough! Then
+he's near his own town now--he won't go far with a bad foot. We'd better
+move as soon as we can. Ask about an escort."
+
+Once more the bushman conversed with Monitaya. The ruler's smile
+disappeared. For some time he sat gazing out over the heads of all,
+evidently weighing matters in his mind. When he responded, however, it
+was without hesitation.
+
+"There is neither friendliness nor enmity between the two peoples, as
+has been said," Lourenco stated. "Our business among the Red Bones is
+our own affair, not that of Monitaya, and Monitaya will make no requests
+for us. But in order that we may go safely and return without harm he
+will send with us twenty of his best men. These men will have orders to
+protect us at all times, unless fighting is caused by our making a
+needless attack on the Red Bones. In that case the Mayorunas will do
+nothing to help us. They will only defend themselves."
+
+"Fair enough!" nodded McKay. "Tell him we'll start no fight. If any
+trouble comes it will be from the other fellows. We'll leave here
+to-morrow morning."
+
+Lourenco translated the promise into Mayoruna. But the chief seemed not
+to hear. His eyes had narrowed and were fixed on the face of Tim, who
+still lay on his back and was giving no attention to what went on.
+Following his look, the bushman gazed critically at the red-haired man.
+
+Tim's florid face had paled. His mouth was drawn and his eyes stared
+straight up, wide and glassy. Slowly he rolled his head from side to
+side.
+
+"Gee! Cap," he whispered, hoarsely, "I et too much. My head aches so I'm
+fair blind, and I'm burnin' up. Gimme some water."
+
+With a swift, simultaneous movement McKay and Knowlton put their hands
+on his forehead. Lourenco and Pedro leaned closer and peered into his
+face. All four glanced at one another. Pedro nodded. His lips silently
+formed one dread word:
+
+"Fever!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+FRUIT OF THE TRAP
+
+
+Heavy hypodermic doses of quinine, aided by Tim's rugged constitution
+and the fact that this was his first attack of the ravaging sickness of
+the swamp lands, pulled him back to safety within the next two days. To
+safety, but not to strength. Despite his stout-hearted assertions that
+he was ready to hit the trail and "walk the legs off the whole danged
+outfit," he was obviously in no condition to stand up under the grueling
+pack work that lay ahead. Wherefore, McKay, after consultation with the
+others of the party, and, through Lourenco, with Monitaya, gave him
+inflexible orders.
+
+"You'll stay here. Stick in your hammock until you're in fighting trim.
+Then watch yourself. Don't pull any bonehead plays that'll get these
+people down on you. Take quinine daily according to Knowlton's
+directions--he's written them on the box. If we're not back in a
+fortnight Monitaya will send men to find out why. If they find that
+we're--not coming back--you will be guided to the river, where you can
+get down to the Nunes place."
+
+"But, Cap--"
+
+"No argument!"
+
+"But listen here, for the love o' Mike! I ain't no old woman! I can
+stand the gaff! I'm goin' with the gang!"
+
+"You hear the orders!" McKay snapped, with assumed severity. "Think we
+want to be bothered with having you go sick again? You're out of shape
+and we've no room for lame ducks. You'll stay here!"
+
+Tim tried another tack.
+
+"Aw, but listen! Ye ain't goin' to desert a comrade amongst a lot o' man
+eaters--right in the place where I got sick, too. Soon's I git away from
+here I'll be all right--"
+
+"That stuff's no good," the captain contradicted, with a tight smile.
+"You didn't get fever here. It's been in your system for days. You got
+it back on the river. These people don't have it, or any other kind of
+sickness. I've looked around and I know. As for the man eaters, they're
+mighty decent folks toward friends. We're friends. You'll be under the
+personal protection of Monitaya, and his word is good as gold. It's all
+arranged, and you're safer here than you would be in New York."
+
+In his heart the stubborn veteran knew McKay was right, but, like any
+other good soldier ordered to remain out of action, he grumbled and
+growled regardless. To which the ex-officers paid about as much
+attention as officers usually do. They went ahead with their own
+preparations.
+
+"Be of good heart, Senhor Tim," Pedro comforted, mischievously. "You
+will not lack for company. The chief has appointed two girls to wait
+upon you at all times."
+
+"Huh? Them two tall ones that's been hangin' round and fetchin' things?
+Are they mine?"
+
+"Yes. They are quite handsome in their way, and strong enough to help
+you about if your legs remain weak. In that case you will probably be
+allowed to put your arms around them for support. I almost wish I could
+get fever, too."
+
+Tim's voice remained a growl, but his face did not look so doleful as
+before.
+
+"Grrrumph! I always seem to draw big females, and I don't like 'em.
+Gimme somethin' cute like them li'l' frog dolls in Paree--sort o'
+pee-teet and chick. Still, a feller's got to do the best he can. Mebbe
+I'll live till you guys git back."
+
+With which he availed himself of the prerogative of a sick man and
+grinned openly at the two comely young women who stood near at hand,
+awaiting any demand for services. They were not at all backward in
+reciprocating, and, despite the tribal paint and their labial ornaments,
+the smiles softening their faces made them not half bad to look upon.
+
+"'O death, where is thy sting?'" laughed Knowlton. "Be careful not to
+strain your heart while we're away, Tim."
+
+"Don't worry. It's a tough old heart--been kicked round so much it's
+growed a shell like a turtle. Besides, I seen wild women before I ever
+come to the jungle."
+
+Notwithstanding his apparent resignation, however, Tim erupted once more
+when his comrades shouldered their packs, picked up their guns, and
+spoke their thanks and good-by to Monitaya. He arose on shaky legs and
+desperately offered to prove his fitness by a barehanded six-round bout
+with his commanding officer. When McKay, with sympathetic eyes but gruff
+tones, peremptorily squelched him he insisted on at least going to the
+door to watch his comrades start the journey from which they might or
+might not return. Nor did he take advantage of his chance to hug the
+girls on the way.
+
+With one arm slung over the shoulders of a wiry young warrior who
+grinned proudly at the honor of being selected to help a guest of the
+great chief, he followed the departing column out into the sunshine,
+where the entire tribe was assembled. And when the stalwart band had
+filed into the shadows of the trees and vanished he stood for a time
+unseeing and gulping at something in his throat.
+
+Straight away along a vague path beginning at the rear of the _malocas_
+marched the twenty-four, the two northerners bending under the weight of
+their packs, the pair of Brazilians sweeping the jungle with practiced
+eyes, the score of Mayorunas striding velvet footed, resplendent in
+brilliant new paint and headdresses, armed with the most powerful
+weapons of their tribe, and loftily conscious of the fact that they were
+chosen as Monitaya's best. Savage and civilized, each man was fit,
+alert, formidable. Nowhere in the loosely joined chain was a weak link.
+
+Before the departure the Americans had been at some trouble to rid
+themselves of Yuara, who, with his men, had tarried at the Monitaya
+_malocas_ during Tim's sickness. While Knowlton was giving his ripped
+arm a final dressing he had calmly announced his intention of joining
+the expedition into the Red Bone country, and it had taken some skillful
+argument by Lourenco to dissuade him without arousing his anger. All
+four of the adventurers would gladly have taken him along had he not
+been hampered by his injury, but, under the ruthless rule barring all
+men not in possession of all their strength, he had to be left.
+
+Now, as on the previous jungle marches, the way was led by two of the
+tribesmen, followed by the Brazilians and the Americans, after whom the
+main body of the escort strode in column. The leader and guide, one
+Tucu, was a veteran hunter, fighter, and bushranger, who had been more
+than once in the Red Bone region and withal possessed the cool judgment
+of mature years and long experience; a lean, silent man who, though not
+a subchief, might have made a good one if given the opportunity. With
+him Lourenco had already arranged that a direct course should be
+followed, and that whenever dense undergrowth blockaded the way the
+machete men should take the lead.
+
+For some time no word was spoken. The path wound on, faintly marked, but
+easy enough to follow with Tucu picking it out. It was not one of the
+frequently used trails of the Monitaya people, but a mere _picada_, or
+hunter's track; yet even this had its pitfalls to guard the tribal
+house. Soon after leaving the clearing Tucu turned aside, passed between
+trees off the trail, went directly under one tree whose steep-slanting
+roots stood up off the ground like great down-pointing fingers, and
+returned to the path. All followed without comment.
+
+A considerable distance was covered before any further sign of the
+presence of ambushed death was shown by the savages. Then it came with
+tragic suddenness.
+
+Tucu grunted suddenly, and in one instant shifted his gait from the easy
+swing of the march to the prowl of a hunting animal. Behind him the line
+grew tense. The click of rifle hammers and of safeties being thrown off
+breech bolts blended with the faint slither of arrows being swiftly
+drawn from quivers. Eyes searched the bush, spying no enemy.
+
+Two more steps, and Tucu stopped, head thrust forward, eyes boring into
+something on the ground. The rest, taking care not to touch one
+another's weapons, crowded around and looked down at the huddled form of
+a man.
+
+A matted mass of black hair, a neck burned copper brown by sun, tattered
+cotton shirt and trousers, big, bare dirty feet, a rusty repeating rifle
+of heavy caliber--these were what they saw first. The man lay straight,
+his face in the dirt, his hands a little ahead as if he had been
+crawling forward at the moment of death. Tucu turned him on his back,
+revealing a blanched yellow-brown face which was proof positive of his
+race.
+
+"Peruvian," said Pedro.
+
+"What got him?" demanded Knowlton. "No wound on him."
+
+Lourenco questioned Tucu. The leader, who evidently knew just where to
+look, tore open the thin shirt at the left side and pointed to a tiny
+discoloration surrounding a red dot under the ribs. He muttered a few
+laconic words.
+
+"A blowgun trap," Lourenco explained. "The gun is set a little way
+beyond here. This man, sneaking along the path, broke the little cord
+which shot the gun. The poisoned dart struck in his side. He must have
+pulled out the dart, but he could not go far before his legs became
+paralyzed, and he fell. Then, still trying to crawl, he died."
+
+Pedro picked up the dead man's gun and worked the lever. The weapon was
+fully loaded and showed no sign of recent firing. Pedro coolly pumped it
+empty, gathered up the blunt .44 cartridges, and pocketed them for his
+own use.
+
+Tucu watched the proceeding in satirical approval. Then, leaving the
+body where it lay, he went stooping along the path ahead, his keen eyes
+searching the undergrowth. In a few minutes he returned with the
+blood-stained dart which, as Lourenco had guessed, the stricken prowler
+had pulled from his flesh and dropped. This he passed to a blowgun man.
+The latter carefully opened his poison pouch, redipped the point of the
+dart, held it a moment to dry in a shaft of sunlight, and slipped it
+into his dart case among a score of unused missiles.
+
+"No waste of ammunition here," was McKay's dry comment. "What happens to
+this corpse now?"
+
+Through Lourenco's mouth Tucu answered.
+
+"It will be left here until police warriors come from the _malocas_.
+Certain men travel the paths daily to inspect the traps. When they find
+this man they will cut off his hands and feet with their wooden knives
+and throw the rest aside to be eaten by the animals. He has not been
+dead long or he would have been devoured by some wild thing before we
+came. The trail travelers will set the trap again and take the hands and
+feet to the _malocas_, where they will be washed, cooked, and eaten."
+
+The faces of the Americans contracted slightly. A simultaneous thought
+made them flash startled glances at each other.
+
+"Tim--" Knowlton said, and paused. Lourenco smiled.
+
+"No, Senhor Tim will not be expected to eat man meat," he assured them.
+"I thought of that before we left--one never knows when these traps will
+yield human flesh. So, without letting Monitaya know why I spoke, I told
+him you North Americans believed the flesh of an enemy to be poisonous,
+and that you would not eat it on that account. Monitaya will remember
+that."
+
+"By George! you have a head on your shoulders, old scout! I was worried
+for a minute. If they offered Tim a broiled foot or a stewed hand he'd
+go for his gun."
+
+Briefly Tucu spoke. The Mayorunas separated and went into the forest,
+seeking any sign of other enemies.
+
+"Queer that this chap should come here alone--if he was alone," added
+Knowlton. "Suppose he's the fellow that's been swiping stray girls? Or a
+spy?"
+
+"Neither, I think, senhor. The girls were captured by more than one man,
+and I doubt if this one had been here before. Probably he was one of
+those lone prowlers of the bush whose hand is against every man. He is a
+half-breed, as you see, and came, perhaps, to steal a girl for himself.
+The jungle is well rid of him."
+
+"Uh-huh. Guess you're right. Say, I'd like to see how that blowgun trap
+operates. Can't understand what blows the dart when nobody is here."
+
+"I do not know, either, senhor. Perhaps Tucu will show us."
+
+The savage guide, after a moment's hesitation, pointed along the trail
+and stalked away, the others at his heels. At a spot some fifteen yards
+farther on he turned into the bush at the right, walked a few paces away
+from the path, turned again sharply to the left, advanced once more, and
+halted. Before them, not easy to discern in the masking brush, even
+though they were looking for it, hung the long barrel of the blowgun,
+lashed to a couple of small trees and pointing toward the path.
+
+Tucu stepped to the mouthpiece of the slender tube and pointed to a
+sapling, just behind and in line with it, which had been cut off about
+shoulder-high from the ground. From the tip of this thin trunk dangled a
+wide strip of bark. The savage, having indicated this, stood as if the
+action of the device were perfectly clear.
+
+"Too deep for me," admitted McKay, after a puzzled study of the tube and
+the trunk. The others nodded agreement. Lourenco confessed to the Indian
+the blindness of all.
+
+Thereupon Tucu bent the sapling far over and released it. As it sprang
+erect the bark strip slapped the end of the gun. Also, the watchers saw
+something hitherto unnoticed--a thin, flexible vine attached to the top
+of the thin stump. Lourenco's face showed understanding.
+
+"See, comrades, this is it: The little tree is bent far down and held by
+the long vine. The vine passes around a low branch, then up over other
+limbs, and out across the path, where it is fastened to a root near the
+ground. A man following the path breaks the vine. The little tree then
+flies up and the bark sheet strikes the wide mouthpiece of the gun. The
+air forced into that mouthpiece by the blow of the bark shoots the
+little dart. The dart does not fly as hard as if blown by a man, but it
+goes swiftly enough to pierce the skin of anything except a tapir. As
+soon as the poison is in the blood the work is done."
+
+"It sure is done," Knowlton echoed, thinking of the short distance
+covered by the dead Peruvian after passing this spot. "Mighty ingenious
+apparatus. These people are no fools, I'll say."
+
+"You say rightly," Pedro muttered. Turning, they went out to the path,
+looking askance at the thin death tube as they passed along it.
+
+The scouting Mayorunas returned, having found nothing. Tucu resumed his
+place at the head of the line. Without a backward glance at the body
+sprawling in the trail at the rear, the column swung into its usual
+gait.
+
+The Americans, silent before, were silent again. They had looked for the
+first time on the work of the Mayoruna traps; had observed the
+cold-blooded way in which the Indiana handled the still form on the
+ground; had visualized the forthcoming mutilation of that body and the
+resultant cannibal rites. More vividly than ever before they realized
+that these men and Monitaya himself were relentless creatures of the
+jungle, and that, despite the present existent friendliness, there
+yawned between them and their barbarous allies an impassable gulf.
+
+For the moment the jungle itself seemed a poisonous green abyss of
+creeping, crawling, sneaking death. And though they had faced death too
+often in another land to fear it in any form, though they marched on
+with unwavering step, their eyes were somber as in their hearts echoed
+the last appeal of the man they had left behind them:
+
+"Ye ain't goin' to desert a comrade amongst a lot o' man eaters--"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+THE RED BONES
+
+
+Four days the expedition tramped steadily onward through the rugged
+labyrinthine hills. Four nights its members slept in utter exhaustion.
+Neither by day nor by night was any sign of the Raposa seen, nor of any
+other human being.
+
+So tired from the constant struggle did the Americans become that their
+jaded brains began to picture the mysterious wild man as a mere
+legendary creature, which they never would find even though they
+searched the inscrutable forests until the end of time. Yet when, on the
+fifth day, Tucu informed them that they now were nearing the principal
+settlement of the Red Bones, the announcement cheered them as if they
+were about to enter a civilized city and there meet David Rand safe and
+sane.
+
+Not that any chance of striking his trail had been neglected in the
+meantime. It was thoroughly understood that if he were met anywhere he
+was to be made prisoner, and that thereafter the back trail should be
+taken. Lourenco had impressed on Tucu the fact that the whole journey
+had for its object the finding of the wild man, and that he must not be
+killed if found. Since the Indians were not in the habit of hunting so
+assiduously anyone but a bitterly hated foe, it is quite possible that
+they misunderstood the spirit of the quest and believed the "dead-alive"
+prowler would, if captured, undergo some extremely unpleasant treatment
+at the hands of the white men. But so long as it was made clear that the
+Raposa must be caught alive, if caught at all, Lourenco did not trouble
+about what the Mayorunas might surmise.
+
+Now, as the end of the long, pathless trail approached, arose a question
+of which McKay had previously thought but had not spoken--how he was to
+converse with the Red Bone chief. Lourenco asked Tucu whether the Red
+Bones spoke the Mayoruna tongue. Tucu replied that they did not. He
+added, however, that the languages were not so dissimilar as to prevent
+some sort of understanding being reached between members of the two
+tribes. The veteran bushman nodded carelessly.
+
+"When the tongue fails, Capitao, the hands still can talk," he said. "It
+takes more time and work, that is all. Ah, here is a path!"
+
+It was so. For the first time since leaving the Monitaya region a path
+lay under their feet. And for the first time Tucu and his fellow
+Mayorunas, glancing along that faint track, showed hesitation.
+
+"Why the delay?" snapped McKay.
+
+"They suspect traps. I will go ahead and feel out the way. I have done
+it before on other paths."
+
+After a few words to Tucu, Lourenco cut a long, slim pole. With this in
+hand he preceded the column, walking slowly, pausing sometimes,
+continually prodding the path, studying it with unswerving gaze as he
+progressed. The thin but rigid feeler, strong enough to tip the cover of
+any pit or to spring any concealed bow or blowgun, was at least ten feet
+long, and between the scout and the head of the line Tucu preserved
+another ten-foot interval. Progress was necessarily slow, but it was
+sure.
+
+In this fashion they advanced perhaps half a mile. Not once did they
+have to leave the path, but Lourenco's caution did not diminish. Rather,
+it increased as they neared the Red Bone town. At length another path
+joined the one on which they were traveling. Here Lourenco paused for
+minutes, inspecting with extreme care the ground and the bush.
