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Title: Bomba the jungle boy at the giant cataract : Or, Chief Nascanora and his captives
Author: Rockwood, Roy
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.

*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Bomba the jungle boy at the giant cataract : Or, Chief Nascanora and his captives" ***


[Illustration: THE WATER KEPT RISING HIGHER AND HIGHER.
  _Bomba at the Giant Cataract._        _Page 184_]



  BOMBA
  THE JUNGLE BOY
  AT THE GIANT
  CATARACT

  OR

  Chief Nascanora and His Captives

  BY
  ROY ROCKWOOD

  AUTHOR OF “BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY,” “LOST ON
  THE MOON,” “THROUGH SPACE TO MARS,” ETC.

  _ILLUSTRATED_

  NEW YORK
  CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY
  PUBLISHERS



BOOKS FOR BOYS

_By_ ROY ROCKWOOD


THE BOMBA BOOKS

  12mo.    Cloth.    Illustrated.

  BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY
  BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AT THE MOVING MOUNTAIN
  BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AT THE GIANT CATARACT


GREAT MARVEL SERIES

  THROUGH THE AIR TO THE NORTH POLE
  UNDER THE OCEAN TO THE SOUTH POLE
  FIVE THOUSAND MILES UNDERGROUND
  THROUGH SPACE TO MARS
  LOST ON THE MOON
  ON A TORN-AWAY WORLD
  THE CITY BEYOND THE CLOUDS


SPEEDWELL BOYS SERIES

  THE SPEEDWELL BOYS ON MOTOR CYCLES
  THE SPEEDWELL BOYS AND THEIR RACING AUTO
  THE SPEEDWELL BOYS AND THEIR POWER LAUNCH
  THE SPEEDWELL BOYS IN A SUBMARINE
  THE SPEEDWELL BOYS AND THEIR ICE RACER


DAVE DASHAWAY SERIES

  DAVE DASHAWAY, THE YOUNG AVIATOR
  DAVE DASHAWAY AND HIS HYDROPLANE
  DAVE DASHAWAY AND HIS GIANT AIRSHIP
  DAVE DASHAWAY AROUND THE WORLD
  DAVE DASHAWAY, AIR CHAMPION

CUPPLES & LEON CO., Publishers, New York

  Copyright, 1926, by
  CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY

  BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AT THE GIANT
  CATARACT

  Printed in U. S. A.



CONTENTS


  CHAPTER                                   PAGE

      I THE SUDDEN ATTACK                      1

     II AT GRIPS WITH DEATH                    9

    III IN THE NICK OF TIME                   19

     IV A TERRIFIC STRUGGLE                   26

      V TERRIBLE JAWS                         35

     VI PURSUED BY AN ALLIGATOR               42

    VII CARRIED INTO CAPTIVITY                53

   VIII THE MAN WITH THE SPLIT NOSE           62

     IX THE SAVAGE RAIDERS                    69

      X IN DEADLY PERIL                       80

     XI FEROCIOUS FOES                        86

    XII THE JAGUARS ATTACK                    95

   XIII THE MAD MONKEY                       102

    XIV BESET OF ENEMIES                     109

     XV LYING IN AMBUSH                      116

    XVI THE ISLAND OF SNAKES                 125

   XVII AMID WRITHING SERPENTS               136

  XVIII THE MYSTERY DEEPENS                  146

    XIX A STARTLING INTERRUPTION             153

     XX IN THE HANDS OF THE HEADHUNTERS      161

    XXI THE GIANT CATARACT                   167

   XXII RUSPAK GLOATS                        173

  XXIII A MAD STAMPEDE                       180

   XXIV IN THE SWIRL OF THE RAPIDS           186

    XXV THE RESCUE OF SOBRININI              192



  BOMBA THE JUNGLE
  BOY AT THE GIANT
  CATARACT



CHAPTER I

THE SUDDEN ATTACK


Bomba made his way as silently as a panther through the jungle.

For that jungle abounded in enemies, as the boy had had occasion to
know. At any moment a boa constrictor might drop like a flash from a
tree above and seek to enfold him in its crushing coils. A turn of
the trail might bring him face to face with a crouching jaguar. Or a
cooanaradi, deadliest of all venomous snakes, might launch itself from
the underbrush and inject its poison into his veins.

There were human foes, too, against whom Bomba had to be on his guard.
With the natives who dwelt in that part of the jungle he was on
comparatively friendly terms, though he never mingled with them on a
footing of intimacy.

But from time to time the dreaded headhunters from the faraway region
of the Giant Cataract invaded this district in search of the hideous
trophies which their name implied wherewith to adorn their wigwams.

Their coming was a signal for the native inhabitants to flee, carrying
along with them their children and scanty household belongings. The
headhunters were cruel and ruthless, and death and destruction followed
in their wake.

Bomba had seen signs of them that very morning, and he had no desire
for a closer acquaintance. On two previous occasions, he and Casson,
the aged naturalist with whom he lived, had been sought out by these
dreaded savages and had narrowly escaped with their lives. A third time
they might not be so fortunate.

“And as I have only one head, I am exceedingly anxious to keep it on my
shoulders,” the boy had told Casson.

So it was with extreme caution that Bomba threaded his way through the
jungle, his eyes darting from right to left, plumbing the recesses of
every thicket, piercing the foliage of every tree. With him eternal
vigilance was the price, not only of liberty, but of life itself.

There was a sudden rustling in the leaves of a giant dolado tree. Bomba
halted instantly, drew an arrow from his belt and fitted it to the
string of his bow.

But his tense attitude relaxed as the leaves were thrust aside and the
grinning, friendly face of a monkey framed itself in the opening.

“Doto!” exclaimed Bomba, in accents of relief and pleasure, as he waved
his hand to the newcomer.

Welcome was in the tone and gesture, and the monkey dropped from branch
to branch, finally landing lightly on the ground. Its eyes gleamed with
affection as Bomba caressed its head.

The boy--for he was no more than that, being fourteen years old at the
most--presented a striking picture as he stood there with a ray of
sunlight falling athwart his face. He was taller than the average boy
of his age and far more muscular and more sturdily built.

From constant exposure to sun and storm, his face was as bronzed as
that of an Indian, but his features betrayed the fact that he was of
the white race. His eyes and hair were brown, his nose strong and
aquiline, and his firm jaw denoted courage and resolution.

He wore the mendiyeh, or native tunic, and across his breast was slung
a puma skin--that of Geluk, the puma, that he had come across and slain
when it was trying to kill the friendly parrots, Kiki and Woowoo. His
arms and legs were bare, and showed the powerful muscles rippling under
the brown skin at every movement. On his feet were home-made sandals.

In his belt he carried a machete, a two-edged knife fully a foot in
length and ground to an almost razor-like sharpness. A pouch at his
waist held his arrows and a five-chambered revolver, the only firearm
he had ever owned, the gift of two white men whose camp he had saved
from a night attack by jaguars.

“So Doto is glad to see Bomba back!” said the boy as he fondled the
animal’s furry head. “And Bomba is glad to meet Doto again. Bomba has
been away for many days and has seen many things. He has met men whose
hearts are black. He has seen mountains break apart and fire come from
the top. Snakes and jaguars have tried to kill him.”

The monkey uttered sounds that would have been unintelligible to many,
but that Bomba knew were meant to express sympathy. The boy had an
almost uncanny power over animals, and had many friends among the less
savage denizens of the jungle, such as the monkeys and parrots. He
talked to them and they chattered back at him, and they had arrived at
a point where they could understand each other in simple things. Tone
and gesture helped to interpret the words and sounds, and each knew
intuitively whether the other were sad or glad and they shared emotions
in common.

“Bomba’s heart is heavy,” the lad went on, “for he has not done what
he wanted to do. He went to see Jojasta, the medicine man. He thought
the man could tell him about his father and mother. But Jojasta was
killed before he could tell Bomba what Bomba wanted to know. He told
Bomba something, but not enough.”

The lad was speaking more to relieve his own sore heart than anything
else, but Doto seemed to understand, and put his hairy paw consolingly
on the boy’s arm.

“And now before many moons Bomba must go away again,” the lad resumed,
“for Jojasta told Bomba that he must go to Sobrinini of the Pilati
tribe, beyond the Giant Cataract, and that she could tell him about his
father and mother. It is a long way off, and there are many dangers in
the way. Bomba may never come back, may never see Doto again.”

The monkey uttered a wail and snuggled closer to Bomba as though
in fear of immediate parting. The boy patted the animal’s head
affectionately and roused himself from his musings.

“Bomba must go fast,” he said. “He is on his way home to Casson. He has
been away a long time, and he does not know whether Casson is alive or
dead. So Bomba must hurry.”

As the lad started on in haste, Doto broke out into excited chatterings
and clung to Bomba’s arm as though to hold him back.

Bomba knew at once that the animal was trying to warn him of
threatening danger, and he stopped short in his tracks.

“What is it, Doto?” he asked.

There was another outbreak of sounds that would have been meaningless
to anyone else, but which Bomba had no trouble in interpreting
correctly.

His face grew grave as he listened.

“I know,” he said. “The headhunters, the men with black hearts, are in
the jungle. I have seen their signs this morning. I thought that I had
got past them. But Doto, from the tops of the trees, can see farther
than I can. Where are these men with the bloody hands?”

The monkey pointed in front of them in the very direction Bomba was
taking.

The boy hushed the monkey’s chattering and stood silent as a statue,
listening.

From his long experience in the jungle he had become preternaturally
sharp of hearing. He knew all the sounds of the jungle and could
interpret them accurately.

But strain his ears as he might, he could detect nothing out of the
ordinary. There was the usual hum of insects, the occasional howl of a
monkey or shriek of a parrot. But there was nothing to indicate that,
besides himself, there was any human being in that part of the jungle.

He glanced at Doto with a look of inquiry, as though to ask if the
animal might not be mistaken. But Doto held to his arm with such a
frenzied clutch that Bomba decided to trust in the creature’s instinct
or knowledge--or both.

There was no help for it. In spite of his eagerness to reach Casson,
about whose condition he was in a ferment of anxiety, he must make
a long circuit to avoid the region in which Doto had indicated that
danger lay.

So he changed his course, left the faint trail that he had been
following, and swung out in a sweeping semicircle, with every nerve at
tension and every sense on the alert. With him went his friend, Doto.

On the route he was now pursuing there was no trail, and Bomba had to
hack a way through the underbrush. This involved exhausting work and
made his progress slow. But most of all he dreaded it for fear that the
noise he necessarily made should attract the attention of lurking foes.

At times, when the brush was very thick, Doto would climb to the
lowest branch of a tree and swing from one bough to the other of the
interlacing trees, and Bomba, who was almost as agile as the monkey
himself, followed his companion’s example.

