“The entire affair is shrouded
in mystery,” said D’Arnot. “I
have it on the best of authority that neither the
police nor the special agents of the general staff
have the faintest conception of how it was accomplished.
All they know, all that anyone knows, is that Nikolas
Rokoff has escaped.”
John Clayton, Lord Greystoke he
who had been “Tarzan of the Apes” sat
in silence in the apartments of his friend, Lieutenant
Paul D’Arnot, in Paris, gazing meditatively
at the toe of his immaculate boot.
His mind revolved many memories, recalled
by the escape of his arch-enemy from the French military
prison to which he had been sentenced for life upon
the testimony of the ape-man.
He thought of the lengths to which
Rokoff had once gone to compass his death, and he
realized that what the man had already done would
doubtless be as nothing by comparison with what he
would wish and plot to do now that he was again free.
Tarzan had recently brought his wife
and infant son to London to escape the discomforts
and dangers of the rainy season upon their vast estate
in Uziri the land of the savage Waziri warriors
whose broad African domains the ape-man had once ruled.
He had run across the Channel for
a brief visit with his old friend, but the news of
the Russian’s escape had already cast a shadow
upon his outing, so that though he had but just arrived
he was already contemplating an immediate return to
London.
“It is not that I fear for myself,
Paul,” he said at last. “Many times
in the past have I thwarted Rokoff’s designs
upon my life; but now there are others to consider.
Unless I misjudge the man, he would more quickly
strike at me through my wife or son than directly at
me, for he doubtless realizes that in no other way
could he inflict greater anguish upon me. I
must go back to them at once, and remain with them
until Rokoff is recaptured or dead.”
As these two talked in Paris, two
other men were talking together in a little cottage
upon the outskirts of London. Both were dark,
sinister-looking men.
One was bearded, but the other, whose
face wore the pallor of long confinement within doors,
had but a few days’ growth of black beard upon
his face. It was he who was speaking.
“You must needs shave off that
beard of yours, Alexis,” he said to his companion.
“With it he would recognize you on the instant.
We must separate here in the hour, and when we meet
again upon the deck of the Kincaid, let us hope that
we shall have with us two honoured guests who little
anticipate the pleasant voyage we have planned for
them.
“In two hours I should be upon
my way to Dover with one of them, and by tomorrow
night, if you follow my instructions carefully, you
should arrive with the other, provided, of course,
that he returns to London as quickly as I presume
he will.
“There should be both profit
and pleasure as well as other good things to reward
our efforts, my dear Alexis. Thanks to the stupidity
of the French, they have gone to such lengths to conceal
the fact of my escape for these many days that I have
had ample opportunity to work out every detail of
our little adventure so carefully that there is little
chance of the slightest hitch occurring to mar our
prospects. And now good-bye, and good luck!”
Three hours later a messenger mounted
the steps to the apartment of Lieutenant D’Arnot.
“A telegram for Lord Greystoke,”
he said to the servant who answered his summons.
“Is he here?”
The man answered in the affirmative,
and, signing for the message, carried it within to
Tarzan, who was already preparing to depart for London.
Tarzan tore open the envelope, and
as he read his face went white.
“Read it, Paul,” he said,
handing the slip of paper to D’Arnot. “It
has come already.”
The Frenchman took the telegram and read:
“Jack stolen from the garden
through complicity of new servant. Come at once. Jane.”
As Tarzan leaped from the roadster
that had met him at the station and ran up the steps
to his London town house he was met at the door by
a dry-eyed but almost frantic woman.
Quickly Jane Porter Clayton narrated
all that she had been able to learn of the theft of
the boy.
The baby’s nurse had been wheeling
him in the sunshine on the walk before the house when
a closed taxicab drew up at the corner of the street.
The woman had paid but passing attention to the vehicle,
merely noting that it discharged no passenger, but
stood at the kerb with the motor running as though
waiting for a fare from the residence before which
it had stopped.
Almost immediately the new houseman,
Carl, had come running from the Greystoke house, saying
that the girl’s mistress wished to speak with
her for a moment, and that she was to leave little
Jack in his care until she returned.