+
+Suddenly he cocked his head as if listening. Then, with a backward
+motion of the hand to enjoin silence, he faced down the branch path and
+stood calmly waiting.
+
+To those behind came a light rustle of leaves and a scuffle of moving
+feet; a sudden cessation; then Lourenco's voice speaking to some one
+concealed behind the intervening undergrowth. His tone was slow, quiet,
+easy--the tone which, even if the words were not understood, would
+soothe suspicious and abruptly alarmed minds. After another short
+silence he resumed talking, pointing carelessly to the place behind him
+where stood the silent file of Mayorunas. A guttural voice replied. A
+head peered cautiously from the edge of the bush, stared fixedly at
+Tucu, and withdrew. The voice sounded again. Immediately three Indians
+stepped into view, poised for action. Another interval of staring, and
+they relaxed.
+
+"Come forward, comrades," said Lourenco. They came, halting again at the
+junction of the trails. Tucu spoke to one of the newcomers, who scowled
+as if only partly understanding, but grunted some sort of answer. Those
+behind the Mayoruna leader craned their necks and scanned the Red Bone
+men, who continued to eye with evident misgiving the tall-bonneted
+cannibals and the broad-hatted pair of whites.
+
+Man for man, these Red Bones were in every way inferior to the
+emissaries of Monitaya. Their bodies were more gaunt, their skins more
+coppery, their foreheads lower, and their expressions much less
+intelligent. Furthermore, they wore not even the bark-cloth clouts which
+formed the sole body covering of the Mayorunas--they were totally naked.
+The one point of similarity between the two tribes was that the faces of
+the Red Bone men were streaked with red dye. But the facial design was
+much different: two short transverse stripes on the forehead, and three
+lines on each cheek, running from the eyes, the end of the nose, and the
+corners of the mouth, straight back to the ears. Studying those visages,
+Knowlton and McKay recalled Schwandorf's statement that these people not
+only ate human flesh, but tortured prisoners of war. It was easy to
+believe that he had told truth.
+
+McKay, standing behind Pedro, shifted his position a bit. At once the
+eyes of the three Red Bones widened and riveted on his face. Heretofore
+they had seen only his hat and eyes, the rest being hidden from them by
+Pedro's neck and an intervening palm tip. Now that they saw his
+black-bearded jaw, they started slightly and peered intently at him.
+
+"I think, Capitao, you would do well to shave," Pedro suggested, with a
+smile.
+
+"'Fraid so," the captain granted. "Black beards evidently are _de trop_
+in the jungle social set at present."
+
+But then one of the Red Bone men came forward, still squinting narrowly,
+and his expression was not hostile. In fact, it was more friendly than
+it had yet been. After a closer scrutiny, however, his face turned
+blank. Slowly he stepped back and muttered something to his companions.
+
+At this Pedro's eyes narrowed speculatively. But his expression did not
+change, and he said nothing.
+
+A lengthy conference took place between Lourenco and Tucu on the one
+hand and the three Red Bone tribesmen on the other; a difficult talk in
+which words and sign language both were used and frequently repeated.
+Eventually an understanding was reached. The three stepped back, picked
+up some small game which they had dropped on beholding Lourenco,
+returned, and led the way along the path. Lourenco cast aside his poke
+stick and resumed his usual place in the column. The whole line moved
+ahead at a much smarter gait than before.
+
+"Note--this path is not mined," thought Knowlton.
+
+This proved true. Moreover, the way now was more broad and firm, so that
+travel on it was much easier. After twenty minutes of rapid tramping it
+debouched abruptly into a cleared space. Here all halted.
+
+Before them lay a town of small, low huts, crowded closely together in
+two parallel rows which curved together at one end. The other end lay
+open, giving access to a sizable creek whereon floated canoes. At the
+water's edge, along the crude street studded with charred stumps, and
+among the damp-looking huts moved naked figures of men and women
+occupied with various sluggish activities. Some of the men already had
+spied the invading party and were standing at gaze.
+
+"Comrades, we have reached the end of our trail," said Lourenco, running
+a cool eye over the place. "Now all we have to do is to find your Raposa
+and get him and ourselves away alive."
+
+"That's all," Knowlton echoed, unsmiling. "The reception committee is
+forming now." And with the words he unbuttoned his holster.
+
+A shrill yell had run along the double line of houses, and out into the
+stumpy street now swarmed men armed with hastily seized weapons. Hands
+pointed, confused exclamations sounded, and a compact detachment of
+warriors came jogging toward the newcomers. The three guides drew away
+from the Mayorunas. The latter promptly fitted arrows to their bows,
+inserted darts in their blowguns, lifted spears or clubs, and with eyes
+glittering awaited whatever might befall.
+
+A couple of rods away the Red Bones halted, bows ready. A hatchet-faced
+savage who seemed to be in command rasped something at the three
+hunters, who quickened their pace toward him. Tucu strode out four paces
+beyond his own men and stopped. Then both parties waited while the
+hunters reported what they knew to the hatchet-face.
+
+"What did you tell them, Lourenco?" asked McKay.
+
+"That we came on a friendly visit to the chief, for whom we had
+important words."
+
+"Nothing of the Raposa?"
+
+"No. They wasted much time arguing that we must tell them all our
+business and let them inform the chief, while we were to stay back on
+the path until permitted to enter the town. We told them our talk was
+for the chief alone, and that we should come here whether they liked it
+or not. So, having no choice, they led us in."
+
+McKay made no comment. None was necessary. Furthermore, his steady eyes
+had caught a simultaneous head movement of the Red Bones--a peering
+movement, as if all were seeking some one man among the new arrivals.
+Pedro observed this. He spoke softly to Lourenco.
+
+"Lourenco, tell Tucu to say to the Red Bones that we come led by a
+black-bearded white man; that this blackboard comes from the far-off
+country where all men wear black beards; that the blackbeard will speak
+with the chief only."
+
+The Americans looked queerly at the young Brazilian, as did Lourenco
+himself. But without question Lourenco obeyed. Calling to Tucu, he gave
+the message. Tucu moved his head slightly, but gave no other sign of
+having heard.
+
+"Now, Capitao, step forward a little and show yourself more clearly,"
+prompted Pedro.
+
+With another puzzled glance McKay did so. He saw that the brown eyes of
+the younger man held a dancing gleam, but he could not read the thought
+behind those eyes. Yet he noticed that as soon as he stepped out the Red
+Bones all focused their gaze on him. More than that, the spokesman of
+the three hunters pointed at him and said something to the
+sharp-featured leader.
+
+Now that leader came forward alone. Six feet from Tucu he halted again
+and talked in a growling tone. The Mayoruna leader, cool and dignified,
+made answer. After a somewhat protracted exchange Tucu turned his head
+and motioned to Lourenco, who went forward, listened, replied shortly,
+and came back. Meanwhile the first detachment of Red Bones had been
+strongly reinforced by others who had come up singly or in small
+parties. Now the expedition was outnumbered at least four to one by
+hard-faced, brute-mouthed, naked men ready, if not eager, for trouble.
+
+"The Red Bone says we shall see the chief," Lourenco stated. "At first
+he said only you, Capitao, should go to him. Then he insisted that we
+all lay down our arms. Tucu has told him we lay down our arms for no man
+or men; that we come in peace--otherwise there would be many more of us;
+that we leave in peace unless the Red Bones themselves bring on a fight.
+In that case, though we are few, there lies behind us the power of
+Monitaya, and behind Monitaya the power of the Mayoruna chiefs, all
+strong enough to wipe the Red Bone nation off the face of the ground."
+
+"Strong stuff, that," said Knowlton.
+
+"Strong, yes. But no stronger than is needed to impress these people.
+Tucu intends to prevent trouble if he can; and often the best way to
+prevent trouble is to make the other man realize what may happen to him
+if he starts it. Also he has his orders from Monitaya to stay with us at
+all times, and he will follow that order even if you, Capitao, try to
+change it. Now we go together to the chief."
+
+He nodded to Tucu, who grunted to the Red Bone leader. The hatchet-face
+in turn shouted something to the men behind. Slowly they drew apart into
+two groups.
+
+"You are the leader, Capitao," suggested Lourenco. Promptly McKay
+marched forward, head up, eyes front, face bleak. The rest followed,
+Tucu falling in behind McKay when the captain passed him. Preceded by
+the Red Bone spokesman, the line advanced between the two bodies of
+copper-skins and swung along the evil-smelling avenue to its upper end.
+
+There, in the very center of the loop joining the two rows of huts, was
+a house twice as big as any other. From its doorway the inhabitant of
+that house could watch the whole life of the Red Bone town. Obviously it
+was the home of the chief. At its door a pair of warriors stood guard,
+but of the ruler himself there was no sign.
+
+Ten paces from it the thin-featured leader stopped and motioned to McKay
+to halt. As the captain and the line behind him did so he stalked
+onward, passed through the doorway, and faded from sight in the dimness
+beyond. With one accord the members of the visiting party looked around
+them.
+
+The street behind now was filled with the mass of Red Bone warriors who
+had trooped after the column. All exit in that direction was blockaded.
+But the ex-officers noted that between the houses were spaces each wide
+enough to hold a couple of men, and in an undertone McKay gave defensive
+instructions to Lourenco.
+
+"If fighting starts, have the Mayorunas take cover along these houses on
+each side. We who have guns will use the chief's house. We can sweep the
+whole street from there. You two fellows capture the chief alive if
+possible. He'll be more useful as a hostage than as a corpse."
+
+Pedro beamed approval of this swiftly formed plan. Lourenco muttered to
+Tucu, who in turn passed the word down the line. Then all stood waiting.
+
+Presently the Red Bone man came out. He shouted a name. From the doorway
+near at hand, where he had been standing and peering at the small but
+formidable body of newcomers, an old man now stepped forth and advanced,
+limping a little, to the hatchet-face. The latter talked briefly to him,
+then to Tucu. The Mayoruna leader pointed to Lourenco. The old man spoke
+to the Brazilian, who answered at once. Thereupon the wizened old fellow
+entered the chief's house.
+
+"That old man speaks the Mayoruna tongue quite well, Capitao," said
+Lourenco. "He says you and I shall enter and talk through his mouth with
+the chief. All others remain outside, and we must leave our rifles
+here."
+
+"All right. Glad we can leave Tucu out here to control these fellows.
+Here, Merry." He passed his rifle to Knowlton. Pedro took Lourenco's
+gun. With packs still on their backs the chosen men proceeded to the
+doorway and entered the house where waited the ruler of the Red Bone
+tribe.
+
+Behind them the line settled into easier postures of waiting. The Red
+Bones, though so compactly ranged as to cut off any chance of escape,
+held their distance, obviously neither inclined to fraternize nor ready
+to precipitate conflict by crowding. Thus, while keeping their ears open
+for any sound of a concerted movement from behind, the visitors could
+use their eyes to inspect the huts nearest them.
+
+In some of these, women stood near the doorways, staring with unwinking
+absorption at the light-skinned, athletic men outside who were so much
+better to look upon than their own mates. The Mayorunas returned the
+stares with the brief glances of men accustomed to noticing everything
+but totally uninterested--as well they might be, for these poorly
+shaped, heavy-mouthed, mud-skinned females were not to be compared with
+their own women. Knowlton and Pedro, too, looked them over, but with the
+same expression as if inspecting a family of lizards. Then they glanced
+into other huts now empty of life, and in a couple of these they saw
+rigid red-hued objects hanging from the roofs.
+
+"The red bones of the dead, senhor," Pedro muttered, and his blond
+companion, peering again at the sinister decorations, nodded without
+reply.
+
+Voices came to them from the chief's house, talking with droning
+deliberation. Evidently no cause for friction had yet arisen. They let
+their eyes rove on beyond the guarded doorway, to pause at a house a
+short distance away at the right. There stood a clubman, who leaned idly
+on his weapon, but showed no intention of moving from his place. The
+door of that house was closed. Not only closed, but barred on the
+outside.
+
+"Hm! Looks like a jail," said Knowlton. Pedro smiled, but an intent look
+came into his face and he studied the closed house.
+
+Suddenly both started. At one corner of the house, unseen by the
+clubman, a head had cautiously slipped forth. For only an instant it
+hung there before dodging back out of sight. But both the watching men
+had seen that the face, though half masked by long dark hair and a thick
+beard, was much lighter than that of any Red Bone savage. And in the
+hair above one ear was a white streak.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+THE RAPOSA
+
+
+McKay and Lourenco, in a broad, low, musty-smelling room, faced a man
+who stood and a man who sat. The man who stood was the old savage who
+could talk in the Mayoruna language. The man who sat was the chief of
+the Red Bones.
+
+In his first words to the visitors the old interpreter revealed that the
+name of the Red Bone ruler was Umanuh. Later on Lourenco informed McKay
+that in the Tupi _lengoa geral_ of the Amazonian Indians (which,
+however, was not spoken by this tribe) the word "umanuh" meant "corpse."
+And whatever the name may have signified in the language of the Red
+Bones, its Tupi definition fitted with disagreeable precision. For
+Umanuh was a living cadaver.
+
+Gaunt, gray skinned, lank haired, hollow of cheek and eye, with thin,
+cruel lips so tight drawn that the teeth behind seemed to show through,
+ribs projecting, clawlike hands resting on bony knees, his whole frame
+motionless as that of a man long dead, the head man of the bone-dyeing
+tribe was the antithesis of both the piggish Suba and the herculean
+Monitaya. Only his eyes lived; and those eyes were cold and merciless as
+those of a snake or a vulture. A man who ruled by ruthless cunning, who
+would gaze unmoved on the most ghastly tortures, who would devour human
+flesh with ghoulish relish--such was the creature who sat in a red-dyed
+hammock and contemplated the impassive face of McKay.
+
+"Umanuh, great chief, eater of his enemies, with fangs of the jaguar and
+wisdom of the great snake, awaits the greeting of the one-whose-hair
+grows-from-his-mouth," droned the old mouthpiece of the chief.
+
+"Makkay, leader of the fighting men of the Blackbeards, whose voice is
+the thunder and whose hand spits lightning and death, gives greeting to
+Umanuh," responded Lourenco in a like droning tone.
+
+A pause. Umanuh gave no sign of life. McKay, straight and cold, met the
+unwinking stare of the chief with his own chill gray gaze. Between the
+two who spoke not was a testing of wills.
+
+"Makkay brings with him none of the Blackbeard warriors," pointed out
+the interpreter, who seemed to know his master's thought. "He comes with
+only the jungle men of light skins."
+
+"Makkay needs none of his own warriors when he comes in peace. If he
+came in war the terrible Blackbeards with him would cause the whole
+forest to fly apart in smoke and flame. Since he walks in peace to visit
+his friend Umanuh, of whose wisdom he has heard, he brings only his
+friends the Mayorunas, who are friends also to the men of the Red
+Bones."
+
+Another pause. The old man now seemed somewhat uncertain of himself. The
+silent duel between McKay and Umanuh went on. At length the chief's eyes
+flickered a trifle. In a hissing whisper he said something.
+
+"The men of the Mayorunas never come to this country unless seeking
+something," the interpreter promptly spoke up. "What do they seek?"
+
+"Only that which Makkay seeks."
+
+Then, turning to the captain, the Brazilian added: "Capitao, we now have
+reached the point to talk business. Have you any presents? And is it
+your wish to give them now or later?"
+
+"I have a few things. But I'll give them later--if at all. This chief is
+hostile. Tell him what we're here for and see how he acts."
+
+"It has come to the ears of Makkay," Lourenco informed the man of
+Umanuh, "that a man of the Blackbeards lives among the men of the Red
+Bones. Makkay would see that man."
+
+Again the interpreter awaited his master's voice before answering.
+
+"No man of the Blackbeards is among the men of Umanuh," he then denied.
+
+"If he is not among them he is near them," was Lourenco's certain reply.
+"He has been seen both by other Blackbeards and by the Mayorunas. I,
+too, have seen him. He bears on his bones the sign that his mind is out
+of his skull. His eyes are green and his hair touched with white. Umanuh
+and his men know well that I speak true."
+
+The pause this time was longer than before.
+
+"There was such a man, but he is gone."
+
+"Then Makkay asks his friend Umanuh to find that one. A chief so wise
+can easily find him where others would see only water and mud."
+
+"If he could be found what would the great Blackbeard leader do with
+him?"
+
+Lourenco thought swiftly. To say the Raposa was McKay's friend would do
+little good. Friendship meant nothing to this unfeeling brute. Therefore
+the bushman insinuated something which his cruel mind could comprehend.
+
+"If a Red Bone man abandoned his people and went to another tribe, what
+would Umanuh do to him when he was found?"
+
+A cold glimmer in the chief's eyes showed that he thought he understood.
+Moreover, he would much like to see what sort of torture this hard-faced
+Blackbeard would use on a fugitive. It might be something even more
+fiendish than his own pastimes. So the next reply came promptly.
+
+"If that man is found the blackbeard will pay for him?"
+
+"There are gifts of friendship for Umanuh," Lourenco nodded.
+
+"The Blackbeard leader will pay more than the other Blackbeard?"
+
+Lourenco almost blinked. What other Blackbeard? The Raposa himself? But
+the Brazilian repressed his bewilderment.
+
+"Makkay will first see the man to make sure he is the Blackbeard whom
+Makkay wants," he dodged. "Then he will pay well."
+
+"Umanuh will see the gifts now."
+
+"The gifts cannot be shown now. They are packed away. When Makkay has
+looked on the man Umanuh shall look on the gifts."
+
+Another eye duel between the chief and McKay. As before, the captain's
+eye proved the harder.
+
+"Umanuh will think of the matter. Night comes. The man hunted by the
+Blackbeard is not here. The Blackbeard and his men may stay to-night
+across the water. When the sun rises again Umanuh will talk further."
+
+"It is well. Let Umanuh tell his men to stay on this side of the water,
+that we may not mistake them in the night for enemies."
+
+When Umanuh had hissed assent the old man stepped to the doorway and
+summoned the hatchet-faced warrior. To him instructions were given. He
+turned and carried the commands to the tribesmen.
+
+"Makkay wishes Umanuh peaceful rest," said Lourenco. With which he
+flicked his eyes toward the door. McKay, with stiff stride, stalked out.
+Lourenco followed. Both felt the snake eyes of the cadaverous chief
+dwelling on their backs.
+
+To the waiting Knowlton, Pedro, and Tucu it was briefly explained that
+preliminary negotiations had been concluded and that camp now would be
+made on the farther side of the creek. Tucu, observing that the Red Bone
+mass behind was dividing again to let the visitors pass through, gave
+the word to his men. The column began to move out, marching in reverse
+order. Pedro muttered swiftly to his partner.