Soon, however, the jungle thinned a little, and they traversed the
forest with redoubled speed in order to make up for lost time.

An hour had passed when Doto suddenly grasped the lad’s arm and pulled
him to the ground. At the same moment, an arrow whizzed over Bomba’s
head. A second later another arrow followed and buried itself in a
tree, where it hung quivering.

Bomba’s enemies were upon him!



CHAPTER II

AT GRIPS WITH DEATH


Like a flash, Bomba acted.

He knew that if he rose he would be offering himself as a target. At
least two of his foes were near at hand. There might be more.

Not fifty feet away was a fallen tree, a veritable monarch of the
jungle, that he and Doto had made their way over with difficulty. Its
branches and foliage spread over a large area.

Turning in that direction, keeping on hands and knees and motioning
Doto to follow, Bomba made his way through the intervening thickets
with as much speed as possible.

Had his enemies followed at once, Bomba would probably have been
discovered and overtaken. But they were wary, and from previous
experiences of their fellows knew to what deadly effect Bomba could
shoot. So, from their places of concealment, they waited for the target
once more to present itself.

And when, a few minutes later, they were reinforced by some of their
mates and rushed forward in a body to the place where Bomba had last
been seen, their expected prey had vanished.

Bomba had utilized those few precious minutes to the utmost. Moving
noiselessly and yet rapidly, he had reached the vast mass of branches
and ensconced himself in their furthest depths.

His concealment was aided also by the fact that the tree had fallen
across a hollow, so that there was a deep hole directly under the
trunk. Into this Bomba burrowed, crouching low so that his whole body
was hidden even should the branches and foliage be thrust aside by his
pursuers.

He had sent Doto off in another direction, as the monkey could be of no
help to him if it came to a fight, and might by its chattering betray
his hiding place to his enemies.

And now, with his heart beating rapidly but with his courage at the
highest pitch, Bomba waited for the coming of his enemies.

He knew that he was in desperate straits and that, if discovered, he
would be doomed. But before the end came he would do his utmost to take
some of his foes with him.

It was characteristic of the boy that at this supreme moment he thought
more of Casson than of himself. He had so often faced death that it had
lost most of its terrors.

But Casson! Poor, sick, half-demented Casson! What would become of him
if anything should happen to Bomba, who had so long been his reliance
and defender?

In that confined space the lad’s bow and arrows were of no use to him.
But he had his revolver fully loaded, and at such short range it could
be trusted to do deadly execution. And as a last resort, if it came to
a hand to hand fight, there was his machete, in the use of which he was
a master.

Before long he could hear his pursuers beating the bushes in the
vicinity, giving utterance to grunts of rage as their search continued
fruitless.

He held his breath and waited.

Then he heard another sound, faint at first but gradually becoming more
definite, a rustling as of some soft, long body slithering through the
brush.

At intervals there was a sound like a rattle, as though the creature
had encountered some obstacle that had aroused its irritation and was
taking this way of showing it.

Bomba knew that sound, and his heart skipped a beat.

A snake was coming toward him, the deadly jaracara, the South American
rattlesnake, the slightest puncture of whose fangs meant death!

What should he do? He could not retreat. If he shot the reptile the
noise would bring his human enemies surging down upon him. If he
attempted to use his machete, the snake’s stroke would be quicker than
Bomba’s blow, and the creature’s fangs would be imbedded in his flesh.

While these thoughts were racing through his mind he saw the loathsome
body and the triangular head of the jaracara come into view not ten
feet away.

At the same moment the reptile caught sight of Bomba. It stopped short
in surprise. Then its eyes snapped with malignant fury. Like a flash it
threw its body into a coil and upreared its head to strike.

But in that short moment an inspiration had come to Bomba. He grasped
a long stick and prodded its coils. Instantly the snake struck at the
stick. Before it could recover, Bomba had pounced upon it and his
sinewy hands had closed upon its throat.

Then ensued a terrific struggle, with the death of one or perhaps both
of the combatants as the only possible outcome--a struggle all the more
terrible for Bomba, because it had to be carried on in silence.

And while he holds that slippery throat with the clutch of desperation,
as the snake twists and writhes and tries to bite, it may be well, for
the benefit of those who have not read the preceding volumes of this
series, to tell who Bomba was and what had been his adventures up to
the time at which this story opens.

From his earliest childhood, as far as his memory went, Bomba had
lived with Cody Casson in the jungle. The latter was a naturalist, who
had withdrawn from civilization and settled in a little cabin in the
remotest part of the Amazonian region. He was moody and abstracted, and
often went for days at a time without speaking except in monosyllables.

But he was kind to Bomba, and a warm attachment existed between them.
He had started to give the boy the rudiments of an education. But one
day, when Casson fired at an anaconda that was darting at Bomba, the
gun burst and laid Casson on his back, while the wounded anaconda
retreated. Bomba had dragged his injured companion to their cabin and
nursed him back to physical health. But Casson’s head had been injured
by the explosion, and from that time on he was half-demented, though
harmless. The lessons ceased abruptly, and Bomba became the provider
and protector of the little family of two.

Thrown thus early on his own resources, Bomba had developed into a
remarkable physical specimen of boyhood, daring, strong, and versed
in all the craft of the jungle. He was surrounded by daily perils, to
which a weaker nature would have succumbed. Serpents and wild beasts
sought his life. But against them he matched his own courage and
cunning, and had so far survived.

He knew comparatively nothing of the outside world. The jungle filled
his whole horizon. But he knew that he was different from the natives
of that region. Tugging at his heart was the knowledge that he was
white, and he was possessed with a great desire to come in contact with
his own people, to learn of their ways and dwell among them.

He knew that he was out of place where he was. The call of the blood
was strong within him. He had a great longing to know of his parentage.
He had questioned Casson repeatedly on this point, and the old man had
striven in vain to tell him. But his memory had failed at the critical
moment, and all that he could do was to mention the names “Bartow” and
“Laura,” which Bomba concluded must refer to his parents.

How Bomba met two white rubber hunters, Gillis and Dorn, and won
their gratitude by saving their lives when their camp was attacked
at night by jaguars; how he trapped the cooanaradi when it pursued
him; how he drove off the vultures when they assailed his friends the
monkeys; how the latter came to his aid when the cabin was besieged
by the headhunters--these adventures are told in the first book of
this series, entitled: “Bomba the Jungle Boy; or, The Old Naturalist’s
Secret.”

Although Casson could not himself remember the facts about Bomba’s
parentage, he told him that he could learn all he wanted to know from
Jojasta, the medicine man of the Moving Mountain. It was a long journey
that Bomba had in prospect to reach Jojasta, but the urge to go was
so strong that the lad determined to attempt it. After beating off
another attack of the headhunters, Bomba took Casson down the river and
delivered him to the care of Pipina, an old squaw for whom he had done
many favors, and set out to find Jojasta.

From the very start his journey was beset with dangers from man and
beast, flood and earthquake. He was instrumental in delivering from the
power of the savages a Mrs. Parkhurst, whom he always referred to in
his mind as “the woman with the golden hair.” Later he found her son,
Frank, and in their joint adventures the boys grew strongly attached
to each other, and Frank’s stories of the wonders of civilization
intensified Bomba’s longings to see those things for himself.

How Bomba was swallowed up in an earthquake and hurled into a
subterranean cavern that promised to become a living tomb; by what a
marvelous combination of nerve and good fortune he reached the open air
and sunlight; how he finally found Jojasta after the latter had been
fatally hurt by the fall of his temple; the partial but not sufficient
information he received from the dying man regarding his parents; the
obstacles he surmounted and the perils he escaped are told in the
preceding volume of this series, entitled: “Bomba the Jungle Boy at the
Moving Mountain; or, The Mystery of the Caves of Fire.”

And now to return to Bomba, as he fights his life-and-death battle with
the snake amid the branches and foliage of the fallen tree, not daring
to make a sound lest he betray his hiding place to the savages who were
hunting for him only a short distance away.

Beneath the scaly skin of the jaracara there was tremendous muscular
power, and this was made more available when the reptile secured a
purchase by wrapping its long body about the boy’s leg.

It squirmed and writhed and twisted, seeking to sink its fangs into the
hands that held it. Its jaws, slavering with poison, were never more
than a few inches from the boy’s flesh. If Bomba’s hands should slip
from that slimy throat ever so little, his doom would be sealed.

The snake knew this and redoubled its exertions. But Bomba knew it too,
and held on with desperation, sinking his powerful fingers deeper and
deeper into the reptile’s throat.

If he could only hold on a little longer!

For time was on his side. The snake, deprived of breath by that choking
grasp, must eventually succumb. Its only chance lay in the possibility
of Bomba’s hands slipping or his nerve failing.

But his hands did not slip nor did his nerve fail.

Gradually the struggles of the snake grew weaker. A glaze began to
steal over the horrid eyes. The grip of its body about the boy’s leg
slowly relaxed. Then at last the reptile straightened out and its head
hung limp.

Bomba still retained his grip for another minute or two to make
assurance doubly sure. Then, when no doubt remained, he threw the
reptile to the ground and with one stroke of his machete cut off its
head.

Only then did he sink down on the ground, panting and exhausted. The
tax had been a tremendous one, not only on his muscles but also on his
nerves. He had seldom been brought more closely face to face with death.

But he had conquered, and a tingle of exultation ran through his veins.
He cast a glance of disgust at the grinning head of his dead foe, and
then turned his attention to the human enemies without.

The struggle had been carried on in such silence that it had not
attracted their attention. They were still at some distance, beating
the bushes for their prey and uttering exclamations of disappointment
and chagrin.

It was too much to hope, however, that sooner or later their attention
would not be drawn toward the tree, and Bomba held himself prepared
for that eventuality.

He wiped his knife on the foliage and restored it to his belt. Then,
with his revolver held ready for action, he crouched low in the hollow
and waited.

He could hear the savages coming nearer and nearer. The crackling of
the bushes and their guttural conversation became more distinct.

Then the branches of the tree were pushed aside and a ray of light shot
through!



CHAPTER III

IN THE NICK OF TIME


Bomba caught a glimpse of half a dozen brawny forms and brutal faces
and dropped at once into the hollow so that he was wholly concealed.

A pang stabbed his heart as he noted the number of his enemies. Against
so many he could not hope to conquer, if it came to a fight. He might
bring down one or two, possibly three, but the others would overcome
him.

But his stout heart refused to quail. He had the advantage of position.
He could see them outlined against the light more readily than they
could discover him in the darkness. He could at least have the
satisfaction of selling his life dearly.

Several of the savages crowded in among the foliage, pushing the
branches and leaves aside so that light could penetrate.

But the light was dim, though strong enough to show the outline of the
giant trunk. To the peering eyes of the savages, it seemed to be lying
flat on the ground, and they failed to discern the hollow underneath.
As far as they could see there was no one hiding there.

