Feeling grateful to the huge tortoise
for the good service he had rendered, they shot a
number of the great snakes that were gliding about
on the ground, and placed them where he would find
them on awaiting. They then picked their way
carefully towards stretches on which the grass was
shortest. When they had gone about two miles,
and had already reached higher ground, they came to
a ridge of rock running at right angles to their course.
This they climbed, and on looking over the edge of
the crest beheld a sight that made their hearts stand
still. A monster, somewhat resembling an alligator,
except that the back was arched, was waddling about
perhaps seventy-five yards from them. It was
sixty feet long, and to the top of its scales was at
least twenty-five feet high. It was constantly
moving, and the travellers noticed with some dismay
that its motion was far more rapid than they would
have supposed it could be.
“It is also a dinosaur,”
said the professor, watching it sharply, “and
very closely resembles the Stegosaurus ungulatus restored
in the museums. The question is, What shall
we do with the living specimen, now that we have it?”
“Our chairman,” said Ayrault,
“must find a way to kill it, so that we may
examine it closely.”
“The trouble is,” said
Bearwarden, “our bullets will explode before
they penetrate the scales. In the absence of
any way of making a passage for an explosive ball
by means of a solid one, we must strike a vital spot.
His scales being no harder than the trunk of a tree,
we can wound him terribly by touching him anywhere;
but there is no object in doing this unless we can
kill him, especially as there is no deep stream, such
as would have delayed the mastodon in reaching us,
to protect us here. We must spread out so as
to divert his attention from one to another.”
After some consultation it was decided
that Cortlandt, who had only a shot-gun, should remain
where they were, while Bearwarden and Ayrault moved
some distance to the right and left. At a signal
from Cortlandt, who was to attract the monster’s
attention, the wings were to advance simultaneously.
These arrangements they carried out to the letter.
When Bearwarden and Ayrault had gone about twenty-five
yards on either side, the doctor imitated the peculiar
grunting sound of an alligator, at which the colossal
monster turned and faced him, while Bearwarden and
Ayrault moved to the attack. The plan of this
was good, for, with his attention fixed on three objects,
the dinosaur seemed confused, and though Bearwarden
and Ayrault had good angles from which to shoot, there
was no possibility of their hitting each other.
They therefore advanced steadily with their rifles
half up. Though their own danger increased with
each step, in the event of their missing, the chance
of their shooting wild decreased, the idea being to
reach the brain through the eye. Cortlandt’s
part had also its risks, for, being entirely defenceless
with his shot-gun against the large creature, whose
attention it was his duty to attract, he staked all
on the marksmanship of his friends. Not considering
this, however, he stood his ground, having the thumb-piece
on his Winchester magazine shoved up and ready to
make a noisy diversion if necessary in behalf of either
wing. Having aroused the monster’s curiosity,
Cortlandt sprang up, waving his arms and his gun.
The dinosaur lowered his head as if to charge, thereby
bringing it to a level with the rifles, either of which
could have given it the fatal shot. But as their
fingers pressed the triggers the reptile soared up
thirty feet in the air. Ayrault pulled for his
first sight, shooting through the lower jaw, and shivering
that member, while Bearwarden changed his aim and
sighted straight for the heart. In an instant
the monster was down again, just missing Ayrault’s
head as he stepped back, and Bearwarden’s rifle
poured a stream of explosive balls against its side,
rending and blowing away the heavy scales. Having
drawn the dinosaur’s attention to himself, he
retreated, while Ayrault renewed the attack.
Cortlandt, seeing that the original plan had miscarried,
poured showers of small shot against the huge beast’s
face. Finally, one of Ayrault’s balls exploded
in the brain, and all was over.
“We have killed it at last,”
said Bearwarden “but the first attack, though
artistic, had not the brilliant results we expected.
These creatures’ mode of fighting is doubtless
somewhat similar to that of the kangaroo, which it
is said puts its forepaws gently, almost lovingly,
on a man’s shoulders, and then disembowels him
by the rapid movement of a hind leg. But we
shall get used to their method, and can do better
next time.”
They then reloaded their weapons and,
while Cortlandt examined their victim from a naturalist’s
point of view, Bearwarden and Ayrault secured the
heart, which they thought would be the most edible
part, the operation being rendered possible by the
amount of armour the explosive balls had stripped
off.
“To-morrow,” said Bearwarden,
“we must make it a point to get some well-fed
birds; for I can roast, broil, or fricassee them to
a turn. Life is too short to live on this meat
in such a sportsman’s paradise. In any
case there can be no end of mastodons, mammoths, woolly
rhinoceroses, moa birds, and all such shooting.”
As the sun was already near the horizon,
they chose a dry, sandy place, to secure as much immunity
as possible from nocturnal visits, and, after procuring
a supply of water from a pool, proceeded to arrange
their camp for the night. They first laid out
the protection-wires, setting them while the sun still
shone. Next they built a fire and prepared their
evening meal. While they ate it, twilight became
night, and the fire-flies, twinkling in legions in
the neighbouring valley, seemed like the lamps of
a great city.
“Their lights,” said Bearwarden,
pointing to them, “are not as fine as the jelly-fish
Will-o’-the wisps were last night, but they are
not so dangerous. No gymnotus or electric eel
that I have ever seen compared with them, and I am
convinced that any one of us they might have touched
would have been in kingdom come.”
The balmy air soothed the travellers’
brows as they reclined against mounds of sand, while
the flowers in the valley sent up their dying notes.
One by one the moons arose, till four among
them the Lilliputian, discovered by Prof. Barnard
in 1893 were in the sky, flooding the landscape
with their silvery light, and something in the surroundings
touched a sympathetic cord in the men.