+
+"Lourenco, see that house with the barred door where the clubman stands
+guard. Remember where it is."
+
+The other swept the loop in one quick glance, located the house, and
+fell into step without a word, the guarded structure fixed on his brain
+as clearly as if he had studied it for an hour. Walking down the
+malodorous street, he said, quietly, "There will be a small moon
+to-night."
+
+"You are becoming a reader of the mind, comrade," Pedro grinned. No more
+was said.
+
+Down to the shore of the creek trooped the party, followed closely by
+the hatchet-face and a score of tribesmen. The whites and the Mayorunas
+got into half a dozen of the waiting canoes and paddled across. In other
+dugouts the Red Bone men also crossed, but they did not land. As soon as
+the borrowed boats were empty the tribesmen took them in tow and
+returned to their own bank. The visitors were left on a partly cleared
+shore, separated from their uncordial hosts by some twenty yards of deep
+water. Not one canoe was left them. Furthermore, the Red Bones now began
+activities indicating an intention to establish a night-longwatch on the
+irside of the stream.
+
+"Taking no chances of our raiding them to-night, or even snooping around
+town," said Knowlton. "Keeping everything in their own hands. Reckon
+we'd better post sentries to-night, Rod, just to keep an eye on that
+outpost of theirs."
+
+McKay nodded.
+
+"We four will take it in turn," he agreed. "Lourenco--Pedro--you--I.
+Three-hour tours."
+
+"Pardon, Capitao," interposed Pedro. "It would be well to change that.
+You two senhores take the first two watches."
+
+"Why?" frowned McKay.
+
+"Because Lourenco and I wish to go visiting. We are much smitten with
+the charms of the ladies here."
+
+The captain's frown deepened, but he studied Pedro's devil-may-care face
+keenly before answering.
+
+"Humph! What's up your sleeve? Out with it!"
+
+Pedro glanced around him and across the water. The tribesmen, both of
+the Mayoruna force and of the Red Bones, were watching the colloquy.
+
+"We are watched, Capitao. Let us make camp now and talk later. These men
+do not understand our words, but we cannot tell what they may see in our
+faces. Now speak harshly, as if I had been insolent."
+
+McKay did. He thundered at the young bushman as if about to do him
+bodily injury.
+
+Pedro retreated a step, as if taken aback by the storm he had unleashed.
+When McKay stopped he replied: "Excellent, Capitao. Now I go to start
+work on the _tambo_."
+
+He trudged away with a sullen gait. On both sides of the stream the
+Indians muttered and looked at the tall commander with increased
+respect. Truly, the Blackbeard was a fierce ruler and one who must not
+be angered; he had the voice of a great gun and the temper of a jaguar.
+That other man was lucky to have his head still on his shoulders!
+
+When the camp was made at the edge of the bush and the four comrades
+were grouped in their hammocks, Lourenco narrated in detail the
+conversation with Umanuh. Knowlton reciprocated with news of what he and
+Pedro had seen at the corner of the barred house.
+
+"I almost jumped after him, Rod," he admitted. "Had all I could do to
+hold myself. But I knew anything sudden like that might start war right
+there, and we wouldn't have a Chinaman's chance of getting away with
+him, so I stood fast. But he's here, and old Umanuh's a liar by the
+clock if he says otherwise."
+
+"He is the same man we saw in the forest, Lourenco, or my eyes are
+twisted," added Pedro.
+
+"Hm! Something very fishy here," commented McKay.
+
+"Very fishy indeed, Capitao," Lourenco echoed. "The man is within call,
+yet Umanuh says he is not here. And Umanuh wants us to buy the man. What
+is more, he asks if we will pay more than the other Blackbeard. What
+other Blackbeard? The man himself has a dark beard, and since we left
+headquarters Pedro and I have grown black whiskers, too. Yet Umanuh
+cannot mean the crazy man would pay him to stay here, or that either of
+us Brazilians would try to buy him. There are no other men with black
+beards--except the German woman-stealer; and of course he cannot be the
+one."
+
+"No?" Pedro asked, softly.
+
+"No, certainly. Why? Of what were you thinking?"
+
+Pedro's brown eyes twinkled, but he made no answer. He only inhaled a
+long puff from his cigarette and looked across the water at the
+hairpin-shaped town.
+
+"What about that visiting trip of yours to-night?" McKay asked.
+
+"I wish to see what is in that house with the barred door, Capitao. When
+I am curious about such a matter Lourenco always becomes curious, too,
+so I shall have to take him with me. If I did not he would say I was
+making love to the chief's wives."
+
+"_Por Deus!_ That may be all the barred house holds--the wives of the
+chief," guessed Lourenco. "Why waste time and risk death to look into
+that place?"
+
+"_Quem nao arrisca nao ganha_, as the coronel would say--he who risks
+nothing gains nothing. I feel that we should visit that house. Something
+calls me back to it."
+
+Lourenco studied his partner a moment, then nodded slowly. But McKay
+interposed decided objection.
+
+"Too dangerous. Also unnecessary. We'll get Rand--if the man is
+Rand--through the chief. Your night spying might ruin everything and get
+you killed into the bargain. Nothing to gain and all to lose. Stay
+here."
+
+Pedro's eyes hardened. But it was Lourenco who answered.
+
+"Capitao, I think we had best do as Pedro says. It is a queer thing and
+I cannot explain it, but I have known him to have such ideas in the past
+and they have always worked out for the best. He himself does not know
+why he does some things--things which look totally foolish and which
+often are very dangerous--except that he feels like doing them. Yet I
+have never known this foolishness to fail to turn out well. He and I
+will go over to-night and see what we may see."
+
+The captain's brows drew together. Flat insubordination! Then he
+remembered that these men were not subordinates at all; remembered also
+what Coronel Nunes said concerning their ability to get into and out of
+dangerous situations. When Knowlton sided with them he capitulated.
+
+"Up in the States we'd say Pedro was 'riding his hunch,'" was the
+lieutenant's remark. "And I've known a hunch to bring all kinds of good
+luck. Gee! I'd like to go across with you lads myself! But I'm no jungle
+expert, especially after dark, and I'd only be in the way. Besides,
+we'll sure have to stick here and keep up appearances while you're gone.
+How will you get over? There's no way but swimming, and this creek's
+probably inhabited by the usual 'gators and snakes and things."
+
+"When one can travel only by swimming, one swims," Pedro smiled. "Leave
+that to us, senhores. Now the sun sinks fast and I have hunger. Let us
+eat."
+
+Night was at hand. While the whites talked some of the Mayorunas had
+quietly slipped away into the bush, seeking whatever fresh meat might be
+obtainable without straying too far from camp. Naturally, the hunting
+was poor so near an inhabited place, but now the absent men came
+stealing back with a few small birds and one monkey. Though the savages
+asked nothing and evidently expected nothing from the whites to eke out
+this scant provision, the latter opened their meager larders to Tucu,
+ordering him to see that every man had at least a few mouthfuls to eat.
+Tucu, like a good commander, made no bones of accepting the invitation
+for the good of his men. When all hands had stowed away the last meal of
+the day the rations were reduced almost to the vanishing point.
+
+"Those miserable whelps over there might have had the decency to give us
+a few bites," Knowlton growled, looking at the Red Bone men on the other
+bank, who were gorging themselves on meat brought by their women.
+
+"It is quite possible that they intend to give us several bites later
+on," Pedro suggested, with a mirthless smile.
+
+"Uh-huh. Shouldn't wonder. But it's also possible that they'll have to
+assimilate a few lead pills before chewing us up. Rod, we'll have our
+work cut out standing guard to-night. I wouldn't put it past that lying
+old Umanuh to try rubbing us out before morning."
+
+"Nor I," concurred McKay. "Only question is whether he dares take a
+chance against our guns and against the likelihood that Monitaya will
+send other men to investigate our disappearance. Better keep well out of
+sight."
+
+As he spoke the last light of day vanished. Stars and a quarter moon
+leaped out in the swiftly darkening sky. The small fire of the
+expedition threw dim shadows against the poles of the night shelters.
+Lights glimmered in the Red Bone huts, and other lights began to streak
+across the gloom--the bright little lanterns of fireflies coasting along
+the stream. But at the point where the Red Bone night guard lurked no
+light shone. They had built no fire, and now they were almost invisible
+in the faint moonshine--sinister shadows which even now might be
+meditating murder or worse.
+
+Lourenco lounged over to Tucu, who was watching those shadows with a
+fixed cat stare, and informed him that until morning a man with a gun
+would be always on guard while the rest slept. The Indian grunted
+approval. By way of precaution against being killed by his own men, the
+Brazilian added the information that later on he and his comrade would
+leave the camp and go upstream for a time. At this Tucu's eyes dwelt on
+his, veered to the lights of the town, and returned. In them was a
+plain, though unspoken, question. The bushman ignored it and strolled
+back to his _tambo_.
+
+The moon sailed higher. The animal uproar of early night began to
+diminish. The fire, almost buried under slow-burning wood whose acrid
+smoke alleviated the insect pests, smoldered dull red. McKay and
+Knowlton drew lots for the first sleep, the captain winning and promptly
+getting under his net. In the Mayoruna shelter all was dark and silent,
+each man sleeping lightly with one hand on a weapon. The two Brazilians
+also were out of sight in their hut.
+
+Up and down, a barely distinguishable figure, Knowlton passed slowly
+with holster unbuttoned and rifle cocked, eyes turning periodically to
+the Red Bone outpost and ears intent to pick any unusual sound out of
+the night noise. Gradually the small lights of the town faded out. To
+all appearance, sleep had whelmed it for the night. The watchers on the
+farther shore stirred a little at times, but the blot they made in the
+moonshine remained fixed in the same spot. The only moving things were
+the khaki-clad sentinel and the blazing fireflies.
+
+Another hour rolled slowly by. The sentinel stopped and stood at a
+corner of the _tambo_. Now was as good a time as any for the Brazilians
+to start their perilous reconnaissance. Perhaps they had gone to sleep.
+He squinted at their hammocks. Yes, they were occupied. Stepping softly
+to the hammock of Pedro, he lifted the net to whisper to the occupant.
+Then he stared, dropped the net, and lifted Lourenco's curtain. A soft,
+self-derisive chuckle sounded in his throat as he stole out again.
+
+The hammocks were occupied, yes; but only by packs and rifles. Armed
+only with machetes, the two bushmen now were--where? He did not even
+know when or which way they had gone. Fine sentinel, wasn't he, to let
+two full-grown men sneak away right under his nose? And if they could
+get out so slick, why couldn't somebody else--a murderous Red Bone, for
+instance--get in with equal facility?
+
+Wherefore he became all the more alert. Instead of resuming his slow
+pace, he stood quiet at a corner, scrutinizing everything within his
+range of vision, listening more intently than ever. Two or three times
+he leaned forward and lifted his piece as some splashing noise in the
+creek came to him; but each time the cannibal guards on the other bank
+also sprang to see what caused the sound, then grunted to one another
+and relaxed, so he knew it was made by piscatory or reptilian life. Near
+him nothing moved. And the moon sailed on westward, smoothly, steadily
+measuring off the silent hours of the night watch.
+
+Then all at once every nerve in him strained toward the back of the
+_tambo_. Something was there! He had not heard it--seen it--smelled
+it--but he felt it; a nameless thing that did not belong there. With
+smooth speed he pivoted, looked, listened. Nothing there.
+
+Motionless, feeling slightly creepy, concealed under the roof corner, he
+waited. A sound came--a stealthy sound. Something was creeping in.
+Lourenco and Pedro, perhaps? Stooping low, he peered along the ground
+under the hammocks.
+
+A man was coming--coming on all-fours like an animal. He was too
+stealthy to be either of the Brazilians. Knowlton glimpsed him only
+dimly, but he was sure this was no man who belonged here. And now, as on
+a previous occasion almost identical in its circumstances, the watchman
+acted in accordance with Tim Ryan's General Order Number Thirteen.
+
+In three jumps he was upon the invader. His gun butt crashed down on the
+rising head. The other collapsed on the ground.
+
+Swiftly Knowlton snapped a match with his thumb-nail. The sudden flare
+half blinded him, but what he saw made him suck in his breath. When the
+match went out he turned the senseless body over, drew his pocket
+flashlight, stabbed its white ray downward. Then he committed the
+unpardonable sin of the army--he dropped his rifle.
+
+Dark haired, dark bearded, streaked with red dye and bleeding slightly
+at the nose, at his feet lay the man for whom the indomitable trio had
+traveled thousands of miles and dared all the deaths of the jungle--the
+Raposa.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+SHADOWS OF THE NIGHT
+
+
+"Rod! Wake up!"
+
+The tense whisper aroused McKay instantly. With one sweep of the arm his
+net was torn aside and he leaped out with pistol drawn.
+
+"Right, Merry. What is it?"
+
+"We've got him! Look!"
+
+The electric ray again streaked the gloom. The astounded captain did not
+drop his gun, but he came near it. For a long minute he stood as in a
+trance. When he attempted to holster his weapon he fumbled three times
+for the sheath before he found it.
+
+"Whew!" he breathed. "Have you killed him?"
+
+"Nope--don't think so. Lord! I hope not! Now that I think of it, I did
+give him a mighty solid smash. Used the butt. He was crawling in here,
+and naturally I didn't stop to ask for his card. Feel his head."
+
+McKay complied. His exploring fingers found only a huge bump under the
+thick hair.
+
+"No, his skull's whole. Didn't even split the scalp. You crowned him
+hard, but unless he got concussion he's still useful. His nosebleed
+comes from hitting the ground, I think. Turn off the light. Are you
+still on guard?"
+
+"Yes. The Brazilians are out."
+
+"Take a turn and see that all's clear. Can't tell what might break any
+minute now. Leave your flash here."
+
+Passing the flat, nickel light-box to the captain, Knowlton retrieved
+his gun from the ground and resumed his patrol. Slight as the
+disturbance had been, uneasiness was in the air. The savages on the far
+shore were up, peering at the _tambo_ and muttering to one another.
+Measuring the distance, the lieutenant saw that, though they had
+undoubtedly seen the flashlight switched on and off and made out the
+movements of men, they could not have discerned what lay on the ground
+beyond the hammocks. Nearer at hand, Tucu and a couple of the Mayorunas
+were awake and looking out. But the sight of the sentinel strolling up
+and down in apparent unconcern and the absence of light in the _tambo_
+gradually quieted the suspicions on both sides of the water. Soon the
+Red Bones squatted again and the Mayorunas lay back with minds at ease.
+
+Then a dim sheen of light showed for a time at the back of the white
+men's shelter, fading out after a few minutes into the usual gloom.
+McKay had pulled a blanket over himself and the unconscious man, masking
+his torch glare from any watching eye while he studied the face and form
+of the invader. After the faint radiance vanished certain sounds came to
+the sentry's ears. Then McKay's tall figure loomed in the vague
+moonshine. Knowlton stopped beside him.
+
+"It's Rand," the captain vouchsafed in an undertone. "No question of it.
+Features identical, though face is drawn. White hair mark, broken nose,
+green eyes. I opened one eye. Got a bad foot, partly healed; looks as if
+he'd torn it on a stub. Poor devil seems nearly starved."
+
+"So? Then that's why he sneaked in like that--wanted to steal some grub.
+Those mutts over yonder probably haven't fed him since he got hurt."
+
+"That's it. He's had to do his own foraging, and his foot has given him
+mighty little chance. Damn those brutes!"
+
+"Right! But now what? Look out that he doesn't sneak away again."
+
+"He won't. I tied his feet. He's in Pedro's hammock, still dead to the
+world. If he wakes up and starts to yell I'll gag him. We've got to get
+away now as soon as we can."
+
+"How?"
+
+"Don't know. By water, perhaps. Wish those bushman were here. Haven't
+heard any noise over there, have you?"
+
+"All quiet. They're safe--or dead."
+
+"Hm! Confounded foolishness, anyway. But we've no means of getting out
+until they're back. Couldn't desert them, besides. What time is it?"
+
+"Ten-thirty. You go on watch at midnight."
+
+"I'm on watch now, inside. They may be back any time. If they don't show
+up in the next couple of hours I'll send Tucu to find out why. We'll
+have to get those canoes over here, too. Water leaves no trail."
+
+He turned back into the hut, leaving Knowlton figuring chances. To
+obtain those canoes was a man-sized job. To put the Red Bone guards out
+of action without arousing the whole tribe was an even bigger job. But
+no boats could be brought over until the outpost was silenced, that was
+sure.
+
+Another half-hour crept past. Still no noise from the town, no
+suspicious move on the other shore. Then from the _tambo_ itself came a
+low mumble of voices. Knowlton stepped swiftly into it. As noiselessly
+as they had gone the two bushmen had returned.
+
+In his usual concise phrases McKay was informing them of the capture of
+the Raposa. With his back to the stream and the flashlight held close to
+his body, he played the light for an instant on the face of the still
+unconscious man. Then, once more in darkness, he asserted:
+
+"Now that we have him, we must get out of here. Only chance to do that
+is to get the canoes. With them we can at least be away from this town
+by sunrise, and it will take the Red Bones just so much longer to find
+our trail where we take to the bush. We'll get a flying start that way.
+Anything else to suggest?"
+
+"That is the best plan, Capitao," Lourenco agreed. For the first time
+since the Americans had known him his voice held a note of suppressed
+excitement. "It is the only plan worth while. And I do not think we
+shall have to take to our legs soon--if at all. I believe this creek
+connects with that which flows past the Monitaya _malocas_. We have
+learned some things. _Por Deus!_ If only we had known the Raposa was
+here!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because then we could have brought company with us. Senhores, guess
+what the barred house holds."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Women of the Mayorunas! Girls stolen from Monitaya and other
+settlements!"
+
+"Jumping Judas!" ejaculated Knowlton. "Are you sure?"
+
+"Sure, comrades! These foul Red Bones are the men who have been lurking
+around the Mayoruna tribe houses and capturing girls who went into the
+bush. They have taken the prisoners to the water, where the trails
+always were lost and where they could find hiding places until night,
+then drive their canoes past the clearings and get out of that country.
+So there must be some water connection by which these men travel, and by
+which we too can travel. If we go downstream we are almost sure to find
+it by daylight."
+
+"But why--what's the idea of their stealing the girls? For victims? If
+so, how are the girls still alive?"
+
+"Do you not see, senhor?" Pedro broke in, impatiently. "Did not Umanuh
+ask if we would pay more than the other Blackbeard for the Raposa? What
+other Blackbeard?"