“Not here,” grunted one of them, already weary with previous effort in
searching the bushes.

Bomba’s heart leaped at this indication of giving up the search. But it
sank again when a voice that had authority in it said:

“Go in farther. Make sure.”

Grumblingly the men obeyed, and Bomba could hear them coming nearer. He
tightened his hold on the revolver.

Suddenly there was a shriek of fright, and one of the savages jumped a
foot into the air. Then he made a break for the open, shouting:

“Snake! Snake!”

His comrades followed, rushing with frantic, headlong haste into the
clearing.

In a flash, Bomba, the jungle boy, comprehended what had happened. The
intruder had stepped on the soft, yielding body of the dead serpent
and had jumped to the conclusion that it was alive. Naturally, he had
not waited to investigate, but had leaped out of the reach of the
supposedly deadly fangs.

Now he stood outside the mass of branches and was jabbering excitedly
as he told of his narrow escape.

The examination of that particular mass of branches stopped then and
there. The men were reasonably certain, anyway, that their hoped-for
victim was not there, and they were perfectly content to leave the
snake in undisturbed possession.

Bomba could hear them moving farther and farther off until at last the
sound of their footsteps and voices died away in the distance.

He could scarcely believe in his good fortune. He had steeled himself
for the conflict that seemed almost inevitable and from which he had
not expected to emerge alive.

The coming of the snake, which had filled him with horror, had really
proved a blessing. Living, it had tried to kill him. Dead, it had
helped to save him.

Bomba lay in the hollow perfectly still for some time, fearing that his
enemies might return. But when an hour had passed without any sound to
alarm him, he ventured cautiously to creep toward the edge of the pile
of branches and look about.

His keen eyes scanned the jungle in every direction, but could
discern no trace of his enemies. He had known from the sound of their
retreating footsteps that they were not between him and his goal. They
had gone in the direction that he had already traversed. That special
group, at least, would now be in the rear of him instead of in front.

This conclusion was confirmed when Doto dropped down from a tree, where
his sharp eyes had noted all that had happened, and rubbed up against
Bomba, chattering his delight.

“They have gone then, Doto?” asked Bomba, as he slung his bow over his
shoulder. “They are far away?”

The monkey chattered an affirmative and pointed back of them.

“It is well,” said Bomba. “I must go fast now to reach Casson. You
saved Bomba’s life, Doto. If you had not pulled him down the arrow
would have found him. Doto is good, and Bomba will not forget.”

A gratified look came into the monkey’s eyes. He wanted to go along
with Bomba, but the latter did not think it best.

“You stay here, Doto,” he said, as he gently released his arm from the
monkey’s hold. “Bomba will soon see you again.”

Then, as the affectionate animal seemed a little crestfallen, the boy
added:

“But you can keep watch, and if you see the men with black hearts
coming after Bomba, you must come and tell him. You can go faster
through the trees than they can through the jungle.”

Doto seemed to understand, and with a last pat of his paw shinned up
the nearest tree. Bomba knew that he had left behind him a vigilant and
faithful sentinel.

A glance at the sun told the boy that it was already afternoon, and
that he must hasten if he were to reach the cabin of Pipina before the
shadows of night closed about him.

So he started off at a rapid pace, employing all his woodsmanship to
avoid obstacles and steer as straight a course as possible. For a part
of the way there were woodland trails, and then he made good time.
When he could, which was often, he jumped over the thickets instead of
hacking his way through them, leaping into the air as lightly as a deer
and landing softly on the other side.

Before long he was on familiar ground, and knew that he was reaching
the cabin where he and Casson had lived for so many years. It had
been burned during the last foray of the headhunters, and was now
uninhabitable. But all that Bomba had ever known of home was bound up
in it.

So a certain melancholy pleasure warmed his heart as he came out into
the clearing and looked at the part of the smoke-blackened wall that
remained standing. Without being conscious of it, tears stood in his
eyes, and he vowed that he would rebuild when the headhunters should
have removed their dreaded presence from the jungle.

But he had no time now to indulge in reflections. A hasty search of
the river bank revealed his canoe in the tree-hung inlet where he had
hidden it.

He untied it, sent it with a push into the middle of the stream, and
began paddling down the river.

It was a long journey, but his powerful arms sent the canoe whizzing
along at a great pace. The current was with him, and he knew that,
barring accidents, he would reach the hut of Pipina before dark.

But “accidents,” he had come to learn, were almost daily occurrences
in the jungle, and he did not abate a jot of his vigilance, his keen
eyes keeping on the lookout everywhere--at the water for snags or
alligators, at either shore for animal or human enemies, on the trees
that overhung the stream for lurking anacondas.

But though always on the alert, his subconscious mind was busy with
thoughts of his recent journey and of that which was to come. Would the
latter be more satisfactory than the former? Would Sobrinini complete
the story regarding the mystery of his parentage that Jojasta had left
so incomplete?

Who was Sobrinini? What did she know? And even if she did know, what
would she tell?

Did Casson know her? Would the mention of her name unlock the door of
his memory, that door that he had tried so desperately but fruitlessly
to open?

But here Bomba’s questioning stopped as the thought came to him
that perhaps there would be no Casson to tell him anything. The old
naturalist had been so weak and frail when he had left him! His hold
on life had been so slender! Perhaps the thread had already snapped.

The thought was an agonizing one to Bomba, and spurred him to such
efforts that the paddle swept in a wide semicircle as he propelled his
slight craft through the water.

At such a rate of speed did he travel that long before he had expected
he found himself in the vicinity of his goal.

When he realized that Pipina’s cabin lay beyond a turn of the river
just ahead, Bomba slackened speed. His habitual caution, bred of long
years in the jungle, asserted itself. He wanted to inspect the cabin
before approaching it.

So, despite his impatience, he rested from his paddling and let the
craft drift with the current until he rounded the bend.

What he saw then made him dip his paddle deep and send the canoe in
frantic haste toward the shore.

Before the door of the cabin crouched a huge puma, preparing for a
spring through the doorway!



CHAPTER IV

A TERRIFIC STRUGGLE


At sight of the crouching brute, Bomba shouted with all his might.

The beast turned at the shout, fangs bared and eyes flashing with
rage, to meet the newcomer. Then, with its tail lashing its flanks, it
advanced toward the river bank.

At the same moment a roar came from within the cabin. And with the roar
was blended the scream of a woman in mortal terror.

As the canoe approached the bank, Bomba fitted an arrow to his string,
drew it to the head and let it go.

The haste with which he shot and the motion of the boat disturbed his
aim, so that it just grazed the animal’s head, inflicting a slight
flesh wound, but no mortal injury.

But the pain inflamed the puma’s rage, and as the canoe had now come
within a few feet of the bank, it prepared to spring.

But just as it was about to launch itself into the air a second arrow
from Bomba’s bow struck fair to its heart.

With a fearful howl the beast rolled over and over for a moment, then
straightened out and lay still.

With scarcely a second glance at his dead adversary, Bomba leaped on
the bank and started to run toward the cabin.

The hut consisted of two rooms, a larger one in the front and a much
smaller one in the rear. A flimsy door with one rope hinge broken
connected the two.

In the swift glance he sent inside as he reached the outer doorway,
Bomba saw no trace of human occupants.

What he did see was a puma, larger than the one he had slain outside,
clawing at the inner door between the two rooms and at times hurling
its huge body against the door. It was a dilapidated door at the best,
and would long since have yielded to the beast’s attack had it not been
for some barriers placed against it on the other side.

Bomba took in the situation in an instant. Pipina had seen the beasts
approaching and, taking Casson with her, had retreated to the inner
room, shut the door, and piled against it whatever furniture she could
gather in her frantic haste.

But that it was pitifully inadequate was apparent at a glance. Already
there were breaks in the door that the puma was trying to enlarge with
its claws so that it could push its body through. From the other side
of the door came the frantic screams of Pipina, seeing death so near at
hand.

In a flash Bomba fitted an arrow to his bow and let it go. It struck
the puma in the shoulder, inflicting a serious wound but not enough to
cripple it.

With a roar of rage the brute turned to meet its new enemy. With one
spring it was at the door.

The movement had been so lightning fast that Bomba had no time to shoot
again. His only salvation lay in flight.

Turning, he ran like a deer toward the river bank, hoping to regain
his canoe and push out into the stream. But even as he did so he felt
that it was hopeless. He was fleet, but the puma was fleeter. Before he
could reach the water it would be upon him.

Just then he saw out of the corner of his eye a third puma coming with
giant bounds into the clearing. Then indeed he gave himself up for lost.

He drew his knife, determined to die fighting. That he was about to die
he had no doubt.

But just as he felt the hot breath of his pursuer on his neck there was
a terrific snarling behind him and the impact of huge bodies.

He glanced behind him and his flight suddenly halted.

The two great pumas were locked in deadly combat, clawing and biting,
rolling over and over as each sought to get a grip on the other’s
throat.

It was a battle of Titans, and Bomba looked on with amazement that was
transformed into an expression of delight as he recognized the last
comer.

“Polulu!” he exclaimed. “Good Polulu! He has come to Bomba’s help.”

He circled about the combatants, seeking to get in a thrust with his
knife that might decide the battle in favor of the friendly puma. But
the fight was so fast and furious that he was as likely to wound one as
the other.

But Polulu needed no help. His weight and courage finally told. Before
long he succeeded in getting the throat hold he was seeking, and then
the end was only a matter of a few moments.

But it had been a terrible fight, and after Polulu had risen from the
body of his dead adversary he was hardly able to move. He staggered
away a few paces, and then lay down panting and exhausted.

Bomba let him rest awhile, and then went up to him and caressed the
great, shaggy head.

“Polulu is a good friend,” he said gratefully. “It is not the first
time he has saved Bomba’s life. There is no one in the jungle as big
and strong as Polulu.”

The puma tried to purr, and licked the hand that fondled him.

Their strange friendship was of long standing. It dated from the time
when Bomba had come across the puma trapped by a tree in the jungle,
that had fallen upon the animal and broken its leg. The boy of the
jungle had been stirred to pity at the creature’s distress. He had
released him from the weight that held him, bound up the broken leg,
and brought him food and drink.

By the time Polulu, as Bomba named the puma, had fully recovered, a
strong attachment had grown up between the oddly assorted pair. Their
paths often crossed in the forest, and more than once the great beast
had saved Bomba from serious danger. Now, once more, he had come to the
rescue when the lad was at the last extremity.

Leaving the animal to lick its wounds, Bomba hastened to the hut.
Its inmates had no inkling of what had happened except that for some
mysterious reason the attacks upon the door had ceased. The screams of
the woman had given place to moaning.

“Pipina! Casson!” shouted Bomba. “It is Bomba calling. The pumas are
dead. Open the door.”