“Oh that I were young again,”
said Cortlandt, “and had life before me!
I should like to remain here and grow up with this
planet, in which we already perceive the next New
World. The beauties of earth are barren compared
with the scenes we have here.”
“You remember,” replied
Bearwarden, “how Cicero defends old age in his
De Senectute, and shows that while it has almost everything
that youth has, it has also a sense of calm and many
things besides.”
“Yes,” answered Cortlandt,
“but, while plausible, it does not convince.
The pleasures of age are largely negative, the old
being happy when free from pain.”
“Since the highest joy of life,” said
Ayrault, “is coming to know our
Creator, I should say the old, being further advanced,
would be the
happier of the two. I should never regard this
material life as
greatly to be prized for itself. You remember
the old song:
“’O
Youth! When we come to consider
The
pain, the toil, and the strife,
The
happiest man of all is
The
one who has finished his life.’
“I suspect,” continued
Ayrault, “that the man who reaches even the
lowest plane in paradise will find far more beautiful
visions than any we have here.”
As they had but little rest the night
before, they were all tired. The warm breeze
swayed the long dry grass, causing it to give out a
soft rustle; all birds except the flitting bats were
asleep among the tall ferns or on the great trees
that spread their branches towards heaven. There
was nothing to recall a picture of the huge monsters
they had seen that day, or of the still more to be
dreaded terror these had borne witness to. Thus
night closes the activities of the day, and in its
serene grandeur the soul has time to think. While
they thought, however, drowsiness overcame them, and
in a little while all were asleep.
The double line of protection-wires
encircled them like a silent guard, while the methodical
ticking of the alarm-clock that was to wake them at
the approach of danger, and register the hour of interruption,
formed a curious contrast to the irregular cries of
the night-hawks in the distance. Time and again
some huge iguanodon or a hipsohopus would pass,
shaking the ground with its tread; but so implicit
was the travellers’ trust in the vigilance of
their mechanical and tireless watch, that they slept
on as calmly and unconcernedly as though they had
been in their beds at home, while the tick was as constant
and regular as a sentry’s march. The wires
of course did not protect them from creatures having
wings, and they ran some risk of a visitation from
the blood-sucking bats. The far-away volcanoes
occasionally sent up sheets of flame, which in the
distance were like summer lightning; the torrents
of lava and crashes that had sounded so thunderous
when near, were now like the murmur of the ocean’s
ebb tide, lulling the terrestrials to deeper sleep.
The pale moons were at intervals momentarily obscured
by the rushing clouds in the upper air, only to reappear
soon afterwards as serene as before. All Nature
seemed at rest.
Shortly before dawn there was an unusually
heavy step. A moment later the ever-vigilant
batteries poured forth their current, and the clang
of the alarm-bell made the still night ring.
In an instant the three men were awake, each resting
on one knee, with their backs towards the centre and
their polished barrels raised. It was not long
before they perceived the intruder by the moonlight.
A huge monster of the Triceratops prorsus species
had entered the camp. It was shaped something
like an elephant, but had ten or twelve times the bulk,
being over forty feet in length, not including the
long, thick tail. The head carried two huge
horns on the forehead and one on the nose.
“A plague on my shot-gun!”
said Cortlandt. “Had I known how much of
this kind of game we should see, I too should have
brought a rifle.”
The monster was entangled in the wires,
and in another second would have stepped on the batteries
that were still causing the bell to ring.
“Aim for the heart,” said
Bearwarden to Ayrault. “When you show me
his ribs, I will follow you in the hole.”
Ayrault instantly fired for a point
just back of the left foreleg. The explosion
had the same effect as on the mastodon, removing a
half-barrel of hide, etc; and the next second Bearwarden
sent a bullet less than an inch from where Ayrault’s
had stopped. Before the colossus could turn,
each had caused several explosions in close proximity
to the first. The creature was of course terribly
wounded, and several ribs were cracked, but no ball
had gone through. With a roar it made straight
for the woods, and with surprising agility, running
fully as fast as an elephant. Bearwarden and
Ayrault kept up a rapid fire at the left hind leg,
and soon completely disabled it. The dinosaur,
however, supported itself with its huge tail, and continued
to make good time. Knowing they could not give
it a fatal wound at the intervening distance, in the
uncertain light, they stopped firing and set out in
pursuit. Cortlandt paused to stop the bell that
still rang, and then put his best foot foremost in
regaining his friends. For half a mile they
hurried along, until, seeing by the quantity of blood
on the ground that they were in no danger of losing
the game, they determined to save their strength.
The trail entered the woods by a narrow ravine, passed
through what proved to be but a belt of timber, and
then turned north to the right. Presently in
the semi-darkness they saw the monster’s head
against the sky. He was browsing among the trees,
tearing off the young branches, and the hunters succeeded
in getting within seventy-five yards before being
discovered. Just as he began to run, the two
rifles again fired, this time at the right hind leg,
which they succeeded in hamstringing. After that
the Triceratops prorsus was at their mercy, and
they quickly put an end to its suffering.
“The sun is about to rise,”
said Bearwarden; “in a few minutes we shall
have enough light.”
They cut out a dozen thick slices
of tenderloin steak, and soon were broiling and eating
a substantial breakfast.
“There are not as many spectators
to watch us eat here,” said Cortlandt, “as
in the woods. I suggest that, after returning
to camp for our blankets and things, we steer for
the Callisto, via this Triceratops, to see what creatures
have been attracted by the body.”
On finishing their meal they returned
to the place at which they had passed the night.
Having straightened the protection-wires, which had
become twisted, and arranged their impedimenta, they
set out, and were soon once more beside their latest
victim.