+
+"Schwandorf!" the Americans blurted, simultaneously.
+
+"Not so loud! Schwandorf, of course! Umanuh works with the German. He
+catches girls by stealth and sells them to the German to add to his
+slave gangs. While the Mayorunas all blame the Peruvians for the
+disappearances, Umanuh works unsuspected. He is holding these women
+until Schwandorf comes again--and it may be that Schwandorf is not far
+off at this moment. Now that we have come seeking the wild man, Umanuh
+at once thinks of selling him also; and he wonders whether we or
+Schwandorf will pay the more for him."
+
+"By thunder! I believe you're right!" Knowlton coincided. "He's stalling
+for time, holding us here while Schwandorf comes up, I'll bet. No wonder
+he and his men are wary of the Mayorunas--they thought we'd come to
+snoop around and catch 'em with the goods. You fellows must have done a
+mighty slick job to find out this stuff without getting caught. Isn't
+the house guarded at night?"
+
+"Indeed it is! Two clubmen are there now, and there is only the one
+door. Not even a window. But Lourenco worked a small hole between two
+logs at the back while I watched the clubmen, and through the hole he
+whispered with one of the women inside. If only we had known the wild
+man was here we could have jumped the guards and tried to bring back the
+women. But of course your business about the Raposa had to be thought of
+first, so all we could do was to tell them friends were here."
+
+For a few seconds there was the silence of thought. Then Knowlton
+chuckled.
+
+"I'll say we have our hands full this night. Now we not only have to get
+ourselves and Rand out of here, but also rescue the fair damsels from
+the clutches of the ogre. 'Twon't do to leave them here while we go back
+to Monitaya and get the rest of his army. By the time we could come back
+they'd be gone--one way or another. What's done has to be done now or
+never."
+
+"Right!" McKay commended. "We'll have to save the women, of course.
+Question is--how?"
+
+Lourenco answered at once.
+
+"My idea, Capitao, is this: We two will return. With us we will take
+Tucu. The three of us can handle those guards quietly. We must have
+Tucu, because the women do not know us and might balk at the last
+moment. Women are queer creatures, and these might think themselves
+safer inside prison walls than following two strange men through the
+night; but Tucu can handle them. When once we are clear of the houses
+Tucu can lead the women to the bank above here, and we shall try for the
+canoes. Then it will be fast work to get away, but if we have good
+fortune it can be done."
+
+"Confound it! You fellows are taking all the risks! Can't you take more
+men--"
+
+"No. No man but Tucu. He has a cool head. These others, if they knew,
+would go blood-mad and attack the Red Bones to avenge their lost women,
+and so would get us all killed. Now I will talk with Tucu."
+
+He slipped into the Mayoruna shelter and returned with the cannibal
+leader, whom he led to the far side of the _tambo_ before speaking.
+Then, in whispers which the other tribesmen could not overhear, he
+explained the situation. Knowlton took another turn or two along his
+post, finding that the Red Bones across the water were stirring about
+and evidently aware that something was going on; but they made no move
+either to get into a canoe or to send a man to the houses beyond. As he
+stopped again at the corner near the whispering pair he heard Tucu
+grinding his teeth, and as the savage turned his face toward the Red
+Bone outpost it was a mask of murder. But he spoke no word as he slipped
+back to his own men.
+
+"He will wake another man and tell him what to do," Lourenco explained.
+"But only we four shall know of the women until they are freed. Will one
+of you lend Tucu a machete? He may need a weapon, and he cannot carry
+his big bow on this trip."
+
+A few minutes later the three crept out behind the _tambo_, Tucu
+gripping McKay's machete. As a final word Lourenco said: "Our men here
+may move about a little after a time, but do not try to keep them quiet.
+It is a part of the plan."
+
+With that he was gone. Listen as they might, the Americans could hear no
+sound to indicate that three men now were traversing the black tangle
+beyond.
+
+McKay took up his rifle and assumed the sentry work. Knowlton sat in his
+hammock, grateful for the chance to rest his weary legs. From the
+hammock where the Raposa lay no sound came. With a worried frown the
+lieutenant leaned over him and laid hand on his heart. After a while he
+sat up again in relief.
+
+"Lord! I sure knocked him cold!" was his thought. "But he's still with
+us, and there's no use in reviving him now; the less noise over here the
+better. Hope I didn't jar his brains loose altogether; he might wake up
+a murderous maniac. Poor devil! A millionaire, yet half starved and more
+than half nutty."
+
+He glanced at the dim scene before the hut. The moon now had journeyed
+so far westward that the creeping shadows of the tall trees had moved
+out almost to the creek, and the two crude shelters and the sentinel
+were surrounded by dense gloom. The Red Bone men opposite must rely on
+their ears alone hereafter, for they could not see through this
+darkness. McKay was visible enough to his own party, but not to the
+enemy. The blond man in the hammock watched the somber figure of his
+comrade, followed the flight of a big firefly whose light floated near,
+thought of the two bushmen out in the dark, and looked again at the
+still form of Rand.
+
+"Drifters all," he soliloquized. "The fireflies and Rod and Tim and I
+and those Brazilian dare-devils--all floating around because we can't
+keep still, and never getting anywhere. And you, you silly-ass Rand,
+have a mint waiting for you up home, and we have to come find you and
+lead you up there and shove your nose into it. And if you get your
+brains back you'll be a nine days' wonder and a hero of the jungle and
+all that, and the girls will all tumble over you--because you've got a
+couple of millions in your sock. And we fellows who yanked you out of
+hell by the left hind leg can pocket our pay and go jump off the dock,
+for all anybody cares. Ho-hum! All the same, I'd rather be me than you,
+old thing. Free to drift and able to handle myself. You can have the
+money and the moths that hang around it."
+
+With which he yawned, squinted again at the sinister figure squatting
+out yonder in the moonshine, arose, and made himself useful. Working
+very quietly, he took down three of the hammocks, rolled them up, laid
+them at the corner nearest the creek; made up the packs by sense of
+touch and placed them and the rifles of the absent pair in the same
+place. Then he lifted the Raposa from the one remaining hammock, laid
+him on the packs, rolled up the hammock itself, and put it under the
+unconscious man's head. If given time when the crisis came, he meant to
+save all equipment. If not, Rand lay where he could be grabbed without
+delay.
+
+Before he completed the work he became aware that the Mayorunas all were
+awake. Not only awake, but moving stealthily about, as Lourenco had
+predicted. McKay also knew it and stepped back into the hut, where
+Knowlton told him what he had done. But so softly did the men of
+Monitaya move that the Red Bone watchers showed no sign of alarm. Both
+the Americans observed, however, that the cannibals across the stream
+had their heads together and that occasionally one looked up at the
+little moon.
+
+"Get that, Rod? They're waiting for the shadows to crawl over there and
+cover them and the water. They know that then we can't see what they're
+up to. I'm betting they intend to pull some dirty work after that."
+
+"Yep. But intention and accomplishment are two different birds. Wonder
+what these Mayorunas are fixing to do. Wish I could talk their
+language."
+
+"Tucu evidently left orders for them to get up at a certain time, but
+why I don't know. We'd better let them alone."
+
+The shadow line passed out upon the water, slipping by infinitesimal
+gradations across its mirror surface. The Mayorunas had become quiet.
+The whites waited in silent suspense for they knew not what. Far out in
+the forest a jaguar gave his coughing roar at intervals. Little by
+little the Red Bone men arose from their squat until they stood erect. A
+tense stillness held both forces. And the shadows crawled on--on--and
+reached the farther bank.
+
+Then a Red Bone man shoved his head forward, squinting upstream as if he
+had heard something move in the rank grass. He began to sneak softly in
+that direction. At that moment, from the water's edge a little above the
+camp, sounded a loud hiss.
+
+Before the sound died a sudden thrum of bow cords filled the air. A
+whisper of five-foot shafts speeding over the water--a rapid-fire series
+of tiny impacts--a couple of short groans--the thumps of falling
+bodies--and the Red Bone outpost was no more. Shot through and through
+by the deadly war arrows of the Mayorunas, they were dead before they
+struck the ground. And from the men of Monitaya sounded one short,
+subdued "Hah!" of savage satisfaction.
+
+Up from the ground where that hiss had sounded rose a tall figure which
+waved its arms and danced about in impromptu signals. Then it ran for
+the canoes. Out from the gloom upstream other figures took shape,
+running fast for the same point. With one simultaneous movement Knowlton
+and McKay seized the Raposa and rushed with him to the stream.
+
+"Senhores!" sounded Pedro's voice, low but tense, across the water. "Be
+ready!"
+
+"Ready and waiting!" snapped McKay. "Who are those people. Your women?"
+
+"_Si._ We are not discovered--"
+
+Across his words smote a long shrill yell from the town.
+
+"_Por Deus._ We _are_ discovered! Get our rifles, for the love of _Deus
+Padre_."
+
+He leaped into a canoe, drove it headlong across, and dived for the
+_tambo_. Behind him the other figures dashed panting up to the landing.
+Tucu's voice rasped in swift commands. The fugitives swarmed into other
+dugouts. The Mayoruna men, still ignorant of the identity of these
+people, but assured by Tucu's voice and manner that they were not
+enemies, lowered their weapons and rushed for the water. Up in the town
+the yelling swiftly grew into a roar, and running figures came pelting
+toward the creek.
+
+The canoes struck the bank. Some were partly filled, some empty and in
+tow. Into Pedro's canoe the whites bundled the Raposa, while the
+Mayorunas got into anything within reach. Lourenco appeared from nowhere
+and urged the Americans to open fire. As he spoke, arrows thudded into
+the ground and the water.
+
+"Take this man and go!" rasped McKay. "We're losing our equipment,
+but--"
+
+His rifle leaped to his shoulder. Flame spat from it. From the van of
+the charging Red Bones shrilled a death scream.
+
+Again and again the captain's gun cracked. Knowlton's joined in. Before
+their rifles grew silent the blunt roar of Pedro's repeater broke out.
+And with the emptying of their long guns the Americans drew their short
+ones, and in a concerted ripping crash the forty-fives volleyed death
+and dismay into the oncoming cannibals.
+
+The rush was checked. For a few seconds the Red Bones wavered and milled
+about. Into their mass poured a cloud of arrows and blowgun darts from
+the silent but no less deadly weapons of the Mayorunas. As the whites
+paused to reload, Pedro opened a new blast from Lourenco's rifle, which
+his comrade had passed to him on the run. Lourenco was not shooting, but
+working madly and alone to save the equipment. And, thanks to the
+renewed deadly fire of the guns, he saved it.
+
+Before the wicked belch of the three rifles and the two automatics the
+Red Bones gave back more and more. Their arrows plunged all around the
+fighting men, but they fell at random, for the gunmen and the canoes
+were virtually invisible in the deep shadows. Downstream, Tucu's harsh
+voice jarred in commands as he straightened out the line of boats.
+
+At the next lull in the firing Lourenco panted: "In, comrades! We are
+loaded. In!"
+
+"Great guns! Are you still here?" snapped McKay. "I told you--"
+
+"In! Talk later. Come!"
+
+The three gun fighters swiftly obeyed. With a powerful heave Lourenco
+sent the canoe after the others. Americans, Brazilians, and the Raposa
+hunched up among the packs, all went sliding down a jungle Styx.
+
+A moment later the Red Bone warriors, taking heart from the cessation of
+firing, poured an avalanche of arrows into the spot where they had been.
+And as the canoe, last in the escaping line, was swallowed up in the
+impenetrable blackness of the forest a hair-raising screech of
+diabolical fury blended with a swift succession of splashes back where
+the cannibals were plunging headlong into the stream to reach the dead
+or wounded men whom they vainly hoped to find on the farther shore.
+
+"I told you to take this man and go!" McKay fumed. "By disobeying orders
+you risked losing him."
+
+"Oh, pipe down, Rod!" remonstrated Knowlton. "If they had, where'd we be
+now? This was the last canoe."
+
+"_Si._ It is so," added Lourenco, his voice hard edged. "As it is, the
+man and the equipment and you also are here. And let me tell you this,
+Capitao Makkay, whether you like it or not: Pedro and I would see this
+wild man and a million others like him in a hotter place than this
+before we would abandon fighting comrades."
+
+To which McKay, finding no adequate answer, made none whatever.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+THE SIREN OF WAR
+
+
+Like a fleet manned by sightless sailors the line of boats blundered on
+through the blackness. With no guiding light, the canoes bumped the
+banks and collided with one another in perilous confusion. Speed was
+impossible, yet speed was imperative. Knowlton and his little flashlight
+solved the problem.
+
+"Say, fellows, let's take the lead," he suggested. "This little light
+isn't much, but it's something, and there are some extra batteries in my
+haversack when this burns out. We can see a little way ahead, and pass
+back the word to the rest. What say?"
+
+"_Na terra dos cegos quem tem um olho e rei_--in blindman's land he who
+has one eye is king," said Pedro. "That little white eye in your box may
+save us all. Lourenco, tell those ahead to let us pass."
+
+Without question the preceding dugouts swerved, and the boat of the
+white men slipped by. At the head of the line they found Tucu and his
+crew struggling manfully to make progress without wrecking the whole
+fleet at the turns. Vast relief and instant acceptance of the new
+leadership followed Lourenco's explanation. At once the floating column
+began to pick up speed. And it was well that it did.
+
+Howls of baffled hate came faintly through the tree mass from the Red
+Bone town. Some time later more yells of rage sounded, much nearer--back
+at a place on the creek which the last boat had cleared only a few
+minutes previously. Some of the Umanuh men had made torches and run
+along one of the Red Bone trails to a bend in the stream, only to find
+the water bare of everything but dying ripples.
+
+Whether the enemy attempted to follow in canoes the escaping party never
+knew, for none succeeded in overtaking the rearmost boat. And after that
+one snarling uproar on the creek bank they heard no more of the land
+pursuit. The narrow margin of safety gained by the aid of the flashlight
+proved enough to give a commanding lead, and from that time on the only
+obstacles to their retreat were those of darkness and winding waters.
+
+Hour after hour Knowlton squatted in the extreme bow, picking out the
+turns and snags just ahead and passing the word back to Lourenco, who,
+in the stern, steered in accordance with his orders and relayed the
+course to Tucu, just behind. Amidships, Pedro and McKay plied steady
+paddles and the Raposa lay all but forgotten on the baggage. There were
+no halts. If any boat back in the blackness got into difficulties it
+extricated itself as best it could, unaided by the rest, and fell into a
+new place in the column.
+
+At last a wan light, which was scarcely a light, but rather a lessening
+of the density, came about the stream. The renewed racket of birds and
+beasts announced that up overhead the sky had paled into dawn. Slowly
+the nearest tree trunks began to take shape in the void, and presently
+the shore line became visible to all eyes. At the same time Knowlton's
+tiny lamp dimmed and faded out.
+
+"Another battery gone," he announced, opening the case and dropping its
+contents into the creek. "Ho-yo-ho-hum! Gee! I'm all in! Eyes feel like
+a couple of burnt holes. Well, gents, I move that at the first available
+spot we go ashore, feed our faces, look at the ladies, and perform our
+morning salute to Umanuh--said salute consisting of applying the right
+thumb to the end of the nose and snappily twiddling four fingers."
+
+"Motion carried." McKay's set face relaxed. Then, his glance dropping to
+the Raposa, it tightened again. "Oh, hullo, Rand! How you feeling?"
+
+The unconscious man was unconscious no longer. Moreover, his expression
+was not that of one just emerging from a stupor and bewildered as to his
+surroundings. Though he had made no movement to change his position, his
+eyes indicated that he had been awake for some time. They dwelt steadily
+on McKay, then strayed past the captain to Pedro, Lourenco, and the
+first Mayoruna crew following a few feet behind. His face was
+inscrutable, and he spoke no word.
+
+"You're with friends. Understand? Friends. You're going home. These
+Indians are friends, too. Get that? _Friends!_"
+
+The green eyes hung on McKay's face again; but, as before, no answer
+came in word, movement, or expression.
+
+"No good, Rod," said Knowlton, who could not see the rescued man's face,
+but watched McKay's. "'Fraid I knocked his last brains down his throat.
+Dead from the neck up."
+
+"I don't know about that. He doesn't look vacant. See here, Rand. We're
+going to land and eat! You hungry? Uh-huh. Thought you'd understand
+that. He's alive, Merry. Maybe not all here, but enough to get us."
+
+"Good!"
+
+The blond man turned his attention downstream again. Soon he suggested,
+"How about landing at that little open space down there at the left,
+Lourenco?"
+
+"Very good, senhor. It looks dry."
+
+The canoe swerved and floated down to a spot on the left shore where
+bright light poured down from an opening in the overhead wall of
+foliage.
+
+"Now look here, Rand," warned the captain. "We'll untie you. But if you
+try to duck into the bush, now or later, you get shot. Shot!
+Understand?"
+
+He tapped his pistol, and the gray eyes boring into the green ones were
+hard as chilled steel. For the first time Rand responded--a slow, short
+nod.
+
+McKay cut the cord around the wild man's ankles, then stepped ashore and
+held out a hand. Rand arose quietly, jumped to the earth unassisted,
+lifted his bad foot and stared at it, then limped onward into a spot
+where the sun now shone bright and warm, and sat down to bask.
+
+"Have to fix that foot, I expect," yawned Knowlton. "But my eyes right
+now are one solid ache, and I'm going to rest them. Watch him, will you,
+Rod? Can't tell what he might do. Of course you wouldn't shoot him,
+but--"
+
+"Wouldn't I? Not to kill, no. But if he makes one break I'll drill a leg
+for him. He's going to the States!"
+
+"Sure. I'm with you all the way. Now beat it and let me repose myself."
+
+He bathed his eyes, then lay down in the canoe with a wet handkerchief
+across them. Pedro and Lourenco already were ashore and raiding the
+slender packs for food. The Mayorunas were debarking and watching each
+new boat as it drew up, their eyes on the women who had wielded paddles
+with them but whose faces they now saw closely for the first time. In
+the shaft of sunlight McKay stood tall and forbidding, rifle in the
+crook of one arm, hat pulled low, guarding the gaunt man at his feet and
+viewing the landing of the expedition.
+
+The women, all young, numbered eleven. Their skins looked slightly
+pallid, their eyes too big and black, their faces somewhat drawn--the
+results of close confinement and anxiety; but none showed any sign of
+abuse. For commercial reasons alone, Umanuh had seen to it that the
+woman flesh he held for sale should remain uninjured. Now, saved from
+the slave trail or worse, the girls showed no more emotion than if on a
+mere journey after turtles or fish. A few spoke to men whom they
+evidently knew. Others gathered in a dumb cluster and awaited whatever
+might come next. With these Tucu talked in gruff monosyllables.