Again there came a scream, but this time it was one of delight. There
was a hurried removal of the barriers on the other side of the door,
and then the old squaw came rushing out and threw her arms about
Bomba’s neck, crying and laughing in the same breath.

Behind her came Cody Casson, his steps slow and uncertain, looking so
frail that it seemed as though a zephyr would have blown him away, but
with an affectionate welcome in his faded eyes.

But he was still alive, and at that moment nothing else mattered. Dear
Casson! Good old Casson! There were tears in Bomba’s eyes as he rushed
forward and folded the old man in his embrace.

The two were roused by a shriek from Pipina, who had gone to the
doorway and now came rushing back in terror.

“There is another puma there!” she cried. “He is bigger that the
others! Quick! Let us get behind the door again.”

Bomba spoke to her soothingly and with a smile.

“He is not like the others,” he said. “He is Bomba’s friend. I killed
one puma but he killed the other. I will bring him here, and you will
see.”

But Pipina, despite Bomba’s assurances, had no desire for an
introduction to the giant puma, and shook her head decidedly, the while
she muttered prayers to her gods.

So Bomba had to be content with bringing out a haunch of meat and
sitting beside Polulu and talking to him, while the latter munched away
contentedly. Then the great beast rose, stretched himself, rubbed his
head against Bomba’s hand, and departed again for his haunts in the
jungle.

They had a great feast that night, for Pipina displayed all her skill
in making a fitting celebration of the wanderer’s return.

Bomba was almost famished, and ate greedily while Pipina beamed with
smiles at his tribute to her cooking. The lad was glad to see also that
Casson had a better appetite than he had had when Bomba had left him.
It was evident that Pipina had taken good care of him.

But though the old naturalist had improved physically, there was no
change for the better in his mental condition. Bomba studied him during
the meal and grieved to see that his mind was still weak and wandering.
Would that closed door in his mind never open?

When the meal was finished and Pipina was busy with clearing away the
food that was left and performing her simple household tasks, Bomba sat
down beside Casson and told the story of his journey.

Casson listened, holding Bomba’s brown hand affectionately in his weak,
worn one, happy beyond words to have the boy back again with him. But
it was with difficulty that the old man kept the thread of the story.
At times he would interpose vague, irrelevant questions that showed how
hard it was for him to understand.

“I saw Jojasta,” said Bomba, “but it was too late. He was dying.
A pillar of the temple fell on him. And then the earth opened and
swallowed him.”

“Jojasta? Jojasta?” repeated Casson, in a puzzled way. “Oh, yes, he was
the medicine man of the Moving Mountain. But why did you want to see
Jojasta?”

“Don’t you remember?” asked Bomba. “You told me that if I saw him he
could tell me about my father and mother.”

“Father and mother,” murmured Casson, and lapsed into silence, during
which he seemed to be cudgeling his poor, disordered brain to make it
yield up its secrets.

“He thought I was Bartow when he saw me,” went on Bomba.

At the name the old man brightened.

“Bartow!” he exclaimed. “I have heard that name.”

“Is he my father?” asked Bomba eagerly.

Casson tried desperately to remember.

“I--I don’t know,” he said at last piteously.

Bomba’s heart sank, but he tried again.

“I asked him about Laura, too,” he went on, watching Casson narrowly.

“Laura, dear sweet Laura,” murmured the old man with emotion, tears
coming to his eyes.

“Who is she? Where is she? Oh, tell me, Casson!” Bomba begged, with all
his heart in his voice.

“She is--she is--oh, why is it that I cannot remember?” exclaimed
Casson in desperation.

“Jojasta knew. Jojasta could have told you,” the old man went on after
a pause. “But you say that he is dead.”

“He is dead,” replied Bomba. “But before he died he told me that
Sobrinini----”

Then came a startling interruption.



CHAPTER V

TERRIBLE JAWS


At the mention of Sobrinini’s name Cody Casson sprang to his feet,
his weakness temporarily banished, and began to dance around the
room, singing in a cracked, treble voice “la, la, la!” over and over
again. Not until he was exhausted did he cease his gyrations and sink
quivering into his chair.

Bomba watched the sudden transformation with consternation and alarm.
What did this strange outbreak mean?

But he forebore to question until Casson ceased trembling and became
once more like his customary self. Then the boy leaned toward the old
man and said gently:

“I was talking about Sobrinini.” Again the old man started, but did not
rise. Bomba went on:

“Jojasta told me to go to Sobrinini, she of the Pilati tribe beyond the
Giant Cataract, to find out about my father and mother.”

“Yes, Nini ought to know,” muttered Casson. “She ought to know.”

“Who is Sobrinini and why should she know?” asked Bomba.

But Casson did not answer. He sat, muttering incoherently, and seemed
so tired from his recent excitement that Bomba was afraid to press the
matter further.

So he tried to calm the old man’s agitation and a little while later
assisted him into his hammock where he almost immediately fell asleep.

Bomba himself got into his own hammock and tried to sleep. But although
he was dead tired, he found himself for a long time unable to close his
eyes.

He tossed restlessly about, his mind in a tumult of unanswered
questions. Why was it that Casson had betrayed such intense excitement
at the mention of Sobrinini’s name? Why had he referred to her as Nini?
That sounded to Bomba like a pet name, implying long acquaintance
and familiarity. Why did he indulge in that wild fantastic dance and
singing?

One thing was reasonably certain. It was hopeless to count much on
Casson. The disjointed words that his questioning had brought from the
old man could not be pieced together so as to give him any reliable
information.

So he must go to Sobrinini, must face all the dangers that would
inevitably await him in that long journey to the Giant Cataract. The
thought of abandoning his quest did not even occur to him. The urge
to find out about his parentage was, if possible, stronger than it had
been before. No difficulties could daunt or deter him.

With his determination firmly fixed in his mind, he fell at last into
an uneasy slumber.

He found plenty of work awaiting him when he woke in the morning. In
the first place, he had to replace the door that had been so nearly
shattered by the puma, so that Casson and Pipina could have better
protection, if exposed to similar dangers in the future.

He spent much time and labor on this, and when a stout door was at last
completed, together with a heavy bar that could be dropped into place,
he felt much easier in his mind.

Then there was the problem of provisioning the cabin during his coming
absence. Though Casson and Pipina had had plenty while he was gone,
their stock was now greatly depleted and needed replenishing. So he
planned to spend several days in the jungle in order to bring them
home plenty of meat. This would be cured by Pipina and would keep
indefinitely.

It was bright and early one morning that he bade Casson and the woman
farewell and set out for his hunting trip in the jungle.

So far as he could learn, the headhunters had left that district. He
hoped they would stay away a long time, preferably forever.

He had not gone far before Kiki and Woowoo, the friendly parrots,
fluttered from the trees and dropped one on each shoulder. A little
later Doto joined him together with other monkeys, so that he was soon
the center of a group of birds and animals, all competing for a word or
a pat of the hand.

He talked to them, and they chattered back. Then he took out his
harmonica and played for them, to their great delight. So much did the
lonely boy enjoy converse with those who loved him that it was with
reluctance he finally sent them away, so that he could go on with his
hunting.

Two hours passed without anything coming in range of his weapons save
small creatures that he disdained to notice. He was after larger game,
preferably a tapir, a creature as large as a calf, whose meat was
succulent and nourishing. A single one of these would furnish meat
enough for a month.

So he turned his steps toward a large river where he knew these animals
were likely to be found.

For a long time he had no luck. The sun reached its zenith and dropped
down toward the western sky. There were plenty of tracks, but it was
mid-afternoon before he caught a glimpse of what he sought.

Then, coming out from a fringe of trees not far from the river’s edge,
he saw a large tapir browsing on the bank.

It offered an easy target, and Bomba fitted an arrow to his bow. But
unfortunately the wind was blowing toward the tapir and carried Bomba’s
scent with it.

The animal looked up, saw Bomba, and without an instant’s hesitation
plunged into the river.

Ordinarily that would have ended Bomba’s chances, for the tapir can
swim for a long distance under water. His game, therefore, could easily
have got beyond bowshot before it would have been compelled to come to
the surface for air.

The boy gave an exclamation of vexation, which was checked, however, as
his eyes, ranging up and down the river bank, caught sight of a canoe
drawn up among some sedge grass near the shore. No doubt it belonged to
a native who had left it there while he made a trip into the jungle.

Bomba ran to it, untied it, seized the paddle, and pushed out into the
stream, following as nearly as he could guess the direction that the
tapir had taken.

But a stern chase is a long chase, as Bomba soon found. When the tapir
did come to the surface, it was a long way from where Bomba imagined
it would be, and before he had come within range of it the beast had
gone under again.

But Bomba’s second guess proved a better one, and the next time the
tapir came to the surface the boy was within ten feet of it.

Bomba dropped his paddle and seized his weapon. The bow twanged.

The arrow penetrated to the heart of the animal, and it died almost
without a struggle.

Seizing a rope that lay in the bottom of the canoe, Bomba made a noose
and threw it around the head and shoulders of the tapir, securing it
before it could sink. Then he tied the other end of the rope to the
canoe, and set out for the shore, towing his quarry behind him.

It was an arduous task, for the tapir weighed several hundred pounds,
and Bomba made slow progress through the water. But his heart was
exultant, for he had bagged his game. His day had not been fruitless.

His progress was checked suddenly, so suddenly that he was thrown on
his back on the bottom of the canoe.

He scrambled to his feet and looked back, thinking that the body of
the tapir might have caught on a snag. At what he saw his heart almost
stopped beating.

It was no snag that had checked the progress of the canoe.

A monster alligator, the cayman of the Amazon region, was tugging at
the tapir, from which it had already torn a piece of the flank.

Then, as Bomba looked, the water was broken in several places by the
horrid snouts and hideous jaws of other caymen, that had smelled the
blood of the tapir and were hastening to have their share of the feast.

Bomba’s first feeling was that of chagrin at losing his prey. But this
gave way at once to an overpowering sense of his own danger.

Those great jaws tearing at the tapir were sure to upset the canoe. He
must cut the rope.

He drew his machete, sprang to the stern, and commenced to hack madly
at the rope. Before he could cut through a single strand, there was a
terrific jerk, the canoe turned over, and Bomba was thrown into the
river.

By this time the river was swarming with alligators!



CHAPTER VI

PURSUED BY AN ALLIGATOR


Bomba was hurled headlong into the green depths of the river. This in
itself would not have bothered him. He could swim like a fish and was
almost as much at home in the water as on land.

But a thrill of terror passed through him as he realized that not far
away was a group of monsters that could swim faster than he could, and
whose terrible jaws, once clamped on him, could bite him in half.

His mind worked with lightning swiftness. He must remain under water as
long as possible. His instinct for direction told him where the land
lay.

So instead of permitting himself to shoot up to the surface, he
remained under and struck out toward the shore.