The woman said that she entertained
not the slightest suspicion of the man’s motives
until she had reached the doorway of the house, when
it occurred to her to warn him not to turn the carriage
so as to permit the sun to shine in the baby’s
eyes.
As she turned about to call this to
him she was somewhat surprised to see that he was
wheeling the carriage rapidly toward the corner, and
at the same time she saw the door of the taxicab open
and a swarthy face framed for a moment in the aperture.
Intuitively, the danger to the child
flashed upon her, and with a shriek she dashed down
the steps and up the walk toward the taxicab, into
which Carl was now handing the baby to the swarthy
one within.
Just before she reached the vehicle,
Carl leaped in beside his confederate, slamming the
door behind him. At the same time the chauffeur
attempted to start his machine, but it was evident
that something had gone wrong, as though the gears
refused to mesh, and the delay caused by this, while
he pushed the lever into reverse and backed the car
a few inches before again attempting to go ahead, gave
the nurse time to reach the side of the taxicab.
Leaping to the running-board, she
had attempted to snatch the baby from the arms of
the stranger, and here, screaming and fighting, she
had clung to her position even after the taxicab had
got under way; nor was it until the machine had passed
the Greystoke residence at good speed that Carl, with
a heavy blow to her face, had succeeded in knocking
her to the pavement.
Her screams had attracted servants
and members of the families from residences near by,
as well as from the Greystoke home. Lady Greystoke
had witnessed the girl’s brave battle, and had
herself tried to reach the rapidly passing vehicle,
but had been too late.
That was all that anyone knew, nor
did Lady Greystoke dream of the possible identity
of the man at the bottom of the plot until her husband
told her of the escape of Nikolas Rokoff from the French
prison where they had hoped he was permanently confined.
As Tarzan and his wife stood planning
the wisest course to pursue, the telephone bell rang
in the library at their right. Tarzan quickly
answered the call in person.
“Lord Greystoke?” asked
a man’s voice at the other end of the line.
“Yes.”
“Your son has been stolen,”
continued the voice, “and I alone may help you
to recover him. I am conversant with the plot
of those who took him. In fact, I was a party
to it, and was to share in the reward, but now they
are trying to ditch me, and to be quits with them I
will aid you to recover him on condition that you
will not prosecute me for my part in the crime.
What do you say?”
“If you lead me to where my
son is hidden,” replied the ape-man, “you
need fear nothing from me.”
“Good,” replied the other.
“But you must come alone to meet me, for it
is enough that I must trust you. I cannot take
the chance of permitting others to learn my identity.”
“Where and when may I meet you?” asked
Tarzan.
The other gave the name and location
of a public-house on the water-front at Dover a
place frequented by sailors.
“Come,” he concluded,
“about ten o’clock tonight. It would
do no good to arrive earlier. Your son will
be safe enough in the meantime, and I can then lead
you secretly to where he is hidden. But be sure
to come alone, and under no circumstances notify Scotland
Yard, for I know you well and shall be watching for
you.
“Should any other accompany
you, or should I see suspicious characters who might
be agents of the police, I shall not meet you, and
your last chance of recovering your son will be gone.”
Without more words the man rang off.
Tarzan repeated the gist of the conversation
to his wife. She begged to be allowed to accompany
him, but he insisted that it might result in the man’s
carrying out his threat of refusing to aid them if
Tarzan did not come alone, and so they parted, he
to hasten to Dover, and she, ostensibly to wait at
home until he should notify her of the outcome of
his mission.
Little did either dream of what both
were destined to pass through before they should meet
again, or the far-distant but why anticipate?
For ten minutes after the ape-man
had left her Jane Clayton walked restlessly back and
forth across the silken rugs of the library.
Her mother heart ached, bereft of its first-born.
Her mind was in an anguish of hopes and fears.
Though her judgment told her that
all would be well were her Tarzan to go alone in accordance
with the mysterious stranger’s summons, her
intuition would not permit her to lay aside suspicion
of the gravest dangers to both her husband and her
son.
The more she thought of the matter,
the more convinced she became that the recent telephone
message might be but a ruse to keep them inactive
until the boy was safely hidden away or spirited out
of England. Or it might be that it had been
simply a bait to lure Tarzan into the hands of the
implacable Rokoff.