+
+When all were ashore, a dozen of the men went into the jungle to hunt.
+The others sought firewood, inspected weapons, talked with one another
+and with the girls, who stared at McKay and asked who he was. A number
+of the warriors looked sourly at Rand, whose face still bore the Red
+Bone tribal streaks which now, to Mayoruna minds, was the insignia of
+the enemy. All knew he was the man who had been sought, all saw that he
+was not a Red Bone, but a white man; yet their mental reaction to the
+sight of the sinister red cross on the forehead and the straight cheek
+lines was rabidly hostile. McKay, all-seeing, decided to wash Rand's
+face for him before journeying much farther. But Rand himself gave no
+sign that he either knew or cared what the feeling of the Mayorunas
+might be. Utterly impassive, he stared back at them.
+
+Then one of the women pointed at him and said something to Tucu. The
+tall watchdog's jaw set a little harder as he waited the effect.
+Somewhat to his surprise, Tucu and a couple of the other men now gave
+Rand a more friendly look. Soon afterward Tucu passed Lourenco, who
+talked with him a few minutes. Catching the Brazilian's eye, the captain
+motioned him nearer and asked for any news.
+
+"Tucu says, Capitao, that most of these girls are from _malocas_ other
+than that of Monitaya, though some of Monitaya's women also are here.
+And one of them says this man, the Raposa, tried to release them a short
+time ago and was nearly killed by the Red Bones for it. They let him
+live only because he is crazy, and they fear to kill a crazy man."
+
+"What! He tried to get them clear?"
+
+"Yes. He opened the door and motioned for them to run, but before they
+could escape they were caught. He was badly beaten. You will remember
+that he was hiding behind that same house when Pedro and Senhor Knowlton
+saw him. Perhaps he meant to try again."
+
+"Hm! Crazy and wild, but a white man for all that. How did you manage to
+free the women?"
+
+"Very simple," was the cool answer. "We stabbed the guards, opened the
+door, and came back to the creek with the women."
+
+"Just like that, eh? And the guards made no resistance, I suppose."
+
+"Not much," grinned the bushman. "They were not allowed to."
+
+"I see. Very simple, as you say. About as simple as our calm and
+unhurried departure."
+
+"Something like that, Capitao. What do you desire for breakfast--salt
+fish and coffee, or coffee and salt fish?"
+
+"A little of everything, thanks. Here comes some monkey meat, too."
+
+The first of the hunters had returned, bringing two big red howlers.
+Others drifted in at intervals, and not one returned empty handed; for
+here in the virgin jungle the game was plentiful, particularly at this
+early hour. Soon the air was heavy with the odor of broiling meat, and
+from the fire of the Brazilians the fragrance of coffee was wafted to
+the nostrils of the recumbent Knowlton. He arose, swallowing fast.
+
+"Gee! I'm half drowned!" was his humorous complaint. "The smell of eats
+makes my mouth water so fast I have to gasp for air. Must tickle your
+nose, too, eh, Rand, old top?"
+
+Rand, famished though he was, gave no sign of assent or of hunger. In
+fact, he gave no sign of anything. Stoically he sat, eyes front.
+
+"By thunder! the man's got pride!" the lieutenant added, in a lower
+tone. "Almost ready to keel over from lack of food, but stiff as a
+cigar-store Indian. Darned if I'm not beginning to respect him!"
+
+Tucu approached, carrying two big monkey haunches. One he offered to
+McKay, the other to Rand. The latter's immobility vanished in a flash.
+With a lightning grab he seized the proffered meat and sank his teeth in
+it. As he wolfed down the tough flesh the three men standing over
+exchanged glances. Tucu laid a hand on his stomach and pressed inward,
+signifying that the man had long gone hungry. The others nodded. Then
+they split the other haunch between them and fell to gnawing.
+
+Lourenco, bringing coffee to the captain, asked Tucu in what direction
+the Monitaya houses lay. Without hesitation the Indian pointed off to
+the left. The Brazilian glanced at the creek, estimating its general
+direction and rate of flow, then returned to his fire.
+
+Offered coffee, Rand took it and sipped it with evident relish. Likewise
+he accepted a cigarette, which he puffed like a man just learning to
+smoke--or one who has not smoked for years. For his meat, his drink, and
+his smoke he gave no indication of gratitude. His attitude was as
+indifferent and matter-of-fact as if he were one of the Mayorunas. When
+his smoke was ended he began inspecting his bad foot.
+
+"Let's see that," said Knowlton, dropping on one knee. "Looks pretty
+sore. Yes, it's more than sore; it's infected. How'd you get it,
+anyway?"
+
+No answer. Knowlton probed his face keenly. Rand straightened out his
+legs, wriggled his toes, and scowled.
+
+"Queer!" muttered the lieutenant, rising. "He looks as if he actually
+didn't know how he got that wound. You'd think he'd remember that much,
+anyhow. I sure am afraid his head is all scrambled up."
+
+He went to the canoe, returned with his meager medical kit, and knelt
+again.
+
+"Now listen here, Rand. I don't know how well you understand me, but I'm
+taking the chance. This foot has to be opened up and cleaned out.
+Otherwise you're going to have serious trouble with it. I'm going to
+hurt you. If you raise a row you'll get an anaesthetic--a swift punch
+under the ear. Better sit still and make no fuss."
+
+With which he went to work. He did a thorough job, and there was no
+doubt that it hurt. But Rand gave no trouble, nor even a sign of
+pain--except that he dug his fingers into the dirt.
+
+"Good boy!" the amateur surgeon approved, when he finished. "You're a
+Spartan--if you happen to remember what that is. Now we'll move on. But
+before we go, wash your face good and hard. Get that tribe paint off.
+These Indians with us don't like it. You're no Indian, anyhow; you're
+white, like us. Savvy? White man. Wash off paint!"
+
+He rolled up his kit and returned to the canoe. The Mayorunas, men and
+women, were entering their own craft. Rand sat motionless a moment,
+McKay and the Brazilians watching him keenly. Slowly then he got up of
+his own accord, limped to the water's edge, and began to scrub his face.
+
+When he desisted the marks still showed, for the red dye clung
+stubbornly to his skin; but they were fainter than before. The other men
+eyed him thoughtfully, none speaking. He settled himself in his former
+place, curled up, and began to doze.
+
+"A queer fish!" Pedro said, softly. "Is he crazy or not?"
+
+"Hanged if I know," replied McKay. "He's no maniac, anyhow. I'd give
+real money to know just what his mental condition is. But we can forget
+him for a while. I'm going to let you fellows sleep by turns now. I had
+some sleep last night; you've had none at all. Merry, your eyes need
+rest. You curl up in the bow and snooze one hour. Then another man, and
+so on. And how about letting Tucu lead the parade again?"
+
+"Excellent, Capitao! I was thinking of that." Lourenco talked to Tucu,
+who swung out into the current. The boat of the white men followed, then
+the others. At a steady cruising speed the brigade surged on downstream.
+
+Knowlton's allotted hour passed. Pedro took his place and was instantly
+asleep. In turn he was aroused, and Lourenco laid down his paddle. But
+just then Tucu's canoe slowed and floated in to the left bank.
+
+The others backed water and looked at a very narrow ravine--almost a
+cleft--in a rising hillside. Through it led a lane of water. From the
+third boat, in which were two women of the Monitaya tribe, now came
+voices carrying information to the Indian leader. At once he turned his
+boat into the cleft.
+
+"This is the connection we have been seeking." Lourenco explained. "The
+women say the boats of their captors came through this crack in the
+hill. At the end we shall find the creek of Monitaya."
+
+The women spoke truth. After threading their way along the weedy
+water-path, which was barely wide enough to give passage for the boats,
+they emerged at a slant into another stream. Down this, with the sure
+instinct for direction of the hereditary jungle-dweller, Tucu turned his
+prow without asking the women whether to go with or against the current.
+Once more on the waters of their home creek, the Mayorunas quickened
+their strokes and howled merrily on toward their _malocas_.
+
+Lourenco took his nap and resumed his place. Hour after hour the fleet
+sped on. Noon passed without a halt, the paddlers munching at whatever
+fragments remained from breakfast. By turns the Americans and Brazilians
+each got another hour's sleep, McKay consenting to relax when all his
+mates had rested. Rand dozed and awoke at intervals, seeming content and
+comfortable despite his cramped position.
+
+By four o'clock even the Mayorunas began to lag in their strokes.
+Excluding the halt at sunrise, they now had been journeying for fifteen
+hours, in the last nine of which they had covered many miles of
+serpentine water. The heat of the day and the constant drive of the
+paddles had taken their toll, and now the body of every man fiercely
+demanded more food. McKay, knowing that in jungle travel distance is not
+a matter of miles, but of hours, had begun to figure that the journey
+which had taken nearly five days of overland work might be completed
+that night by the swiftly moving canoes. But now, recognizing the signs
+of exhaustion, he realized that without some powerful spur the Indians
+would not attempt to reach the home _malocas_ until the morrow.
+
+Then the spur came. Even as Tucu began scanning the shores for a good
+camp site, he and every other Mayoruna suddenly ceased paddling and
+threw up his head. Faint and far, a xylophonic call of beaten wooden
+bars rapped across the jungle, rising and falling in swift, regular
+cadence--a sirenical flow and ebb of sound waves. Over and over it
+undulated, rapid, incessant, imperative.
+
+A chorus of excited grunts broke from the canoe brigade. The dugout of
+Tucu leaped away like a roweled horse. Lourenco and Pedro buried their
+paddles in mighty strokes, hurling their boat ahead to keep from being
+run down by those behind.
+
+Lourenco barked at Tucu, who flung back an answer.
+
+"Paddle hard, Capitao! If we do not keep up we shall be wrecked. That
+message is the war call of the Mayorunas--calling in the hunters from
+the forest to take arms against an enemy. We must race now with these
+madmen around us, or we go under. Paddle!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+STRATEGY
+
+
+In the last light of the fast-fading day the canoes darted from the
+forest into the clearing where stood the Monitaya _malocas_.
+
+Long before their arrival the siren call had ceased, but there had been
+no lessening of speed by the racing dugouts. On the contrary, the last
+long mile had been covered in a final desperate spurt, the paddles
+swinging in swift unison to the accompaniment of a ferocious chant of
+one syllable: "Hough! Hough! Hough!" This explosive cadence had echoed
+down the stream ahead of them; and now, as the panting crews emerged
+from the jungle, they found themselves flanked by a long line of their
+fellow-warriors, bristling with drawn arrows and ready spear points. But
+of the enemy whose presence that great xylophone had betokened there was
+no sign.
+
+At sight of the familiar feather bonnets of their own men the tense
+Monitayans let their weapons slowly sink. And when Tucu, leaping ashore,
+gaspingly demanded news of the fight, the line dissolved into a mob
+which rushed to welcome him and his mates. In the first few breaths it
+was learned that no fight had yet taken place, but that all the warriors
+had been brought in and ordered to prepare to march at the next sunrise;
+and that the sudden war call had been sent out as the result of the
+arrival of a stranger.
+
+Then the crowd parted, and through it came striding two men whose
+appearance caused the white men to erupt into hoarse shouts of greeting.
+One, whose hard face swiftly relaxed into a half smile of relief, was
+the great chief himself. The other, whose jutting jaw suddenly dropped
+and whose blue eyes opened in incredulity, was Tim--Tim, once more
+strong and florid and aggressive, gripping his rifle, astounded at the
+sight of his comrades standing there alive and alert. They soon learned
+why.
+
+Dropping his gun, he sprang at them with an inarticulate roar of
+welcome. He wrung their hands, pounded their shoulders, laughed, cried,
+swore, all at once. Then he burst out:
+
+"Glory be! Ye're alive, homelier 'n ever and tough as tripe! We thought
+ye was wiped out sure! We was all set to start in the mornin' and pull
+them Red Bones to pieces. Mebbe we'll do it yet, too. How'd ye break
+through? Did ye kill Sworn-off and his gang?"
+
+"Schwandorf? Gang? Haven't seen anybody but Red Bones--though we sure
+saw plenty of them," replied Knowlton. "What are you talking about?"
+
+"Then ye missed him by about one point windage. When'd ye leave? Last
+night? I bet he's there by now. Gee! Where'd ye git them girls? And
+who's this guy? Great gosh! Is he the Raposy? Wal, for the love o'
+Mike--"
+
+"Tim!" broke in McKay. "What's all this about? Now wait. This is the
+Raposa. These girls are Mayoruna women held prisoners by the Red Bones.
+We got them last night and lit out in the middle of a general
+engagement. Now open up with your news."
+
+"Right, Cap. We got a visitor to-day--old friend of ourn--li'l' old
+Hozy, the only white guy in that Peruvian crew we had. He's all dolled
+up like an Injun--shaved face, tribe paint, and so on. He come through
+the Injun country that way--I dunno yet how he done it, him bein' a
+Peruvian and all, but he got through, and he says Sworn-off and a whole
+gang of bad eggs is back here to git this Raposy guy and all the girls
+they can lay hands on. He says Sworn-off's got them Red Bones workin'
+for him, and you fellers must be massacreed sure by now.
+
+"Good thing I was here when he come, or he'd be cut up and in the
+stewpot. Monitaya's a good skate, but he sure is poison to anything
+Peruvian, and soon as Hozy begun to try to talk he got wise and dang
+near bumped him off. I got him to cool down some, and he believes Hozy's
+tellin' the truth, but even at that they got Hozy tied up like a dog.
+Come look at him."
+
+But it was necessary to wait awhile for Tucu and Lourenco to tell
+Monitaya the tale of what had taken place; for the chief demanded
+immediate and full details, and not until he had them would he return to
+his _maloca_ and his hammock throne. By that time the little moon was
+again ruler of the sky and the keen hunger of the voyagers had grown
+ravenous. Followed by the rescued and the rescuers, he then stalked into
+the tribal house and to his usual place, where he commanded that food be
+brought.
+
+On the ground, directly in front of the chief's hammock, sat a gaunt,
+painted Indian around whose neck was a stout noose, the other end of the
+cord being held by a muscular savage whose skull-smashing club was
+gripped loosely in his other fist. As the whites reached them the noosed
+man's face cracked in a grin.
+
+"Greetings, senores," said the voice of Jose. "You will pardon me for
+remaining seated, yes? The man behind me is itching for an excuse to
+crush my head."
+
+"Jose!" exclaimed both Knowlton and McKay. Though Tim had said Jose was
+"tied like a dog," they had not thought to find the expression literal
+truth. The sight angered them and they turned to Lourenco.
+
+"Tell Monitaya we want this man freed!" McKay snapped. At his peremptory
+tone the cannibal chieftain looked oddly at him, and when Lourenco
+translated the demand--though in a more diplomatic manner--he scowled.
+But he gave the clubman the word and the rope was lifted from the
+prisoner's neck.
+
+"_Gracias, amigos_," he bowed. "If I still remain seated, it is because
+I am very weary--and I have not eaten since yesterday."
+
+His thin face and his projecting ribs not only corroborated his simple
+announcement, but indicated that for more than one day his food and rest
+had been almost _nil_. Naked, painted, minus his fierce mustache and
+flamboyant headkerchief, he appeared a far different man than the
+domineering _puntero_ of a short time back. But his bold black eyes, his
+reckless grin, and his mocking tone proved him the same swashbuckling
+Jose, undaunted by hunger, exhaustion, or his position as prisoner of
+man eaters whose enmity was implacable.
+
+"Well, you're going to eat now, or we'll know why not!" vowed Knowlton.
+"We understand that you brought a warning to Monitaya. Is this his way
+of treating men who risk their lives to befriend him?"
+
+Jose shrugged.
+
+"Once an enemy, always an enemy. That is their rule. And do not think
+that I traveled the bush and threw myself into this snake heap from love
+of Monitaya. I do not care if he and all his race are blown to hell. I
+am here because, as I once told you, Jose Martinez never forgets. Thank
+you, senor, I will eat now and talk later."
+
+Deftly he extracted a chunk of meat from a clay pot which had been
+placed before Knowlton and in turn tendered to him. Monitaya watched him
+eat, but gave no sign of disapproval; and the Americans, and even the
+Brazilians, made an aggressive show of friendship toward the lone
+Peruvian for the express benefit of the chief. They knew well that by
+their rescue of the Mayoruna women they had made their own position
+among these people virtually impregnable, and that their recognition of
+Jose as a friend probably would be his only bulwark. Wherefore they left
+no doubt in the minds of the watchers as to where he stood in their
+regard.
+
+Monitaya, sitting in regal dignity, looked down upon two parties of
+seven feasting with famished speed--the rescued women who were not
+members of his own tribe, and the four Americans, two Brazilians, and
+one Peruvian. All the others had scattered--Tucu and his band to their
+own family triangles, and the four Monitaya girls to become the nuclei
+of feminine groups which demanded intimate accounts of their capture and
+treatment by the captors.
+
+To the strange women at his feet the chief paid scant attention now,
+though he meant to interrogate them after their hunger was satisfied.
+His eyes dwelt on Rand, the strange combination of white man, Indian,
+and jungle demon of whom he had heard so much and on whose tanned skin
+the red skeleton streaks told the tale of a "mind out of the skull."
+Jose and Tim stared in frank curiosity at the dead-alive newcomer, whose
+silent composure remained totally unperturbed. But the seven new girls,
+though ignored by the chief and his guests, were by no means neglected
+by the other men of the _maloca_, being thoroughly stared at by most of
+the young bucks--and, it must be confessed, by a goodly proportion of
+the married men also.
+
+When at length the meal was finished Monitaya commanded the girls to
+stand before him and narrate their experiences. The men lit smokes, Jose
+seizing the proffered cigarette with avidity, Rand accepting his with
+the usual odd deliberation.
+
+"Wal, Hozy, old feller, ye're in right with the chief now," asserted
+Tim. "Ye got all our gang with ye, and she's some li'l' old gang, I'll
+tell the world. This feller Renzo can talk cannibal so good he makes
+Monitaya hunt for the dictionary, and he'll tell the chief in ten
+seconds what I tried half an hour to say this afternoon--that ye belong.
+I 'ain't been here long enough to learn much o' their lingo, ye
+understand. If I could spout it like French, now, there wouldn't been no
+trouble."
+
+McKay and Knowlton snickered. They knew Tim's French was several degrees
+worse than the usual American doughboy's "frog" talk.
+
+"Good thing you couldn't," derided Knowlton. "You'd have had Jose
+crucified before we got here."