For more than a minute he shot ahead at a rapid pace. And only when
it seemed as though his lungs would burst did he at last rise to the
surface.

He shook the water from his eyes and looked behind him. He could see at
least half a dozen caymen tearing at the body of the tapir and others
swimming about greedy for their share.

His only hope lay in the possibility that the brutes would be so busy
fighting each other for a portion of the spoils that they would not
notice him at the distance that he had already attained.

But his chase for the tapir had carried him far out into the stream and
the shore seemed still a terrible distance away.

He summoned up all his resolution and struck out for land, keeping
himself as low in the water as possible and moving with scarcely a
ripple.

For a time it looked as though his hope might be realized. Twice he
looked behind him, and each time the brutes still seemed to be fighting
about the body of the tapir.

But the third time he looked back he saw something that filled him with
consternation.

A huge alligator had detached itself from the group and was making
toward him at full speed. He could see the long, scaly body, the fiery,
red eyes and the hideous jaws with their rows of glistening teeth.

Bomba turned and swam for his life.

As the lad swam he measured the distance to the shore. He knew that the
alligator was coming at a faster pace than his own, but he hoped that
the start he had gained might yet enable him to reach the shore before
those terrible jaws should close on him.

It was a close calculation, but he decided that he had a chance. He put
redoubled power into his strokes and swam as he had never swum before.

But his heart sank as he noted how steep the bank was at the nearest
point. Had the shore been shelving, he might have been able to find a
footing when the water grew shallower and rush up on land before the
cayman could reach him.

But the bank was three or four feet high and ran straight up and down.
He would have to reach up, grasp the edge and pull himself up. And he
realized only too well that before he could do this the alligator might
have caught him.

In his heart Bomba felt that he was doomed.

But his indomitable spirit refused to give up. He called to his aid all
his reserves of force and swam on. As a last resort he had his knife.
He could stab with it, perhaps hold off for a moment the vicious rushes
of his foe. But as against a knife, of course the alligator would
conquer in the end.

One last glance Bomba cast behind. The cayman had made up much of
the distance between them and was now fearfully close. A minute more
perhaps and then----

Bomba cast one farewell look at the sky and felt for his knife.

But as he looked upward, something brushed across his face. It was the
branch of a tree that hung far out over the water.

A ray of hope cut through the blackness of the boy’s despair. With the
quickness of a cat, he grasped the branch and swung himself up on it
out of the water. Even as he did so, he heard beneath him the snap of
the alligator’s jaws.

But those awful jaws missed the boy by a hair’s breadth. The speed at
which the brute was going carried it several yards farther before it
could turn. And by that time, spurred on by dreadful necessity, Bomba
had climbed farther up on the heavy bough and was out of reach.

The rage of the baffled man-eater was fearful to witness. It churned
the water into foam and emitted frightful bellowings as it leaped
half out of the water, trying to reach the prey of which it had been
cheated. It gnashed its teeth and its red eyes gleamed with fury.

For a full half hour Bomba lay extended on the branch, feeling with
unspeakable relief and delight the strength come back into his muscles
and vitality creep into his exhausted frame.

The alligator still kept up its watch, and Bomba wondered why. Did it
not know that its quarry had escaped? Then he realized that the brute
was not so stupid after all.

For the alligator is a land as well as a water animal, and though its
prey had baffled it for a while, it knew that the boy, soon or late,
would have to descend the tree. And when Bomba should slide down the
trunk to the ground, his enemy meant to clamber up the bank and be
waiting at the foot of the tree to receive him.

Luckily Bomba’s bow was still slung over his shoulder and his arrows
were at his belt. His immersion had been so sudden that he had not had
time to discard them. They had hindered him in his swimming, but now he
blessed the fact that they were with him.

His position was a difficult one to shoot from, for he would have to
use both hands for his bow and depend on his sense of equilibrium to
keep him secure on the branch. If he should lose his balance, he would
topple into the water, and he shuddered to think what would happen
after that.

He solved his problem in part by wrapping both legs closely around the
bough. Then he fitted an arrow to his string and took careful aim.

He knew that about the only vulnerable part of the alligator was the
eye. An arrow striking anywhere else would simply rebound from the
tough hide without inflicting any material damage.

It was some time before Bomba could get a good view of his target. The
cayman kept swimming about with its head half submerged in the turbid
water.

But at last the alligator lifted its head and glared at the boy. At the
same instant Bomba shot.

The arrow went straight to its mark, pierced the creature’s eye and
penetrated to the brain.

There was an awful bellow and a tremendous thrashing about for a few
moments. Then the alligator slowly sank below the surface of the river.

Bomba waited for some time, but the body did not reappear. The arrow
had done its work well.

Once fully convinced of this, the boy made his way to the trunk of the
tree and slid down it to the ground.

It was good to feel the earth again beneath his feet. His heart swelled
with gratitude. True, he had been cheated. The alligators had robbed
him of his tapir. But they had not robbed him of his life, and compared
with that fact everything else seemed insignificant.

The sun was near its setting now, and his hunting would have to be
deferred to the next day. Soon the four-footed hunters of the jungle
would themselves be abroad, and it behooved Bomba to make himself safe
for the night.

Ordinarily he would have collected brush and made a fire, trusting to
the flames to keep wild beasts at bay. But now, owing to the possible
presence of the dreaded headhunters in the jungle, he dared do nothing
that would betray his presence to the marauders. He had not detected
any signs of them so far, but a sort of sixth sense told him that they
had not yet returned to their homes above the Giant Cataract.

He gathered some jaboty eggs which he ate raw, and which, with some
cured meat he had brought with him from the cabin of Pipina, made a
simple but satisfying meal.

Then he cast about for some place in which he could pass the night.

He found it in the center of a dense thorn thicket, into which he
penetrated slowly and with great care, pushing the thorny stalks aside
so that they would not wound his flesh. Once in the center, he beat
down enough of the brush to serve him as a bed, and covered it with
bunches of soft moss that he had gathered near the river’s edge.

Here he was safe. Even if his scent betrayed him, no wild beast was
likely to venture through the thorns. And if, perchance, some prowling
brute, more daring or hungry than the rest, should try it, the noise
made would awaken the boy at once and he could trust to his weapons for
the rest.

As he lay there, waiting for sleep to come, his thoughts were tinctured
somewhat with bitterness. Why should his life be in constant peril?
Why should he be doomed to be hunted by beast and reptile?

It was not as though he were a native of the jungle. Then he might have
accepted his lot as the decree of fate and borne whatever came to him
with stolidity, if not with resignation.

But his real place was not there. He was white. He was heir to all the
instincts, traditions and ambitions of his race. He belonged elsewhere.
Then why was he here? Why were his aspirations and longings doomed to
be thwarted? What had he done to deserve such a fate?

His thoughts turned to Frank Parkhurst. What a difference there was
between their lots! No doubt by this time Frank had reached one of the
cities he had talked about and whose wonders had so deeply stirred the
jungle boy. To-night Frank would be sleeping safely in a soft bed. He
would have abundance of good food. He would be laughing and talking
with others of his kind. And his mother, the woman with the golden
hair, would print a good-night kiss upon his lips.

But Bomba had no mother near him to kiss him good-night. He had no
friends to talk to, to clap on the shoulder in jovial fashion, as
Gillis had done to Dorn. Monkeys and parrots were his only intimates,
except poor demented Casson and the squaw, Pipina.

As to laughter--when had Bomba last laughed? He could not remember.

In this melancholy mood he at last fell asleep.

But his depression vanished when he awoke the next morning. His sleep
had been undisturbed. Weariness had departed. The current of his blood
ran swiftly through his young veins. The skies were azure. It was good
to be alive.

And his optimism was increased by the good fortune that for the next
two days attended his hunting. Tapirs, deer, agouti and other game fell
before his arrows, until he had accumulated enough to supply the cabin
for weeks to come.

A good deal of his time was consumed in skinning the animals. He could
not carry them home bodily, as he had no means of conveyance except
his sturdy shoulders. So he cut off the choicest parts, wrapped them
in great leaves tied with bush cord, and on the third day after he had
left the cabin set out on his return.

All this time he had kept a sharp lookout for the headhunters. But
during the whole of the hunting trip he had come across no signs of
them.

He would have felt easier in his mind, however, if he had occasionally
met some of the friendly natives that ordinarily dwelt in that region.
They, too, were conspicuous by their absence. If the headhunters had
really gone, why had not the natives returned to their usual haunts?

The answer was not far to seek. Those dreaded invaders were probably
still lurking somewhere in the district, and if Bomba had not crossed
their trail, it was simply a bit of good fortune.

A sense of impending calamity grew upon him as he neared his
destination. The burden on his shoulders was heavy, but it was matched
by the burden on his heart.

He tried to throw off his depression, assuring himself that it was due
to weariness. Soon he would reach the cabin, be once again with Casson
and Pipina, and all would be well. So he communed with himself, though
not with much conviction.

The journey back to Pipina’s hut was made in rapid time, the jungle boy
being spurred on by his anxiety.

He turned the bend of the stream from which he could see the hut,
and an exclamation of relief escaped him as he saw that it was still
standing. He had half-feared that he would find it burned or demolished.

But it was there, and everything about it seemed placid and serene. No
puma this time ranged before the door. It seemed an abode of peace.

“Bomba was a fool,” he told himself, as he hurried forward.

He gave the loud halloo with which he was accustomed to announce his
coming. Usually this brought either Casson or Pipina to the door at
once.

This time his call evoked no answer. No figure appeared at the doorway,
nor could he hear any stirring within.

He called again, this time in louder tones. But again there came no
answer.

His uneasiness returning at this unusual circumstance, he hastily ran
up to the hut.

The door stood open and a hurried glance into the outer room showed
that it was empty.

He rushed in and examined the farther room. No one was there.

“Casson!” he called in a frenzy of anxiety. “Casson! Pipina! Where are
you?”

His only answer was the echo of his voice.

Casson was gone! Pipina was gone!



CHAPTER VII

CARRIED INTO CAPTIVITY


For a moment Bomba stood stupefied with dread. Then he ran out into the
open.

He beat the bushes about the hut. He dashed down to the edge of the
ygapo, his quick eye scanning the expanse for some sign of the passing
of Casson and Pipina.

Nothing anywhere. No footprints, no trampling of the bushes, no clue to
guide him in a search for the missing ones.

To all appearances no one had trodden that deserted spot since Bomba
had returned from his journey to the Moving Mountain.

Yet Casson was gone. Pipina was gone.

Bomba retraced his steps to the hut, his mind in a ferment of
bewilderment and grief.

Indians! Only Indians could traverse the jungle with the silence and
stealth of ghosts, leaving no trace behind.