With the lodgment of this thought
she stopped in wide-eyed terror. Instantly it
became a conviction. She glanced at the great
clock ticking the minutes in the corner of the library.
It was too late to catch the Dover
train that Tarzan was to take. There was another,
later, however, that would bring her to the Channel
port in time to reach the address the stranger had
given her husband before the appointed hour.
Summoning her maid and chauffeur,
she issued instructions rapidly. Ten minutes
later she was being whisked through the crowded streets
toward the railway station.
It was nine-forty-five that night
that Tarzan entered the squalid “pub”
on the water-front in Dover. As he passed into
the evil-smelling room a muffled figure brushed past
him toward the street.
“Come, my lord!” whispered the stranger.
The ape-man wheeled about and followed
the other into the ill-lit alley, which custom had
dignified with the title of thoroughfare. Once
outside, the fellow led the way into the darkness,
nearer a wharf, where high-piled bales, boxes, and
casks cast dense shadows. Here he halted.
“Where is the boy?” asked Greystoke.
“On that small steamer whose
lights you can just see yonder,” replied the
other.
In the gloom Tarzan was trying to
peer into the features of his companion, but he did
not recognize the man as one whom he had ever before
seen. Had he guessed that his guide was Alexis
Paulvitch he would have realized that naught but treachery
lay in the man’s heart, and that danger lurked
in the path of every move.
“He is unguarded now,”
continued the Russian. “Those who took
him feel perfectly safe from detection, and with the
exception of a couple of members of the crew, whom
I have furnished with enough gin to silence them effectually
for hours, there is none aboard the Kincaid.
We can go aboard, get the child, and return without
the slightest fear.”
Tarzan nodded.
“Let’s be about it, then,” he said.
His guide led him to a small boat
moored alongside the wharf. The two men entered,
and Paulvitch pulled rapidly toward the steamer.
The black smoke issuing from her funnel did not at
the time make any suggestion to Tarzan’s mind.
All his thoughts were occupied with the hope that
in a few moments he would again have his little son
in his arms.
At the steamer’s side they found
a monkey-ladder dangling close above them, and up
this the two men crept stealthily. Once on deck
they hastened aft to where the Russian pointed to
a hatch.
“The boy is hidden there,”
he said. “You had better go down after
him, as there is less chance that he will cry in fright
than should he find himself in the arms of a stranger.
I will stand on guard here.”
So anxious was Tarzan to rescue the
child that he gave not the slightest thought to the
strangeness of all the conditions surrounding the
Kincaid. That her deck was deserted, though she
had steam up, and from the volume of smoke pouring
from her funnel was all ready to get under way made
no impression upon him.
With the thought that in another instant
he would fold that precious little bundle of humanity
in his arms, the ape-man swung down into the darkness
below. Scarcely had he released his hold upon
the edge of the hatch than the heavy covering fell
clattering above him.
Instantly he knew that he was the
victim of a plot, and that far from rescuing his son
he had himself fallen into the hands of his enemies.
Though he immediately endeavoured to reach the hatch
and lift the cover, he was unable to do so.
Striking a match, he explored his
surroundings, finding that a little compartment had
been partitioned off from the main hold, with the hatch
above his head the only means of ingress or egress.
It was evident that the room had been prepared for
the very purpose of serving as a cell for himself.
There was nothing in the compartment,
and no other occupant. If the child was on
board the Kincaid he was confined elsewhere.
For over twenty years, from infancy
to manhood, the ape-man had roamed his savage jungle
haunts without human companionship of any nature.
He had learned at the most impressionable period
of his life to take his pleasures and his sorrows
as the beasts take theirs.
So it was that he neither raved nor
stormed against fate, but instead waited patiently
for what might next befall him, though not by any
means without an eye to doing the utmost to succour
himself. To this end he examined his prison
carefully, tested the heavy planking that formed its
walls, and measured the distance of the hatch above
him.
And while he was thus occupied there
came suddenly to him the vibration of machinery and
the throbbing of the propeller.
The ship was moving! Where to
and to what fate was it carrying him?
And even as these thoughts passed
through his mind there came to his ears above the
din of the engines that which caused him to go cold
with apprehension.
Clear and shrill from the deck above
him rang the scream of a frightened woman.