+
+"That's right, gimme the razz! Course, I did have a li'l' trouble makin'
+some o' them frogs understand, but that was because they was so ignorant
+they didn't know their own language when they heard it spoke right.
+Anyways, ye got to admit Hozy's still with us and sassy as ever, and he
+wouldn't been if Timmy Ryan hadn't been round to powwow for him."
+
+"You have it right, senor," Jose agreed, gravely. "Without you I should
+now be dead. I can speak the Mayoruna tongue quite well, but of what use
+is it to talk any language when men will not listen? It was you and your
+gun that saved me."
+
+"Gun? Good Lord! Did you pull a gun on Monitaya?" ejaculated the
+lieutenant.
+
+"Aw, no. That is--I guess mebbe I did wave me piece around while I was
+arguin'--I can always convince a guy better if I got somethin' in me
+hand. But I didn't git real rough."
+
+"You are lucky to be still alive, Senhor Tim," said Lourenco. "If
+Monitaya were not the man he is you would not be alive. I am glad we
+have returned."
+
+"Meanin' I need a guardeen? Say, lookit here now--"
+
+"As you were!" clipped McKay. "We're all wasting time. Jose, let's hear
+your report. I thought you were going to put Schwandorf out of action
+for good?"
+
+"And I am, Capitan! That is why I now am here. If I had reached him
+immediately after leaving the Nunes place it would have been done at
+once. But a man travels slowly when he is alone and has lost much blood,
+and before I met Schwandorf again I had time to think coolly. Then when
+I saw him I changed my plans.
+
+"Some days down the river I met him traveling fast in a canoe paddled by
+hard men whom I know. He pretended to be greatly grieved when I told him
+you all were dead. Oh yes, senores, I told him that! I was playing with
+him, and it amused me to see how he thought he was deceiving me when I
+was really fooling him. I said we were attacked by Indians a short way
+above the Nunes place and that I alone escaped. Then he said something
+that made me decide not to kill him for a time.
+
+"He told me he had learned that this man here--his name is Rand,
+yes?--that the man Rand was a bank thief who had run away from North
+America, and that a reward would be paid for him. He said your real
+reason for coming here was that you were detectives trying to earn the
+reward. That is false, is it not, senores?"
+
+"We're no detectives. Rand's no thief."
+
+"Ah, so I thought. But Schwandorf often tells truth to conceal his lies,
+so that it is sometimes hard to know which is true and which untrue. He
+went on to say he had warned you not to come into this Indian country,
+and he was sorry you had been killed--the snake--but since you were dead
+we might get the money for ourselves. If we succeeded in catching the
+man Rand and taking him out alive I should get half the reward, or five
+hundred dollars.
+
+"I saw plainly what his plan was. I might be useful to him in catching
+Rand if Rand was out in the bush, for I have traveled this country alone
+more than once and am a far better bushman than the German. But whether
+I got Rand or not, I never should live to demand my part of the money. I
+know too much about Schwandorf--things which I shall not tell now. So
+when the right time should come, Jose would meet with a fatal accident,
+such as a bullet in the back, or a knife in the throat while sleeping.
+But I did not let him know I saw this. I pretended to fall in with his
+plan like the fool he thought me to be.
+
+"It was not Rand alone that brought him here. You have brought back
+Mayoruna women from the Red Bone country, so you know the Red Bones are
+women stealers. And they steal for Schwandorf. You may believe me or
+not, senores, but I did not know this until the German told me. Oh yes,
+I knew he dealt in women, but of the Red Bone part of his business I was
+ignorant. As soon as I learned it I saw how I could put the illustrious
+Senor Schwandorf out of action, as you say, and at the same time try to
+save you.
+
+"I sharpened my knife to a razor edge, deserted the German when we
+reached the right place, shaved with my knife, painted myself with the
+red and black plant dyes, and came overland to this place, thinking you
+would be here if still alive. But you had traveled faster than I
+expected and had gone into the Red Bone country, so my chance to save
+you seemed to have passed. I could only try to tell this chief the Red
+Bones were stealers of his women and that the German was with them,
+knowing that if he believed me he would go on the war trail against them
+and kill them all. But if Senor Tim had not befriended me I should have
+died too soon to tell my tale. That is all, senores. Now can you spare a
+little more tobacco?"
+
+They could and they promptly did. With a new cigarette glowing he lay
+back and looked quizzically at the women lined up before Monitaya.
+
+"How many men has Schwandorf?" asked McKay.
+
+"About twenty in all, Capitan. There were eight in his crew, and they
+were to meet a dozen more at a place on the Peruvian side."
+
+"All riflemen?"
+
+"_Si._ He brought many cartridges for them. They are to raid tribe
+houses of these people."
+
+"Capture women and run them into Peru?"
+
+"_Si._" Jose yawned as if speaking of a deal in salt fish.
+
+The Americans looked thoughtfully around the big house. They saw that
+every man near them was inspecting some kind of weapon--making sure that
+bow cords were unfrayed, that arrow heads and spear points were firm,
+that the long blowguns had received no cast from suspension, and that
+darts were absolutely straight and true. The strong but cruel faces of
+the warriors were stamped with malignant hatred of the Red Bone tribe
+and the Blackbeard who enslaved their women. The command to prepare for
+a march at dawn had not been withdrawn.
+
+"We'll be expected to go, too, and I'd sure like another crack at
+Umanuh, not to mention the Schwandorf outfit," said Knowlton, "but we
+have friend Rand on our hands now, and our first duty is to get him out
+of here safely."
+
+"Aw, Looey, have a heart! I 'ain't had no action since that li'l' scrap
+down the river, and I got to have some excitement before we blow. What's
+more, we can't beat it now, with Monitaya dependin' on us to fight on
+his side. He'd git sore, and I don't blame him."
+
+His superior officers and the Brazilians frowned. Every man of them
+itched to close with the enemy in one final decisive battle. Yet--
+
+"What 'll we do with Rand?" Knowlton voiced the general thought.
+
+The green eyes of the Raposa turned to him, rested long on his, traveled
+deliberately along the other faces. And then, to the utter astonishment
+of all, the dumb spoke.
+
+"I'll fight," said Rand.
+
+Speechless, the men around him stared. His face was inscrutable as ever,
+his eyes fathomless, his voice flat and toneless. But slowly he raised
+his hands as if holding a bow; twitched his right thumb and forefinger
+in the motion of loosing a shaft; let the hands sink. His gaze calmly
+lifted from theirs and dwelt on the farthest wall. Not another word did
+he speak.
+
+"Begorry! there's yer answer!" triumphed Tim. "He says, 'Fight!' And I
+bet he can sling a wicked bow and arrer, at that. Don't ye s'pose he
+wants a crack at them Red Bones, after the way they used him?"
+
+"I think, comrades, that the man has settled the matter for us," Pedro
+seconded. "None of us wants to run away; and, as Tim says, we are
+expected to help Monitaya. We should be considered cowards, worse than
+dogs, if we refused. If we do not fight the Red Bones we may have to
+fight these Mayorunas, who now are our friends. We must stay."
+
+McKay nodded, still studying the expressionless countenance of Rand.
+
+"That's settled," he announced, crisply. "Now, Lourenco, find out
+Monitaya's plan of battle."
+
+The chief had finished his examination of the women and Lourenco
+promptly put the question. Monitaya laconically replied.
+
+"His purpose is not changed by our arrival, Capitao. He and his men go
+to-morrow to attack and destroy the Red Bones. When they reach the town
+of Umanuh they will surround it, and all will rush in when the chief
+gives his yell of war."
+
+"About what I expected. An Indian has a single-track mind always. But
+his strategy is rotten. Might be good enough if he had only Umanuh to
+deal with, but with Schwandorf in the game it's different. Ask him how
+he expects to protect his women while he's gone."
+
+"He says," Lourenco reported, "that there will be no danger to the
+women, because his warriors will be between the women and their enemies
+until those enemies are dead."
+
+"Very simple. So simple that it's foolish. He doesn't figure on the
+other fellow's mind at all; doesn't realize that a man like Schwandorf
+is bound to outguess him on such straightaway tactics and isn't at all
+likely to play into his hands. But that's the exact situation. The
+German will outguess him, and it's up to him to outguess the German in
+turn. We'll do his guessing for him.
+
+"Schwandorf goes into Umanuh's town, learns what's happened, finds the
+Red Bones frothing at the mouth, and is sore himself. He figures that
+we've returned here with the women, that Monitaya's men are blood-mad
+against the Red Bones, and that they'll do just what they are planning
+to do--march on Red Bone town and leave their women unprotected except
+by the old men, whose defensive power is negligible. He is in this
+country for the express purpose of getting girls, and with Monitaya's
+men away from their _malocas_ he has a wide-open chance to make the
+biggest slave haul of his life. So he plans to outmaneuver Monitaya,
+attack this place, capture all the young women, allow the Red Bones to
+massacre everyone else and burn the houses, and then move on without the
+loss of a man. After that perhaps he intends to find us and get Rand, or
+perhaps to attack other Mayoruna _malocas_. At any rate, his first
+objective is this place. Am I right so far?"
+
+"Dead right," Knowlton nodded.
+
+"Very well. Now he may figure that, having found the water connection
+between the two creeks, the Mayorunas will come against Umanuh by the
+canoe route. Or he may think they'll make the overland trip. In either
+case, the Red Bones have to come through the bush, for the simple reason
+that they haven't boats enough to carry all their force. Their canoes
+were rather few when we were there, and we commandeered several of them
+for our own use. If they decide to come part of the way in canoes
+they'll have to work a come-and-go transport service, bringing the
+fighting men down in batches to some rendezvous from which they must
+finish the journey on foot. Chances are that they'll disregard the
+canoes and all march overland by some route that would dodge the
+Mayoruna line of march. But in either case they're coming here. And it's
+here, in the place where he's not expected to be, that Monitaya should
+meet them. Let him fortify himself and await the assault. It will come."
+
+"And we shall be saved many weary miles of leg work," Jose smiled.
+"Capitan, your strategy is magnificent."
+
+"Begorry! it ain't so bad at that!" Tim approved. "Hozy, me and you will
+have our hammicks slung out front here when the show starts and do our
+shootin' prone. Suits me fine. Put it up to the chief, Renzo."
+
+Lourenco did. Very carefully he explained it all to Monitaya, dwelling
+on the fact that McKay himself was a warrior chieftain and familiar with
+the fighting methods of such men as the atrocious Blackbeard, and
+depicting graphically the horror of an attack by the barbarous Red Bones
+on the defenseless women. It took him some time to divert the chief's
+stubborn mind from the original plan, but in the end he succeeded.
+
+To the vast astonishment and disappointment of the vengeful warriors,
+Monitaya curtly announced that the projected march would not take place.
+They stared as if disbelieving their ears, and more than one black look
+was given Lourenco. But not a man questioned the countermanding of
+orders, not a mutter was heard. The great chief had spoken, and his word
+was final.
+
+Reluctantly they laid aside the weapons on which they had been toiling
+with such purposeful zeal. The chief watched them with a little smile of
+pride--pride in their zest for war, pride in their unquestioning
+acceptance of his dampening order. Then he coolly told them to continue
+their work; told them, further, that the next morning all the streams
+were to be poisoned, new traps set, and scouts stationed far out on
+every trail to await and report the approach of foes. Instantly their
+faces flamed again and from every quarter of the wide house rose an
+excited hum. They were to fight, after all!
+
+"Tough eggs, these lads, if ye ask me," yawned Tim. "Bet ye we'll see a
+row worth lookin' at when she does break."
+
+He forebore to mention the fact that in rifle power their assailants
+would outnumber them four to one.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+THE BATTLE OF THE TRIBES
+
+
+The next four days, though they were days of waiting, were busy enough
+to satisfy the most impatient Mayoruna warrior.
+
+Outposts were established on every route by which the attacking force
+would be likely to approach the twin _malocas_, the watchmen being given
+the strictest commands not to fight, nor even to allow themselves to be
+seen, but to run at top speed with the warning.
+
+Poison detachments went forth to collect the ingredients for making
+deadly the water and the weapons. Those detailed to the work of
+polluting the streams gathered quantities of blue-blossomed,
+short-podded plants with yellow roots, the roots being pulped and thrown
+into the slow currents, which straightway became fatal to man or beast
+The wurali squad procured their favorite materials and, in a flimsy shed
+well away from the houses, prepared a plentiful supply of the venomed
+brew.
+
+New traps were set at points where a man or two might be picked off,
+though it was realized that these would have little effect on the final
+result. And inside the big houses men especially skilled in the
+manufacture of arrows and darts toiled swiftly and steadily from dawn
+till far into the night.
+
+These activities, however, were only the usual defensive preparations
+made by the warriors whenever they knew a sizable body of foes was
+somewhere in the vicinity. It remained for the brains of the white men
+to devise additional features, simple enough in themselves, but
+astounding to the savages, who were accustomed only to the primitive
+battle tactics of their ancestors. For the first time in their lives the
+cannibals found themselves digging in--and also digging out.
+
+After a survey of the terrain and a catechism of Lourenco and Monitaya
+as to the usual methods of attack and defense, the two officers broached
+an idea born of the exigencies of the situation. As they expected, the
+great chief was somewhat slow to approve it, for it involved a literal
+undermining of the walls of his fortresses. But despite the natural
+inflexibility of his mental processes he was an unusually intelligent
+savage, and eventually the patient reiteration of the advantages of the
+scheme won him first to assent and then almost to enthusiasm. Wherefore
+the amazed tribesmen were set to work, armed with crude wooden shovels,
+in digging holes under the logs which sheltered them from man, beast,
+and jungle demon.
+
+All along the walls, at intervals marked by McKay and Knowlton, the
+tunnels were dug. At the same time another large gang excavated before
+each of the _malocas_ a deep, curving trench, the two long pits being
+separated by a ten-foot space of solid earth affording free passage from
+the houses to the creek. Meanwhile the women and the older children were
+weaving flimsy covers from withes and vines. As soon as a tunnel was
+completed it was masked outside the walls by one of these covers, on
+which a thin layer of earth and grass was laid. The two trenches were
+likewise concealed, and the loose earth was carried inside the house and
+packed solidly against the walls flanking the doors.
+
+At sundown of the fourth day the work was ended. And so well was it done
+that when the great chief, his subchiefs, and his foreign allies went on
+a final tour of inspection they could find no sign that the houses were
+honeycombed with exits or that the ground in front of the little
+entrances was not solid at all points.
+
+"Rod and I took the idea from those pit traps out on the trails,"
+Knowlton explained for the dozenth time. "Holes are covered to look
+exactly like the rest of the ground. Every man of us has to be inside
+when the enemy arrives, but we have to get out quick when the right time
+comes, so we go under the walls. And can't you see those brave women
+stealers go kerplunk down into the trenches? Oh boy!"
+
+Whereat Lourenco and Jose smiled as if enjoying a secret joke. They
+were. For they knew something of which the Americans were not
+aware--that Monitaya had improved on the trench-trap idea of the whites
+by studding the bottom of those trenches with barbed araya bones smeared
+with wurali.
+
+"Yeah, and I figger them guys 'll git some jolt when these houses, which
+'ain't got nobody in 'em but women and kids, begin to spit lead out o'
+loopholes and spew screechin' cannibals up out o' the ground. Gosh! I
+wouldn't miss seein' Sworn-off's face for a keg o' beer--and that's
+sayin' somethin'."
+
+Wherein Tim expressed the general sentiment.
+
+So ended the fourth day. When the fifth broke no man showed himself
+outside the walls. Except the few outposts, every male of the Monitaya
+_malocas_ bided within, awaiting with growing tension the arrival of the
+enemy. It was more than likely, McKay had pointed out, that the main
+body of the barbarous force led by Schwandorf would be preceded by a
+handful of scouts, and quite possible that one or more of these would
+slip past the outguards and spy on the tribal houses. The sight of even
+one warrior would instantly apprise any such spy that the others must be
+near, and the word would go back at all speed to the Red Bones.
+Wherefore the only Monitayans to pass through the tiny doorways that
+morning were a few young women sent out as bait. These, naturally, took
+good care to stay near the entrances.
+
+Within, the men waited at their appointed places. Each tunnel had its
+quota of warriors, the number being divided evenly to assure a speedy
+and simultaneous exit. The Americans had elected to fight from the
+_maloca_ of the great chief, while the Brazilians and Jose were to
+garrison the doorway of the other house as soon as the warning came.
+Rand, wordless and imperturbable as ever, now was armed with a strong
+bow and plenty of new arrows with unpoisoned heads; and he, of course,
+would remain with his own countrymen. Thus, preparations completed, all
+settled themselves to the interminable hours of waiting.
+
+Up on the heaped earth near the doorway, which made the walls
+practically bullet-proof to a height of six feet and thus would protect
+the women and children, one or more of the Americans was constantly on
+the lookout through some inconspicuous loophole. Hour after hour dragged
+past, and no unusual movement or sound came to reward their vigilance.
+Under the glare of the sun the roof and walls grew hot; under the silent
+strain of endless anticipation the impatience of the fighting men became
+a ferment. At length Pedro, unable to keep still, mounted to a peephole
+near Knowlton. Scarcely had he put his eye to the opening when both men
+sucked in their breath.
+
+At the edge of the bush a man's head peered from behind a tree. And at
+the same moment a single canoe came creeping out of the bush and up to
+the landing place. The head behind the tree was that of a Red Bone spy.
+The two in the small canoe were Yuara and a companion from the Suba
+tribe.
+
+"Lourenco!" hoarsely whispered Pedro. "Yuara comes. Tell girls to run to
+welcome him and guide him between the pits. A spy is watching. If Yuara
+walks on the pits he dies and our trap is revealed. _Por amor de Deus_,
+send girls quickly!"
+
+Lourenco acted instantly. Seizing two young women, he propelled them
+doorward, talking swiftly the while. Yuara and his mate were already
+advancing innocently toward the few girls outside, none of whom had wit
+enough to warn him. But the two whom the Brazilian had grasped happened
+to be of quick intelligence, and now they darted out. Before the
+visiting pair could reach the death trap the girls were upon them,
+laughing as if delighted to see a man once more, and deftly turning them
+aside to the point where two unobtrusive stubs marked the bridge of
+safety.
+
+Vastly astonished by such effusive welcome from two girls whom they did
+not know, but by no means displeased thereby, the young warriors of the
+Suba clan were piloted to the door and inside. As they disappeared, the
+head of the spy also vanished.
+
+"Woof!" muttered Knowlton, wiping sweat from his brow. "That was close!