“Nascanora!” The word hissed between the boy’s clenched teeth. “This is
your work! If you have killed Casson, Bomba will not rest until he has
found your heart with an arrow, a bullet, or a knife!”

The boy reëntered the empty hut with a sharp pain stabbing at his
heart. He would search the cabin more minutely now for some sign, some
clue, to the whereabouts of the absent ones. And if he could not find
it there, he would call into play all his skill in woodcraft to find
and follow their trail. For trail there must be somewhere. They could
not have vanished into thin air.

Inch by inch, he scrutinized the walls, the floor, even every crevice
of the crude and meagre furniture, thinking he might find some message
from Casson. It was almost a forlorn hope, but it was all that he had
at the moment.

He had nearly abandoned even this hope, however, when he discovered
a faint scrawl on the wall in the darkest corner of the hut. He bent
closer, and his brows drew together in a scowl as he tried to decipher
the writing.

Then suddenly a hoarse cry of rage escaped him. His eyes blazed in the
shadowy hut like those of an angry puma.

For this was what he read:

  “_Nascanora is taking away Casson, Pipina, Hondura to camp near Giant
  Cataract. Come. Help._”

So the headhunters had achieved their end at last! They had captured
the helpless old man whom their superstition had led them to regard
as a Man of Evil, a magician whose spells had brought blight on their
crops and sickness to their people. Poor old Casson, whose one desire
was to help rather than hurt!

They would torture him. They would make him a sacrifice to their gods.
And when flesh and blood could no longer stand their torments, they
would kill him and place his head on the wigwam of their chief.

Bomba’s rage was terrific, and it would have fared ill with the savage
chief if at that moment he had come within reach of the boy’s knife.

The boy read the scrawl again. So they had taken Hondura too, the
friendly chief of the Araos tribe, the father of the pretty little
girl, Pirah, who had once saved Bomba’s life!

Why had Nascanora made Hondura captive with Casson and the squaw? Was
it because Hondura and his tribe had been on friendly terms with Bomba
and the old naturalist? Or did Nascanora think that the Araos tribe
was becoming too powerful, and had he hoped by depriving them of their
chief to render his people helpless and throw confusion and panic into
their hearts?

But that problem could be left till later for solution. The pressing
thing was to plan for the rescue of the captives before they were so
far away that their recovery would be impossible.

When his first fury had exhausted itself, Bomba left the writing on the
wall and sat down on the threshold of the hut, the better to think out
a course of action.

“Near the Giant Cataract” said that rude scrawl penciled by poor
Casson, when the attention of his captors was momentarily diverted.
Bomba had no clear idea as to how far away that was or what direction
would have to be followed to reach it. But from what he had gathered
from the natives from time to time, the place was at a great distance,
and he knew that a long and arduous journey lay before him.

That is, if he had to go that far in order to catch up with the raiding
party. There was nothing in the hut on which he could base any judgment
as to the time the capture had taken place.

It might have occurred the very day that he had left on his hunting
trip. In that case, they would have had a three days’ start of him.
Or again it might have happened yesterday. In that event, his task of
overtaking them would be that much easier.

No matter how much they wanted to hurry, no large party could proceed
very fast, encumbered as they were with prisoners and probably laden
with spoils. Bomba could cover as much ground in one day as they could
in two or possibly in three. So he had little doubt of his ability to
overtake them before they could get very far.

What he would do if he should come up with them, he did not pause
to consider. No plan formed now would be of any service. He must be
guided by circumstances as they developed. But he had enough confidence
in his own quick wit to believe that he would be able to shape such
circumstances to meet his ends.

But time pressed, and he could spend no more time in reflection. He
rose to his feet and secured some cured meat from Pipina’s stores to
feed him on the way. He would have no time to spend in hunting food
when there were human enemies requiring his attention.

He tested his bow, put a new string on it, and replenished his store of
arrows. His revolver and machete were already at his belt. He took one
more look about the cabin to make sure he had overlooked nothing and
plunged into the jungle.

Like a hound when trying to pick up a trail, he described a long
circle, scanning the ground narrowly for every sign that might indicate
the direction in which the party had gone.

For a long time his search was unsuccessful. At last his eyes
brightened, for they rested on a little strip of cloth fluttering on a
thorn bush. He examined it carefully and recognized it as a strip torn
from a loose dress such as the Indian women wear. Probably it was torn
from Pipina’s garment.

This was something, but not enough. He must find a second strip, if
possible, and the line formed by the two would give him the direction
in which the party were traveling.

Before long his eager search was rewarded. Now he could shape his
course, and he hurried forward with redoubled speed.

The bits of cloth also told the jungle boy another story. The fact that
they had been torn off at all showed that the savages had been hurrying
their captives along at great speed, and so roughly that they took no
care to avoid the thorn bushes that tore the clothes and probably the
skin.

Bomba’s heart burned within him as he pictured poor, weak Casson
driven along, perhaps flogged to make him hasten. How long could he
endure such treatment in his feeble condition? Perhaps even now he had
succumbed to the hardships of the journey! Bomba gritted his teeth and
his eyes flamed with fury.

He had not gone far when his jungle instinct warned him of danger in
the immediate vicinity. Motions as vague as shadows, faint rustlings
that could not have been detected by an untrained ear, told him that
something or someone was trailing him, keeping step with him, moving
as swiftly and silently as he. From being the hunter, he had become the
hunted.

When Bomba paused the slight rustlings stopped. When he moved on they
were resumed.

Still he continued on his way. Whether his pursuer were beast or human
he could not tell. But the jungle lad knew that, whether beast or
human, the surest way to provoke attack was to betray a knowledge of
his danger.

To keep on would be at least to delay attack and perhaps derange the
plans of his pursuer. But when the attack at last came--if it should
come--he would be ready.

Suddenly he became conscious that he was encircled. The faint sound,
which had been behind him, was echoed now on the right and the left and
in the front. His enemies, whoever they were, were closing in upon him.

There was nothing that his eyes could tell him. Not a leaf stirred
nor was there any movement in the brush. There was only that ghostly
rustling that to Bomba’s sensitive ears was as plainly perceptible as
the rumbling of distant thunder.

Then something shaped itself, vague and dim behind a thicket. Like a
beast at bay, Bomba crouched, pulled his bow from his shoulder and
plucked an arrow from his pouch.

Before he could fit the arrow to the string a hideous chorus of shouts
rent the air, and like magic the jungle was filled with men, men with
the ferocious faces of demons, who rushed upon him, shouting and
brandishing their sharp, murderous knives above their heads.

Bomba had no time to turn and flee. He dropped his bow, whipped out
his machete and backed toward a tree, only to feel himself seized from
behind and borne helpless to the ground.

A score of natives bent above him, their faces menacing, their knives
pointed at his throat.

“Hondura?” grunted one of them. “Where is he?”

A light dawned upon Bomba. These were braves of the Araos tribe seeking
their leader. They blamed him, Bomba, for the disappearance of their
chief--Bomba, who at that very moment was on his way to rescue that
chief from captivity.

“Let me up and I will tell you,” he said, refusing to quail before the
fierce eyes directed upon him.

They hesitated, evidently suspicious of some trick. But finally the
leader, a strapping native named Lodo, whom Bomba remembered having
seen on his recent visit to their village, ordered that a close ring be
formed about the lad. Then he ordered him to stand up.

Bomba did so, and Lodo advanced toward him, knife in hand, his gaze
lowering.

“Where is Hondura, our chief?” he demanded. “You hide him.”

“The bad chief, Nascanora, take good chief, Hondura, prisoner,” Bomba
replied, his brown eyes holding the little, shifting ones of Lodo with
great earnestness. “He take, too, my friend Casson and Pipina, the
squaw. Come with me to the hut, and I will show you the writing on the
wall.”

It was plain that the Indians considered this a subterfuge or a trap,
and there was considerable parleying before Lodo finally announced that
they would take him to the hut.

“But you fool us, Bomba,” threatened Lodo with a suggestive twist of
his knife, “and I cut out your heart--so!”



CHAPTER VIII

THE MAN WITH THE SPLIT NOSE


Bomba raged within himself at this enforced delay in his journey. But
resistance against such odds would be nothing less than suicide.

And apprehension was in his heart as he moved along with his captors.
He was by no means sure that he would be able to prove to the natives
that he spoke the truth concerning their chief.

After all, the only proof he had was that writing on the wall, and if
they thought that he was trying to deceive them they might regard the
writing as part of his plan. There was no likelihood that any of them
would be able to decipher it for themselves.

So it was with no great confidence as to the ultimate outcome that he
made his way back to the cabin, surrounded by the lowering bucks of the
Araos tribe and feeling the suspicious gaze of Lodo boring into his
back.

They traveled swiftly, as the way was familiar, and it was not long
before they reached the deserted hut. Bomba led them into it and
pointed out the faint scrawl on the wall.

Lodo could make nothing of it, and looked from the writing back to
Bomba with a fierce scowl and a tightened grasp upon his knife.

“You read,” he said, and the cruel point of the knife pricked Bomba’s
bare shoulder and brought a tiny trickle of blood. “No fool Lodo.”

Bomba read the words twice under Lodo’s direction, and still the giant
was unconvinced. The other bucks patterned their conduct on his and
crowded around Bomba, muttering and growling like beasts of the jungle
about to close in on a helpless prey.

“You lie!” The point of Lodo’s knife pricked again at Bomba’s shoulder,
deeper this time, and a red stream followed it.

Still Bomba did not flinch, giving the sullen Indian look for look
without a sign of fear.

“You lie!” again shouted Lodo, working himself into a frenzy of fury.
“Braves see Hondura near the hut of Casson, the white medicine man.
Hondura not come back to his people. Bomba hide Hondura. Bomba must
die!”

His knife was upraised in menace. A shudder of anguish passed through
Bomba, but he said no word. A dozen hands reached out to seize him, a
dozen knives were pointed at his throat----

“Wait!” A guttural voice came from the doorway of the hut, and Grico,
he of the one eye and the split nose, forced his way through the ring
of angry Indians. “Let me see writing on the wall. I tell you if Bomba
lie.”

Grico was a native of tremendous physical strength. He had for a while
lived in one of the towns on the coast, and as a boy had been taken
under the care of an English missionary school. Here he had been taught
the rudiments of education. But the call of his jungle blood had proved
too strong to be resisted, and he had run away and thrown in his lot
with the Araos tribe.

There, when he reached manhood, he became known as the swiftest runner
and the greatest hunter of them all. He had lost one eye and acquired
his split nose in a battle with jaguars, in which he had shown almost
superhuman strength and courage.

He had become therefore a person of great influence in the tribe,
not only because of his prowess as a hunter but also because of his
knowledge of the world outside and his education, which gave him
great superiority over his ignorant and simple-minded mates. And he
was cunning enough to make this count for all that it was worth and
considerably more, considering that, after all, he had gained only the
merest smattering of learning.