+Here's hoping we have no more visitors."
+
+Yuara and his companion meanwhile were being interrogated by both
+Lourenco and Monitaya, who in turn enlightened them as to the present
+state of affairs. At the promise of war the faces of the Suba men lit
+up.
+
+"Yuara comes only on a visit to learn news," Lourenco told the rest.
+"You remember that the day after our return a canoe was sent downstream
+to a point where the wooden bars could be beaten and heard by Suba's
+men, and that a warning against the Red Bones and Schwandorf was given
+in that way. Yuara has become anxious to know more, so he is here."
+
+"If he sticks around he'll learn a lot," predicted Tim.
+
+With no waste of words or motion Yuara coolly attached himself and his
+fellow-tribesman to McKay. Monitaya and his subchiefs were informed of
+the arrival and departure of the enemy scout. The word passed among the
+warriors, who, despite their innate equanimity, began to grit their
+pointed teeth and quiver like dogs held in leash. But another hour
+passed, and yet another; and still no word from the outposts arrived.
+
+Suddenly a chorus of screams shrilled from the women outside. In a
+frenzy of fear they plunged through the doorways. Blending with their
+outcries, a hoarse yell of ferocity rose raucously from the direction of
+the creek. At once a louder ululation burst forth at the rear and sides
+of the clearing. Monitaya's outguards had failed and the _malocas_ were
+surrounded.
+
+Loping from the bush fringing the stream came a score of yellow-faced,
+shirtless, barefooted brutes crisscrossed with cartridge belts and
+gripping rifles. At their head loomed a burly black-whiskered creature
+with a revolver in each hand--the malignant Schwandorf himself.
+
+Grinning like a pack of yellow-fanged wolves, they doubled toward the
+low entrances, their guns spouting wantonly at the upper walls--a ragged
+volley meant to terrorize the defenseless women within, none of whom
+were to be killed until the handsomest had been cut out and set aside
+for slavery. Some of the heavy bullets bored through between logs and
+thudded wickedly into rafters and roof poles within. But from the
+loopholes where the defending rifles lurked no shot cracked in reply.
+
+The fiendish howling of the Red Bones, sweeping in from all sides to the
+butchery, swelled into a feline screech that almost drowned the roar of
+the rifles. Into the view of the watchers at the loopholes streamed
+hideous faces and naked brown bodies swerving inward from left and right
+to follow at the heels of the Blackbeard and his gunmen. In a few
+seconds more the trotting line of Peruvians was backed and flanked by a
+horde of demons hungering for the taste of women and babes. On they
+came--
+
+With the suddenness of a cataclysm the ground opened. Riflemen vanished
+in midstride. Savages screaming triumphant hate were gone in the flick
+of an eye. Others, instinctively digging their heels into the ground the
+instant those ahead of them disappeared, were hurled forward and down by
+the momentum of the following mass. Before the rush could be checked the
+trenches were packed with men struggling in frenzy to get out, wounding
+themselves and one another with the deadly points of their poisoned
+weapons.
+
+Of the twenty gunmen only four remained. They were the four immediately
+behind Schwandorf. By blind chance the German had set foot on the narrow
+isthmus separating the twin trenches, saving himself and the henchmen at
+his heels from being engulfed. Now, as the Red Bones fought back from
+the trap yawning before them, he and the surviving Peruvians stood
+staring in momentary stupefaction at the welter of death on their
+flanks. The malevolent yells of the savages had been cut short by the
+catastrophe, and for the moment no sound was heard but the grunts and
+snarls of struggling men.
+
+Then into the semisilence burst a mighty voice--the battlefield voice of
+McKay.
+
+"Now! Fire at will!"
+
+The walls spat flame and lead. A scythe of death swept above the ground
+where stood Schwandorf and his riflemen. The Peruvian half-breeds
+collapsed and lay still. But Schwandorf, shocked into activity by the
+impact of that first word, dodged death by an infinitesimal fraction of
+a second. Hurling himself backward, he struck the earth just as the
+bullets sped through the air over him. With a lightning rebound he was
+up while fresh cartridges were jumping into the rifle barrels menacing
+him. Headlong he dived into the mass of Red Bones just behind. And the
+next bullets darting after him killed the savages, leaving him unharmed.
+
+The command of McKay and the crack of the rifles sent the quivering
+Mayorunas into the fight. In a flash every masking tunnel cover was
+thrown bodily into the air. Before the thunderstruck Red Bones had
+recovered from the shock of finding their gun-armed leaders annihilated
+and their mass being swept by swift-shooting rifles hidden in the walls,
+they beheld a horde of vindictive foes erupting from under those walls
+like warrior ants rushing from subterranean galleries. A blood-chilling
+yell of concentrated fury smote their ears; a hastily loosed storm of
+war arrows and short throwing-spears ripped into their flesh; a
+swift-running arc of light-skinned men swerved around them, shooting and
+stabbing as they went. They, who had so exultantly surrounded the homes
+of women and children, now were surrounded in turn.
+
+From the doorway of Monitaya's _maloca_ the two Brazilians and Jose now
+leaped forth and, firing as they ran, dashed to hold the entrance of the
+other big house. A few arrows whirred around them during their transit,
+but the shafts were shot hurriedly and missed. Meanwhile the three
+bushmen were striking down enemies at every flash of their guns, firing
+with the swift surety of veterans of many a running fight. They reached
+their objective unwounded; and when they reached it a fringe of dead
+foes marked their passage along the face of the hostile array. Once
+within the door, they rapidly reloaded and sprayed lead along the
+trenches, which, though now nearly full, had become a dead-line past
+which no Red Bone sought to go.
+
+Up on the earth embankments within the chief's house the four Americans
+fought steadily on; the soldiers shooting as coolly as if engaged merely
+in rapid-fire target practice, the silent Rand methodically driving
+arrows in swift succession from his wall-slit. Arrows thudded thickly
+into the logs masking them. Bullets, too, slammed into their
+rampart--bullets from the heavy revolvers of Schwandorf, who, ever
+keeping himself protected by the bodies of his cannibal allies, shot
+with both hands as the chance came. And the German could shoot. With
+only the small gun muzzles as targets, he planted bullets so close as to
+knock dirt more than once into the eyes of the riflemen and render them
+momentarily useless. After a time he got a bullet fair into a loophole.
+
+Knowlton grunted suddenly, swayed back, toppled, fell down the parapet.
+For a few seconds he lay still.
+
+"Looey!" howled Tim. "How ye fixed? Hurt bad?"
+
+The lieutenant heaved himself into a sitting position, stared around,
+clapped a hand to his right shoulder, looked at the red smear his palm
+brought away, reeled up, and scrambled back to his rifle. Schwandorf's
+bullet had drilled clear through the shoulder, and in falling his head
+had struck one of the upright poles. Without a word he got his gun into
+action once more, shooting now from the left shoulder. Tim, with a tight
+grin of relief, devoted himself once more to trying to shoot down the
+dodging German.
+
+The encircling Mayorunas, their first paroxysm of fury vented, now
+settled in cold hate to their work. On all sides their clubmen and
+spearmen were bludgeoning and stabbing at the close-packed Red Bones,
+leaping in, killing, springing back and onward with terrible efficiency.
+Beyond these a thin but deadly line of bowmen poured arrows in
+high-looping curves over the heads of the hand-to-hand combatants, the
+shafts whizzing far up, turning, and plunging down unerringly into the
+center of the enemy force. Each of those arrows could, and many did, end
+the lives of two or three adversaries by gouging their skins and letting
+the fearful wurali into their blood. The blowgun men too were darting
+into every opening, handling their clumsy weapons like feathers and
+constantly moving to spy out fresh targets.
+
+But the men of Monitaya were by no means escaping unscathed. The Red
+Bones, assailed from every quarter and milling about in hopeless
+disorder, were fighting now with desperate frenzy. Their own clubbers
+and stabbers were charging out and smashing skulls or piercing abdomens,
+their arrows rose in all directions at once, and some into whose veins
+the wurali had struck sprang in the last moments of life on nearby foes
+and bit like mad dogs. With a leader and a chance to form into any sort
+of flying wedge they might have broken through with comparative ease and
+taken a far heavier toll. But they had no leader: for Umanuh, whose name
+meant "corpse," now was a corpse in truth, his merciless brain oozing
+from a skull shattered by a Mayoruna clubman; and Schwandorf was very
+busy looking out for Schwandorf. So it was every man for himself, with
+the devil rapidly taking not only the hindmost, but the foremost as
+well.
+
+Thicker and thicker fell the dead. The trenches now not only were filled
+to the level of the ground, but piled with a windrow of bullet-torn
+bodies knocked down by the ever-spitting rifles. Jose, Pedro, and
+Lourenco abandoned all shelter and knelt in plain sight before the door
+which they had kept clear of all close attack. Monitaya, until now a
+field general who strode up and down roaring commands and encouragement,
+suddenly cast away his regal role and, seizing a club from one of his
+bodyguard, hurled himself on the nearest Red Bones--a raving, ravening
+demon of destructiveness whose glaring eyes smote terror into those
+fronting him and whose weapon swung like the club of Hercules. His
+bowmen and blowgun men, at last out of missiles, came charging in with
+bare hands or weapons seized from fallen warriors. Maneuvering had
+ended. Henceforth the fight was a grappling melee.
+
+Then the gunfire dwindled and died. The rifle cartridges were spent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+THE PASSING OF SCHWANDORF
+
+
+The three soldiers flung down their hot, empty guns.
+
+"Nothin' left but the gats and the steel," rumbled Tim. "Me, I'm goin'
+out and git some fresh air."
+
+With which he drew pistol and machete, leaped down, and lunged through
+the door. McKay bounded at his heels.
+
+"Merry! Rand! Stay here!" he commanded. Then he was outside, his pistol
+roaring in unison with Tim's.
+
+Knowlton and Rand looked at each other. The lieutenant fumbled his
+pistol from its holster, got it firmly in his left hand, slid down the
+embankment, and staggered out. Rand coolly walked over to Tim's
+discarded gun, picked it up, and followed.
+
+Over at the other doorway the bushmen threw aside their useless guns and
+drew their machetes. Jose, grinning like a death's-head, whirled the
+bush knife aloft and mockingly dared the Red Bones still fronting him to
+come and take it from him. Pedro and Lourenco indulged in no such
+bravado, but leaped like jaguars at their foes. Whereupon Jose,
+muttering a curse on them for getting the jump on him, dashed forward
+with furious abandon.
+
+Their pistols emptied, the Americans also drew machetes--all except
+Rand, who had no weapon but the bulletless rifle--and waited. Few
+unwounded Red Bones now were left; but among those few Schwandorf still
+lived.
+
+"Schwandorf!" bellowed McKay. "You yellow cur--you _Schweinhund_! Come
+and fight!"
+
+"Yeah!" taunted Tim. "The women and kids are inside. Come and git 'em!"
+
+Schwandorf came. He came not because he wanted to, however, for his
+guns, too, were empty. He came because the Red Bones, sensing the
+challenge and loathing the Blackbeard who had shielded himself so long
+among them, threw him out bodily. They had no time to stand and watch
+what might happen to him, but they took time to cast him out where he
+must stand on his own legs. Then, snarling, they resumed their now
+hopeless battle against their encompassing executioners.
+
+For a moment the German stood glowering at McKay. Then, with a dramatic
+gesture, he threw aside his useless revolvers and advanced empty handed.
+
+"Man to man?" he growled.
+
+"Man to man!" echoed McKay, passing his pistol to Tim and sheathing his
+machete. Fists clenched, he sprang forward.
+
+Schwandorf halted. His hands remained empty--until the captain was
+within eight feet of him. Then he leaped back, his machete jumped into
+his fist, and its point stabbed for his antagonist's abdomen.
+
+An instantaneous side-step and twist of the body saved the captain from
+evisceration. The blade ripped through breeches and shirt and scraped
+the skin. As Schwandorf yanked it back for another thrust McKay struck
+it away with one hand and, without drawing his own steel, jumped again
+at his assailant. An instant later the two blackbeards were clenched in
+a death grapple.
+
+Schwandorf found his long knife useless and dropped it. He strove for a
+back-breaking hold, but found it blocked. McKay, though an indifferent
+swordsman, was a formidable wrestler and fist fighter, and the German's
+advantage in weight was more than offset by the American's quickness and
+wiry strength. Science was thrown to the winds. A heaving, choking,
+wrenching man-fight it was, stumbling over bodies, each straining every
+muscle, trying every hold to twist and break the other and batter him
+down to death.
+
+Smashing fist blows brought blood dripping from their faces.
+Bone-wringing grips forced gasps from their lungs and superhuman spasms
+of resistance from their outraged nerve centers. They fell across a
+corpse, rolled on the ground, throttled, kicked, struck, and tore.
+Finally, in a furious outburst of energy, the American fought his enemy
+down under him, clamped his body with iron knees, and crashed a terrific
+punch squarely between the German's glaring eyes. Schwandorf went limp.
+
+At that instant a backward eddy of the battle surged over the pair. The
+maniacal Red Bones, fighting to the last bitter drop of doom, found two
+white men under their feet. Screeching, snarling, they fell on them like
+wild beasts, tearing with tooth and nail. Their arrows were gone, their
+darts exhausted, and no spearman was among them; they fought with
+nature's weapons, while above them one lone clubman struggled to swing
+down his lethal bludgeon without killing his fellows.
+
+McKay, wrenching his machete loose and gripping it with both hands, got
+its point upward and jabbed blindly at the weight of flesh bearing him
+down. Faintly to his ears came yells of rage and the impact of
+blows--the battle roars of Tim and Knowlton, who with their machetes
+were cleaving a way to their captain. But the beastly demons over him
+still crushed him down on Schwandorf, smothering him under the burden of
+bodies dead and alive. His stabs grew weak. Exhaustion and lack of air
+were killing him more surely than the savages.
+
+Pedro, Lourenco, Jose and the inexplicable Rand came slashing and
+clubbing a path of their own to the beleaguered Scot--the Brazilians
+cutting straight ahead with deadly surety, the painted Peruvian chopping
+and thrusting with a fixed grin, Rand swinging the gun butt down on head
+after head. From still another direction Yuara and his satellite came
+boring in with spears snatched from dead hands. The three rescue parties
+reached the squirming heap at almost the same moment. But Yuara was the
+one whose arrival counted most.
+
+In one last convulsive struggle McKay heaved himself up until he was
+once more on his knees. His head came out of the welter, his mouth wide
+and gulping for breath. The lone clubman grunted, swung his weapon high,
+and with all the power of his muscular body drove it down at that
+upturned, unprotected face.
+
+With a mighty plunge Yuara threw himself over the captain. His spear
+sank into the stomach of the clubman. But the heavy wooden war hammer
+fell with crushing force. As the Red Bone collapsed with the spear head
+buried in his middle, his slayer also dropped under that terrible stroke
+with head mangled beyond recognition.
+
+Yuara, son of Rana, warrior of Suba, who owed his life to McKay's rough
+surgery, had paid his debt.
+
+Under the impact of his body McKay also slumped forward, senseless.
+
+Over them now burst the bloodiest berserk battle of that bloody day. The
+soldiers, the bushmen, and the reclaimed Raposa, already smeared from
+head to foot with red stains from their own veins and those of foemen,
+went stark mad. Before their united ferocity the men of Umanuh dropped
+as if rolled under by an inexorable machine of war. Backward they
+reeled, striving now to escape the red wall of cold steel surging at
+them--only to fall under a fresh attack of ravening Mayorunas who came
+pouring in upon them from the sides. The last of the group lurched
+headless to the ground under a decapitating side-swing from the awful
+club of Monitaya himself.
+
+Then Knowlton, his lifeblood still draining slowly but surely away
+through his wounded shoulder, pitched on his face and was still.
+
+"Back!" gasped Tim. "Git looey and cap out o' this! Here, you Raposy!
+Lend a hand!"
+
+The Raposa, his green eyes ablaze and his obdurate calmness totally
+gone, glared around as if seeking one more Red Bone to kill. Then, as
+Tim heaved the lieutenant across his shoulders and went lunging across
+contorted bodies toward the _malocas_, he ran back to the heap where
+McKay lay and dug him clear. Lourenco aided him in lifting the captain,
+and they bore him off after Knowlton.
+
+Pedro and Jose shoved the other bodies aside until they uncovered the
+prone figure of Schwandorf--a ghastly form dyed from hair to heels with
+the blood of the cannibals whom he had led there. To all appearances he
+was dead. Yet the Brazilian and the Peruvian looked keenly at him, then
+at each other.
+
+"There is a saying, is there not, that the devil takes care of his own?"
+grinned Jose. "It would be sad if this man should yet live and escape.
+See! What is that tall Red Bone doing over yonder?"
+
+Pedro followed his pointing finger. He saw no such Red Bone as Jose had
+mentioned. But when he looked back at Schwandorf he noticed something
+that made him glance quickly at Jose once more.
+
+"Ah yes, Senor Schwandorf is truly dead," the Peruvian added, wiping his
+machete carelessly on one bare leg. "Whether or not the devil takes care
+of his own, as I was saying, there is no doubt that _el Aleman_ now is
+with the devil. So, since we can do nothing for him, let us look after
+the two North American senores."
+
+Pedro, with a grim smile, turned with him toward the tribal houses.
+There was nothing else for them to do, for the Mayorunas now were
+dispatching the last survivors of the attacking force. Before the pair
+entered the low doorway a long, triumphant yell burst from the hoarse
+throats of the men of Monitaya. Of all the Red Bones who had swept in
+such ghoulish glee into that clearing not one now remained alive.
+
+At that shout of victory and the entrance of the men to whose
+precautions and prowess they owed so much, the women flocked again into
+the center of the _maloca_ and the children dived out through the
+tunnels to behold the battlefield. Though bullets and arrows had come
+through the doorway, those inside had escaped all injury by hugging the
+protective earth embankment or taking refuge in the vacant shafts under
+the walls. Now the older women, experienced in treatment of wounds,
+busied themselves with the white warriors, while the younger ones
+fetched water and pieces of isca--a natural styptic made by ants--or
+made up pads of poultices of healing herbs.
+
+Tim, who had expected to play surgeon with his crude knowledge of first
+aid, found himself not only relieved of his job, but being bathed and
+plastered with the others. He, Jose, Pedro, Lourenco, and even Rand were
+gashed by thrusts from broken spear hafts, bleeding from open bites,
+ripped by glancing sweeps of tooth-set clubs, bruised by fierce
+blows--minor injuries all, but such as might easily have resulted in
+blood poisoning unless given prompt attention. Later on they were to be
+thankful for those ministrations, but now they tolerated them only
+because they could do nothing for the captain and the lieutenant.