Bomba knew something of the history of Grico, and hope sprang in him
anew as the giant caboclo made his way through the sullen group and
peered at that faint scrawl upon the wall. Slowly he read the words
aloud:

  “_Nascanora is taking away Casson, Pipina, Hondura to camp near Giant
  Cataract. Come. Help._”

Then he turned to the Indians, his one eye gleaming at them in a
contemptuous manner.

“Bomba speaks truth,” he said. “Those are the words he said, and that
is the writing on the wall. Take the point of your knife away, Lodo.
The boy is right. Chief Hondura has been taken away by the wicked
Nascanora. We will capture Nascanora and tie him to a tree and pile the
brushwood up about his knees and with flint and stone make red flames
that will lick at his flesh and bones. Ayah! Ayah!”

The cry of vengeance, indescribably weird and savage, was taken up
by the Indians and filled the jungle with a long wailing shriek that
chilled the blood of Bomba as he thought of what might have happened to
him had it not been for Grico’s timely appearance.

Once their enmity was turned from him, the Indians became as friendly
and pleasant as they had been savage a few moments before.

One of them found a bit of native cloth in the hut and bound it about
the wound in Bomba’s shoulder. Then they squatted outside the hut to
hold a council and decide upon plans for the rescue of their chief.

While the Indians talked in their guttural language, sometimes
sitting for many minutes of silence between their laconic sentences,
Bomba fretted and fumed, eager to be once more on the trail of the
headhunters.

However, he could not risk offending Lodo and his braves, who might
prove valuable helpers in his quest, by going off too abruptly. So he
waited, answering as best he could the questions that Lodo and Grico
put to him from time to time.

He told them of the previous visits of the headhunters to Casson’s
cabin, how he had beaten off their attacks, how he had wounded
Nascanora himself, how he had captured Ruspak, their medicine man, and
how in the jungle he had overcome the braves of Tocarora.

“I think there are two bands of headhunters,” he said, when asked
for his opinion. “Nascanora is at the head of one, and Tocarora, his
half-brother, leads the other. They will join each other somewhere in
the jungle. Then Nascanora will be strong enough to fight the Araos if
they come looking for their chief.”

“But they did not think of Grico!” said he of the split nose, his one
eye gleaming balefully. “Grico will get other braves who will fight
with the Araos to get back Hondura. Hondura has been good to Grico.
Grico will show that he is grateful.”

Bomba knew that this was no idle boast. Grico’s courage was so well
established that he would have no trouble in rallying many bucks of
other tribes under his leadership. If he could do this, the Araos
and their auxiliaries would prove formidable enemies, even to the
redoubtable headhunters.

But Bomba knew that this would take time and be the subject of
innumerable powwows before the avengers would get fairly started. And
with the knowledge he had of Casson’s danger he was in no mood for
delay. He must go on. They could follow later.

He knew the risks he ran in going alone. He would be only one against
the hordes of Nascanora. But his wit had served him so often where mere
force would have failed that he was willing and eager to trust to it
again.

So when a favorable opportunity presented, he broached his plan to his
new-found allies.

“Bomba will go first and try to find the trail while Lodo and Grico are
getting their braves together,” he said. “If Bomba finds them near by,
he will come back and tell you, so that you may come and fight them. If
he finds they are far off, he will leave a trail of his own so that you
may move fast through the jungle. Does Bomba speak well?”

Lodo and Grico consulted.

“Bomba speaks well--” Lodo was beginning when there was a sudden
commotion in the surrounding jungle. A moment later a strange company
broke into the clearing.

Bomba saw that they were squaws of the Araos tribe. The faces of the
women, usually so stolid, wore the ghastly gray of terror. They had
come from afar and swiftly, for their flesh was torn by thorns and
spiked vines and their breath came in gasps.

One of them, who was the squaw of Lodo and seemed to be the leader of
the women, came over to her husband and stood before him, striving to
regain breath enough to speak.

“What is it, woman?” cried Lodo. “What has happened?”

“The maloca,” she got out at last. “Bucks come. They burn our houses.
They carry off the women. They take the children. All gone.”



CHAPTER IX

THE SAVAGE RAIDERS


The news fell with stunning effect upon the assembled bucks already
wrought up to a high pitch of fury because of the capture of their
chief. There was a hubbub of exclamations of grief and rage.

“Pirah gone, too,” declared the woman, with a sweeping gesture of her
hands.

“Pirah!” This was Bomba’s voice, harsh and unlike his own, as he pushed
through the group of scowling Indians. “You say Pirah taken too? Who
were the bucks?”

“No know.” The squaw shook her head. She had recovered her breath now,
and, with the other women, was regaining her habitual stolid look.
“They come--many come.” She extended her ten fingers, closing and
opening her hands several times to indicate an indefinite number. “Take
women. Take children. We run away. Hide in bushes till they go. Then we
come here.”

Her story roused the Indians even more than the loss of their chief.
That their native village, or maloca, should have been invaded, their
women and children carried off, was a crime that by their code merited
only one punishment, and that torture and death.

The powwow broke up at once and the braves hurried away to their
maloca, taking their women with them.

Bomba accompanied them for some distance, and then took leave of them,
promising to pick up the trail at once and coöperate with them in every
way possible in the rescue of their chief and kidnapped families, as
well as of Casson and Pipina.

Then he left them to return with heavy and angry hearts to their
despoiled maloca while he again sought out the path he had been
pursuing when the onrush of Hondura’s enraged braves had put such an
abrupt stop to his journey.

His heart was sorer now than ever, for it was torture to him to think
of the pretty little Pirah, the daughter of Hondura, who had once
succored him, in the clutches of the evil Nascanora. For in his own
mind Bomba did not doubt that the same hand that had directed the
capture of Hondura had also ordered the despoiling and burning of the
chief village of the Araos.

Bomba could but remember that on his onetime visit to the Araos tribe,
when his life had been in danger from the suspicion of Hondura and
his braves, it had been little Pirah who had stood between him and a
horrible fate, and by her innocent friendship had changed enmity to
confidence and trust.

Another fact stood out from the story brought by the Araos squaws. It
was that the headhunters must be present in large force, or they would
not have dared thus to challenge the wrath of the most powerful native
tribe of the district.

Probably the opinion he had voiced to Lodo and Grico had been the
correct one. Nascanora was probably at the head of one band and
Tocarora of another. The scrawl on the wall had told him that it was
Nascanora in person who had raided the cabin of Pipina. While he was
thus engaged, Tocarora had probably assailed the maloca. Later on, the
two bands would have met to form a formidable combination.

If this were true, it would make Bomba’s task all the harder. But he
cared little for this. His heart was on fire with rage. In his present
mood no danger could daunt him.

Then again he must rescue poor Cody Casson, no matter how difficult
the undertaking. First, there was the love and gratitude the boy felt
for his benefactor, but if the enemy should kill the old naturalist,
Bomba was afraid that the last hope of clearing up his own identity--of
finding out about his father and maybe other relatives--would be gone
forever.

So, having once more picked up his trail, he went on at a swifter and
ever swifter pace, tormented at every step by fears of what might be
happening at that very moment to his friends at the hands of the evil
chief of the headhunters.

One thought, however, brought him a little comfort. He knew the
boastful nature of the savages. Nascanora would want to exhibit his
captives to the women of his tribe who had been left at home. He would
be eager to impress them with his power. They, too, must have their
share in the horrid festival that would end in the torture and death of
most of his victims and the reduction to slavery of the others.

So the lives of the captives were probably safe until the headhunters
had reached their dwelling-place above the Giant Cataract. Bomba would
be in time to save them, avenge them, or, at the worst, to die with
them.

Several hours passed and Bomba had made remarkable progress before he
stopped for a few minutes to rest and eat.

As he felt in his pouch to draw out a portion of cured meat, he made a
startling discovery.

His revolver and harmonica were missing!

Bomba could scarcely believe this at first, nor accept it as a fact
until he had searched every recess of his pouch and quiver. He even
retraced his steps for some distance through the jungle, in the hope
that his treasures might have slipped out and that he could recover
them.

But he could find no trace of the magic music or the precious “fire
stick,” and at last he came back to the clearing to ponder and mourn
his loss.

That loss to him was very great. He had so few treasures that he
cherished them fondly. The harmonica had brought him soothing and
comfort in many lonely hours. The revolver had been the white men’s
gift, and therefore doubly precious. Moreover, it was a very important
part of his equipment. On occasion it might mean all the difference
between life and death. His offensive power was sensibly weakened. Now
he had only his knife and his bow and arrows.

But his treasures were gone, in all likelihood irrecoverably gone.
Where and how had he lost them?

A thought that crossed his mind swiftly changed his mood from mourning
to anger.

He remembered that Grico, he of the one eye and the split nose, had
come close to him and jostled him several times, as though by accident,
during his journey through the jungle. At the time, Bomba had thought
it chance. Now he saw in it design. Perhaps it was Grico who had robbed
him of his treasures.

Grico, to be sure, had saved his life, and for that Bomba was grateful.
The fact modified the anger that assailed him. Still he vowed that, if
his suspicions were correct, he would get that revolver and harmonica
back. He would pay the debt he owed Grico in some other way.

He was meditating gloomily upon his loss when his attention was
attracted by a slight rustling in the underbrush.

Swift as thought, he fitted an arrow to his bow and stood on the alert.

He could dimly see the form of some animal, and not knowing but what it
might be a jaguar, he shot. The law of the jungle, he had learned, was
to shoot first and investigate afterward.

There was a startled grunt, a floundering about in the bushes, and then
silence.

Bomba crept forward cautiously, prepared for a second shot, but relaxed
when he saw lying dead before him a peccary, the wild pig of the jungle.

He was not especially pleased at this, for the peccaries usually
traveled in droves and companions of the dead one might be near at
hand. As a rule, he gave the animals a wide berth, for nothing is more
ferocious than the peccaries, whose murderous tusks, if they get to
work, can tear a man into ribbons.

So he waited for a while, close to a tree up which he could climb if
the drove bore down upon him.

But none appeared, and Bomba came to the conclusion that this was a
young pig that had wandered from the drove and lost its way in the
jungle.

The roast pig makes delicious eating, and Bomba did not neglect the
unexpected gift that had come his way. It offered an agreeable change
from the dried meat on which he had expected to dine. So he cut a steak
from the choicest part, roasted it over a fire of twigs, and soon was
feasting on a dish that kings might envy.

How he wished that Frank Parkhurst was with him to share the feast!
Before he had met with the white people he had been lonely, but he had
not so keenly sensed his loneliness. Now it was ever present with him.

The friendship he had formed with Frank was the most precious thing
that had so far come into Bomba’s starved life--except, perhaps, the
meeting with the woman of the golden hair, Frank’s mother.