+
+McKay and Knowlton were under the direct and capable treatment of the
+wives of the great chief. Of the two McKay looked by far the worse, but
+actually was in much better condition. From the waist up he was clawed,
+bitten, and bruised so badly that he was a fearsome spectacle; his left
+arm was dislocated, three fingers of his right hand were broken, and his
+muscles were so wrenched that for a week afterward he moved like a
+cripple; but his present unconsciousness was largely due to exhaustion
+and partial asphyxiation. Knowlton, whose skin was comparatively
+unmarked, but whose veins had continued to pour vital fluid from his
+gaping bullet wound during his stubborn fight, now was badly weakened.
+But whatever could be done for him was being done, and the others could
+only stand by.
+
+The women not engaged in caring for the fighting visitors soon found
+themselves busy with their own male relatives, who came stumbling in by
+themselves or were carried by others. The Red Bones, though finally
+annihilated, had made their mark in the Mayoruna tribe. At that moment
+thirty-six of Monitaya's warriors lay dead among the bodies of their
+enemies, and before the next sunrise several more passed on to join the
+spirits of their comrades in arms. Yet all who survived, though some
+were crippled for life, thought only of the victory and gloated on their
+scars of combat. As for those who had fallen, they were dead, had died
+as Mayorunas should, and so needed no sympathy or regret. Even now their
+bodies were being collected for immediate transportation into the
+forest, where, in accordance with the tribal custom, they would be
+burned.
+
+Some of the men who brought in the wounded men continued on to the
+bushmen and, in significant sign manual, requested a loan of their
+machetes. Having received them, they hastened out to join those who,
+equipped with hardwood knives, were gathering the sinister trophies of
+triumph before heaving the dead Red Bones out to the waiting vultures.
+
+"Urrrgh!" growled Tim. "'Twas a lovely scrap, but I wisht I was
+somewheres else, now it's over. While ye was away they brought in the
+fists and feet o' some guy they caught in a trap--"
+
+"We know," nodded Pedro.
+
+"Yeah. Wal, I s'pose we got to look pleasant. Dog eat dog, as the feller
+says. Long as somebody has to git et, I'm glad it ain't us." Wherewith
+he turned to the Raposa and changed the subject. "Raposy, old sport, ye
+sure done some good work, for a crazy guy. I'll tell the world ye
+cracked heads like a Bowery cop full o' bootleg booze."
+
+The Raposa's green eyes glimmered. In fact, they almost twinkled. And
+for the second time the wild man spoke.
+
+"I am not crazy."
+
+"Huh? My gosh! Ye spoke four whole words! That makes six in a week. Be
+careful, feller, or ye'll strain yerself. And as far's bein' crazy's
+concerned, don't let it worry ye none. We're all crazy, too, or we
+wouldn't be here."
+
+Under cover of his banter the veteran eyed the other sharply. As he
+turned his gaze aside to the moving figures about him he thought:
+"Begorry! he don't look like a nut, at that. Mebbe somethin's
+unscrambled his brains again. Here's hopin', anyways."
+
+The big tribe house now was full of life. Small groups of warriors,
+their hurts dressed with primitive poultices, gathered around the
+hammocks of those more seriously injured and discussed the battle.
+Others came in bearing armfuls of severed Red Bone hands and feet, which
+were distributed among the family triangles. The women, their remedial
+work done, now turned to the clay cooking vessels, freshened the fires,
+stripped the flesh of their enemies from the bones, and set it to boil.
+Among the hammocks moved the subchiefs, their eyes still shining with
+the light of battle, examining the wounded men and glancing at the
+preparations for the dire feast to come.
+
+Over all drifted a steadily thickening smoke which rolled up and out
+through the vent in the peak of the roof, where the setting sun smote it
+with rays of gleaming red. Around the _maloca_ gleamed the red light of
+the cooking fires among whose burning fagots bubbled the red pots and
+pans. Red men and women passing about in a crimson setting--the scene
+formed a fitting end to the reddest day in the unwritten records of the
+tribe, who since noon had proved themselves worthy champions of the
+ancient god whose name they never had heard, but who nevertheless ruled
+their lives--the red god Mars.
+
+Monitaya himself, head high and chest swelling with pride, now came
+striding lithely in, followed by a young warrior carrying something. He
+stopped between the hammocks of McKay and Knowlton, studied their faces
+gravely, listened as his wives told of what had been done. At almost the
+same moment the eyes of the pair slowly opened and stared up at him.
+
+The face of the great chief melted in one of its transforming smiles.
+The captain and the lieutenant grinned pluckily back. With a nod of
+silent comradeship the big savage turned to his own hammock and sat
+down. Two of his women built up the royal fire and fell to work on the
+things handed over by the young warrior. Tim and his mates took one
+squint at what they were doing. Then they moved between the fire and the
+two officers, blocking the view.
+
+"'Bout time ye woke up and listened to the birdies," Tim chaffed.
+"Fight's over, and we been hangin' round waitin' for ye to quit snorin'
+so's we could hear ourselves think. Lay still, now! Ye're all plastered
+up nice and comfy--and don't preach to me no more about the girls. Ye
+had every dang one o' the big chief's wives hangin' over ye and kissin'
+ye so hard it sounded like a machine gun. Ain't that right, fellers? Me,
+I'm so jealous I could bite the both of ye."
+
+"Schwandorf dead?" hoarsely queried McKay.
+
+"Huh? Oh, him? Sure. Ye fixed him right, Cap. The pretty li'l'
+blackbirds has flew away with him by now. Say, ye mind that feller
+Yuarry? Know what he done? Wal--"
+
+And while he talked, behind his back the wives of Monitaya completed
+their task and dropped into the great chief's stewpot the flesh of the
+black-bearded slaver and slayer who would menace them no more.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+PARTNERS
+
+
+Seven men squatted around a camp fire on the river bank. Beyond them,
+half revealed by the flickering light of the flames, rose the poles of a
+_tambo_ wherein empty hammocks hung waiting. At the edge of the water
+lay two canoes.
+
+Five of the men wore the habiliments of civilized beings, though their
+shirts and breeches were so tattered and stained that a civilized
+community would have looked askance at them. The other two were nude as
+savages, but their beards and tanned skins were those of white men.
+Beards of varying length seemed, in fact, to be the fashion, for
+everyone present wore one, and all but two were very dark. Of the odd
+pair, one's thin face was partly covered by stubby, blond hair, while
+the other's jaw was masked by a growth of unmistakable red.
+
+Lifting their cigarettes, the blond man and a tall, eagle-faced comrade
+moved their arms stiffly, as if still hampered by injuries. Newly healed
+scars showed on the skins of the rest.
+
+"Injuns are a funny lot," declared the red-haired one. "There's
+Monitaya, now. Keeps us a couple weeks, doctors us half to death, feeds
+us till we gag, gives us new canoes, sends a platoon o' hard guys with
+us to see that we git to the river safe--and don't even say good-by. No
+handshake, no 'Good luck, fellers'--jest a grin like we was goin' to
+walk round the house and come right back. And the lads that come out
+with us done the same--turned round and quit us without a word. I bet if
+we lived amongst 'em long we'd git to be dummies, too."
+
+For a moment there was silence. For no apparent reason all glanced at
+one of the naked men, on whose skin faintly showed reddish streaks.
+
+"You would," he said.
+
+"Huh! Gee! Rand's talkin' again! First time since we licked them Red
+Boneheads. Two whole words. Go easy, feller, easy!"
+
+"I will be easy. But it's time I talked. I am not dumb. I am not crazy."
+
+The green-eyed man spoke slowly, as if forming each word in his mind
+before pronouncing it. The rest squatted with eyes riveted on his face.
+
+"I have not talked before because I had to find myself. I had to hear
+English spoken and become used to it. I had to put things together in my
+mind. Even now some things are not clear. But I can talk and make sense
+of my talk. I will tell what I can remember. First tell me one thing.
+McKay, am I a murderer?"
+
+"A murderer? You? If you are we never heard of it."
+
+"A man named Schmidt. Gustav Schmidt. German merchant at Manaos."
+
+"Gustav Schmidt? Piggy little runt, bald and fat, with a scar across his
+chin?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"He's dead, but you didn't kill him. He was shot a little while ago by a
+young Brazilian for getting too intimate with the young fellow's wife.
+We heard about it while we were in Manaos, and saw his picture. What
+about him?"
+
+"I thought I killed him. I struck him with a bottle. I was told he was
+dead. How long have I been here?"
+
+"You left the States in 1915. It is now 1920."
+
+"Five years? My God! What has happened in that time? Is my mother well?"
+
+The others looked pityingly at him. Slowly Knowlton spoke.
+
+"Your mother died two years ago from heart trouble. Your uncle, Philip
+Dawson, also is dead."
+
+Rand's jaw set. The others shifted their gaze and busied themselves with
+making new cigarettes, spending much time over the simple task.
+
+"Poor mother!" Rand said, huskily. "Uncle Phil--he was a good old scout.
+And I was here--buried alive--only half alive! My head--Tell me, what
+happened on the night before you dressed my lame foot? I remember
+clearly everything from the time I woke in the canoe before daylight
+that morning. Before that there is a blur."
+
+Knowlton sketched the events of that night, and told also of the glimpse
+which he and Pedro had caught of the "wild man" while waiting outside
+the house of the Red Bone chief. A flash lit up Rand's face.
+
+"So that is how I got my sore head. You struck me with your rifle butt.
+That explains much. Before I became a wild beast I was shot in the head.
+The bullet did not go through the skull. It struck me a terrible blow on
+the crown. When I recovered consciousness I was not myself. I have never
+been the same until--"
+
+"Gee cripes!" exploded Tim. "That's it. I seen that same thing up home.
+Bug Sullivan, it was. When he was a li'l' feller he tumbled downstairs
+and hit his head, and for 'most ten years he was foolish. Then a brick
+fell off a buildin' and landed on his bean. It knocked him for a gool,
+but when he come out of it he was bright as a new dime. Looey, when ye
+busted Rand with yer gun ye jarred somethin' loose inside, and now he's
+good as any of us."
+
+"By George! You're right!" cried the lieutenant. "Things like that do
+happen. I've heard of them. Haven't you, Rod?"
+
+McKay nodded.
+
+"That is it," affirmed the Raposa. "I have not been insane. But much was
+gone from me. My mind was a house full of closed doors which I could not
+open. I knew who I was and why I was here, but I knew also that
+something had happened to my brain; knew I was defective; believed I was
+wanted for murder. So I could not go out. I could only stay here, prowl
+the jungle, live the jungle life.
+
+"Now that the closed doors have opened again, others have swung shut. I
+cannot remember much of my wild-beast life here. Some things are clear.
+Too clear. Torturings and horrible feasts. Perhaps I should be grateful
+that some things are forgotten.
+
+"But now my life up to the time I was shot is plain again. I talked with
+a man who had traveled the Amazon and the Andes. I never had seen
+either, and I was ripe for something new. A steamer was just sailing
+south, and I got aboard in a hurry. No baggage but a suitcase and five
+thousand dollars. I had traveled a good deal--Europe, Canada, Japan--and
+always found that plenty of money was all a man needed. Thought it was
+the same way here. I've learned better.
+
+"I visited Rio--a few hours--and then came up along the coast and
+inland. At Manaos I got into trouble. Went ashore and got to drinking
+with two Germans. One of them--Schmidt--grew ugly and said a lot of
+rotten things about the States. Tell me something, men--is the war over
+and did our country get into it?"
+
+"It is, and it did." And Knowlton outlined the epochal occurrences of
+the world conflict.
+
+"And I missed that, too!" mourned Rand. "But I started a war of my own
+down here, anyway. When I quit seeing red I had a bottle neck in my hand
+and both the Germans were down. Somebody said Schmidt was dead. A couple
+of men tried to grab me. I fought my way clear, hid awhile, got back on
+the boat without being noticed, and paid one of the crew well to hide me
+in the hold and feed me. Nearly died from heat and suffocation down
+there, but lived to reach Iquitos, where my man smuggled me ashore. I
+thought I was safe there. But before I could make a move to travel on I
+fell into the hands of that cursed Schwandorf."
+
+"Schwandorf!"
+
+"Schwandorf. He was in Iquitos. The sailor who hid me must have sold me
+out to him. Schwandorf told me he was a police officer in Brazilian
+employ. Said he would take me back to stand trial for murdering Schmidt.
+The dirty blackmailer took all my money to keep his mouth shut and take
+me to a 'safe place.' The safe place was up this river. I came up here
+with him in a canoe paddled by some tough Peruvians. Then he began
+trying to bully me into doing dirty work for him--running women into
+Peru. I saw red again and jumped for him. He gave me that bullet on the
+head.
+
+"After that things are badly blurred. I found myself among savages. How
+I got there, why I wasn't killed, I don't know. Schwandorf was there
+awhile. Then he went away with his gang, leaving me very sure of only
+one thing--I was a murderer and would be executed if caught. And--well,
+that's about all, except that the savages seemed rather afraid of me and
+didn't want me around."
+
+There was another silence. Then Lourenco remarked:
+
+"Between Schmidt and Schwandorf you have suffered much. It is possible
+that there was a connection of some sort between them. But neither can
+ever trouble you again. I do not see why Schwandorf took the trouble
+even to put you among the Red Bones. One more bullet would have ended
+you."
+
+"Any ideas on that subject, Jose?" asked McKay.
+
+"Only a guess, Capitan. I was not here five years ago, and I knew
+nothing of Schwandorf then. But I know he always schemed for his own
+good and overlooked no chances. So perhaps, finding this man not dead,
+but darkened in mind by his bullet, he thought he might be able to use
+him in some way at some future time. A dead man is not useful to anyone.
+If this man should never become valuable he could live and die forgotten
+among savages, where he could do Schwandorf no harm. If worth something
+he could be found again."
+
+"Cold-blooded Prussian efficiency," nodded McKay. Then he spoke directly
+to Rand.
+
+"Since you're mentally sound," he went on, "we may as well tell you how
+you happen to be among us. We three--Merry, Tim, and I--came here to
+find you. The settlement of the Dawson estate hinges on you."
+
+"On me? How? I've no claim to it. Paul Dawson, Uncle Phil's son--"
+
+"Is dead, too. Killed in action in the Argonne, You're next in line."
+
+McKay watched him keenly. So did Knowlton. The half-expected jubilance
+did not come.
+
+"So Paul's gone," was Rand's reply. "Hard luck. Suppose I hadn't been
+found--then what?"
+
+"In due time the money would go to a school. Boys' school."
+
+"Orphans? Blind? Cripples?"
+
+"Hardly." McKay's mouth curved sardonically. He named a preparatory
+school of the "exclusive" type. Rand's mouth also twisted.
+
+"That hotbed of snobbery? That twin sister to a society girls' finishing
+school? Might have known it, though. Uncle Phil was fond of the sort of
+education that doesn't educate. I'm glad you fellows found me. I'll go
+home and collect every red cent, just to keep it out of the hands of the
+supercilious bunch of bishops that run that sissy-spawner."
+
+Knowlton chuckled appreciatively.
+
+"It's not the sort of school that breeds he-men, for a fact," he agreed.
+"But you don't seem much enthused over having a couple of millions
+dropped into your lap."
+
+Rand sat still. His face remained cheerless, impassive.
+
+"What is money?" he said, presently. "I've always had plenty of it.
+What's it done for me? When you have it you can't tell whether people
+are friends to you or only friends to your money. It makes you cynical,
+suspicious. What's worse, you depend too much on it. You think it will
+do everything. Then if you land in a place where it's no good and you
+haven't got it, anyway, you're up against it a good deal harder than the
+fellow who never had it but knows how to handle himself without it."
+
+"True for ye," Tim concurred, heartily. "All the same, I bet ye'll
+change yer tune after ye git home."
+
+"Will I?" The green eyes impaled him. "Maybe. But I don't think so. I've
+had my run at blowing in money on myself alone. Now I'm going to blow
+some on other folks. I missed out on the war, but--There must be quite a
+few of our fellows lamed and crippled by that war. And I'll gamble that
+the government isn't treating them all like princes. I know something
+about governments."
+
+"Princes? Say, feller, there's many a dog that's took better care of
+than some of our boys back home!"
+
+"So I thought. The income from a couple of millions, along with some of
+the principal, will do a lot of good if used right. And--" His eyes
+turned to the three bushmen.
+
+"Do not look at us in that way," said Lourenco, reading his thought. "We
+can make all the money we need, and we came with the capitao and his
+comrades only because we wanted excitement. Use your money for the
+crippled men who need it."
+
+"And Jose Martinez also is well able to provide for his wants," coolly
+added the other naked man. "I am here only to settle old scores, and now
+they are settled. Each man is goaded by his own spur--money, wine,
+women, excitement, revenge. Money is not mine."
+
+He yawned, arose, stretched like a cat, and stepped toward his hammock.
+The two Brasilians also moved toward the _tambo_. The others stood a
+moment longer beside the fire.
+
+"Well, since we three didn't come here because of wine, women, or
+revenge," Knowlton said, whimsically, "it must have been for money and
+excitement. Don't know which was the stronger lure, but if we could have
+only one of the two I think we'd let the money slide. How about it,
+Rod?"
+
+"Right! And, Rand, let me say this: Before we knew you we had an
+impression that you were more or less of a worthless pup. We've changed
+our ideas. If you ever go broke and want to hit a trail into some new
+place to make a strike of your own, and you need partners, let us know."
+
+And he held out his hand.
+
+The naked millionaire took it. For the first time a faint smile
+lightened his face.
+
+"I'll do that, partners!" he promised.
+
+"Yeah! That's the word. Pardners! Only, li'l' Timmy Ryan bucks at ever
+travelin' back into this here, now, Ja-va-ree jungle. I got enough of
+it. Right now I'm homesick."
+
+"So say we all," affirmed Knowlton. "Now let's turn in."
+
+But Tim stood a little longer looking out at the moonlit river and the
+two waiting canoes. His gaze roved along the stream, northward. He
+lifted his head, opened his mouth, expanded his lungs, and then the
+astounded denizens of forest and stream cut short their discordant
+concert to listen to something they never had heard before and never
+would hear again--a great voice thundering a censored version of a North
+American army song.
+
+ "Home, boys, home! Home we want to be!
+ Home, boys, home, in God's countree!
+ We'll raise Ol' Glory to the top o' the pole
+ And we'll all come back--not a dog-gone soul!"
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PATHLESS TRAIL***
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