It had made still more deep and strong the urge that was on him to hold
fellowship with his kind. For he was white--as white as Frank himself.
Yet fate had thrown the two boys into environments that were as widely
separated as the poles.

Chicago, Frank had called the city in which he lived. Bomba wondered
whether he would ever see that strange and wonderful city or others
like it, wondered if he would always have to spend his life in the
jungle, with none save Casson and a few natives for his friends, to
none of whom he could speak of the longings that obsessed him, of the
aspirations that seemed doomed forever to be thwarted.

He spoke to himself half aloud:

“I am not as well off as the beasts and reptiles of the jungle. They
live together and have plenty of their own kind. They do not hunt and
live alone as I do. The monkeys gather in flocks, the wild peccaries
hunt in droves. Even the big cats, the hungry jaguars, have their
companions. Why am I, Bomba, always alone? I do not belong here in
the jungle, which is the only place I know. And I cannot go to the
wonderful world where Frank and other boys and many people live and
laugh and slap each other on the back. Where do I belong? Where is
there a place for me?”

But nothing answered that desolate cry that came from the very depths
of the boy’s heart.

However, Bomba soon aroused himself from these unhappy musings. A
certain oppression and unusual stillness in the jungle warned him
that a storm was imminent. In the distance he could hear faintly the
rumbling of thunder.

He girded himself and resumed his journey, his heart heavy, but his
body refreshed and strengthened by the hearty meal he had eaten. For
some time he had failed to pick up any direct clues of those he was
pursuing. But he was now reasonably sure of the direction they had
taken and pressed confidently forward.

His footsteps had been directed toward the river, since that offered
the shortest route to the region of the Giant Cataract. Now, however,
he struck deeper into the jungle, not caring to be caught in a raging
torrent if the river should overflow its banks. He remembered how
nearly he and Mrs. Parkhurst had been overwhelmed by the waters while
they were escaping from the Indians, and he had no wish to repeat the
experience.

He quickened his pace, leaping over many of the obstacles in his
path instead of cutting his way through them. He did not want to be
caught in the open during the storm that seemed to be gathering. If a
wind accompanied it, there would be a rain of castanha nuts from the
branches, and many of these were big and heavy enough to kill anyone
they struck.

He must find shelter of some kind. He knew of the existence of a cave
not far away. If he could reach this, he would be safe until the storm
abated. Fortunately the tropical tempests, though fierce while they
last, are not of long duration, and Bomba knew that he would not be
delayed long on his journey.

The storm was gathering with frightful rapidity. Now it was a race
between the boy of the jungle and the elements. The roar of the thunder
came closer. Jagged sheets of lightning shot athwart the sky. The
wind tore through the jungle, shattering the ominous silence that had
prevailed into jangled discords of sound.

The trees bent before that furious onslaught. Parrots, monkeys and
other denizens of the jungle scurried to shelter.

The castanha nuts were ripped from their fastenings, and their thuds
blended into a menacing chorus as they struck the ground.

One of these heavy missiles in falling grazed Bomba’s shoulder, sending
a thrill of pain through his arm.

The cave was now not far away, but the wind was pressing with terrible
force against Bomba’s straining muscles. Flailing, sharp-thorned vines
whipped about his head, stinging, half-blinding him. His breath seemed
torn from his gasping lungs, to be borne off mockingly on the wings of
the terrible blasts.

Still Bomba’s muscles were iron and he forged forward doggedly,
ignoring the thorns that tore at him, the roots that tried to trip him
up, the vines that sought to strangle him.

He was closer--closer--only a short distance now, and he would be able
to drag himself into the welcome shelter of the cave.

Then, suddenly, as the tidal wave tops all other waves, came a gigantic
burst of wind that bore great trees before it as though they had been
toys, bending them, breaking them, uprooting them, whirling them about
as in a fantastic dance.

The force of that blast bore Bomba backward, pinning him against a
great tree, with all the breath knocked out of his body. At the same
time there came a ripping, tearing sound, a rumble and a roar that vied
with the crash of the thunder.

Something struck Bomba--he had no time to see what--swept him from the
ground as though he had been a feather, and dropped him many feet away
with a force that drove all consciousness from him.



CHAPTER X

IN DEADLY PERIL


When Bomba slowly came to himself, fighting his way through
unconsciousness, he did not realize at once the full significance of
his plight.

First of all, he knew that he was drenching wet--probably it had
been the beating of rain upon his face that had brought him back to
consciousness.

The heavens had opened, and a deluge of rain had descended on the
jungle, filling the dry beds of the ygapos as though by magic,
overflowing the banks of the streams so that along their shores twin
torrents raged.

Bomba had been swept by the branches of a falling tree into a deep
hollow in the ground. The jungle abounded with these miniature pools,
their bottoms only a muddy ooze at most times, the hollows only full
after a rainfall or the overflowing of some stream in the vicinity.

Bomba wondered dully if he had been seriously injured, perhaps crushed,
in the fall. There was no feeling in his body, and at first he was
too dazed to test his strained muscles. He seemed to himself like a
disembodied ghost.

But as the rain continued to fall upon his upturned face, fuller
consciousness returned to him. He viewed his situation with more active
alarm, tried to move his hands and feet and raise himself from his
confined position.

This effort ended in a feeling of almost complete discouragement. His
feet and legs were powerless. They might have been cut from his body,
for all the good they were to him. He could not even raise himself
sufficiently to look and see if they were still there.

Branches of the fallen tree pinioned him as securely to the ground as
though he had been bound by iron cords. There was a stifled oppressed
feeling in his chest, and it hurt him to draw a long breath.

His left arm, seemed dead. It possessed no more feeling than the lower
part of his body. His right arm and hand seemed numb and almost useless
at the start. The arm was doubled under him, and Bomba thought it must
be broken.

But, by an agonized effort that made the sweat start from his brow, he
managed at last to move it, ever so slowly and painfully, drawing it by
degrees from under his prostrate body, until that much of him at least
was free.

The blood surged back into the numbed arm, causing the boy unspeakable
agony. But as circulation was resumed, feeling and power came back, and
Bomba flexed and unflexed his fingers with a sensation of renewed life.

He was a helpless thing no longer. His right hand was clear. If he
could reach the machete, drag it free and hack his way through the
imprisoning branches!

But even as he groped for the machete Bomba discovered something that
seemed to turn the blood in his veins to ice.

The water was rising in the pool!

Until now, this phase of his terrible danger had not struck Bomba. The
painful freeing of his right hand, the fear that in the fall he might
have sustained an injury that would cripple him and leave him a prey to
the first beast of the jungle that might roam that way, the dread that
he might never be able to free himself from those ruthless, imprisoning
branches had blinded him to another and more imminent peril that
threatened.

The rain was still torrential, and the pool that had been for weeks
only a muddy depression in the jungle floor was now filling with water.

If he could not reach his machete with his still half-numbed right hand
and hack his way free from the branches before the water rose to his
mouth and nose as he lay on his back, Bomba would die--drown like a rat
in a trap.

This certainty roused him at once to frantic effort. By a desperate
strain, his hand found its way to the machete in his belt. The
sharp-pointed twigs of the branch that imprisoned his chest tore at his
flesh cruelly, but Bomba did not even feel the pain.

It was one thing to die on his feet, fighting to the last breath, and
another to lie there flat on his back, while the water crept up and up,
seeking to close his nostrils, fill his throat, and deprive him of life.

He had the machete now, and was hacking feebly at the nearest branch,
for the strength had not yet come back into his hand and arm. He
succeeded in cutting away some of it. The fragments brushed aside fell
with a sickening splash into the water.

Slow work! Heart-breaking work! If only the rain would stop, the
torrential downpour slacken for a while, he might yet get free. But in
the lowering heavens to which Bomba lifted his anguished eyes there was
no hope. It would need but a short time to fill the pool to overflowing.

The water crept higher, while Bomba slashed furiously at the confining
branches. Steadily, sections of them came away and dropped into the
muddy water--but not fast enough!

The chill of the rising waters was about his shoulders now. When his
neck tired of holding his head above the surface, he could feel the
clammy touch upon his ear.

He had cleared away much of that network of branches. The weight on his
chest was lighter. He could breathe more freely.

He tried to lift himself, but could not. That dreadful incubus still
held him securely.

Chilled to the bone, shivering, he went to work again. More branches
and still more were pushed aside and dropped into the pool. The lapping
of the water sounded in his ears as though death were crooning its
awful lullaby.

Wearied of holding up his head, his arm one agonizing ache from the
effort of using it in that strained position, Bomba let himself relax
for a moment and lay back gasping for breath.

Lying there, the water was over his ears, filling them with a drumming
sound. It climbed still higher, as steady and implacable as fate.

He could not relax like that again without bringing the water over his
eyes, over his nose----

Bomba lifted his head frantically, and, summoning his last reserve of
strength, hacked at the boughs.

He would not die like that! He would not! Surely strength would be
given him to resist that awful fate!

And strength was given him--the temporary strength of a madman.

He knew no fatigue, felt no pain, was conscious of nothing but the
sound and touch of that lapping, creeping water.

That spasm of superhuman energy was not without result. It seemed to
him that the load on his chest was lightening. Perhaps he could sit up.

One straining, frantic effort--another-- He fell back, weak and
gasping, into the pool.

The waters closed over him with a greedy, sucking sound and blotted out
his face completely.

A trail of tiny bubbles rose to the surface.



CHAPTER XI

FEROCIOUS FOES


But Death had not yet claimed Bomba for his own.

The water broke and the lad’s face appeared, ghastly drawn and white.
He was not yet conquered. He would make one more supreme effort.

He drew the blessed air into his lungs. The veins stood out on his
neck, the great muscles in his shoulders were ridged like whipcords
as he strained to throw the last of the imprisoning branches from his
chest.

If it had not been for his awful desperation, even his great strength
would not have been equal to the task. As it was, there was a ripping,
tearing sound, and slowly the grip of the branches relaxed, slowly
Bomba forced himself upward, his face suffused with blood, his breath
coming in short gasps of agony.

Then a great joy flooded his heart. The mass upon his chest yielded.
He sat upright in the pool. Now he could use his shoulders as well as
his arms to free the lower part of his body. And he had escaped those
greedy waters that a moment before had been sucking at his breath.

He rested for a while, for the effort had exhausted him; rested, while
he drew great draughts of air into his lungs, luxuriously expanding the
chest that had been so cruelly imprisoned.

He flexed his arms and felt his body carefully to make sure no bones
were broken.

Everything all right there! But his legs were yet held captive, and
there was no feeling in them. They might be broken, crushed. He could
not tell.

He could work faster now, for the strength of his back and shoulders
went into the quick, sharp strokes of the machete. One by one the
boughs yielded to his vigorous attacks and were thrown aside.

The water was still creeping upward in the pool, but it would be a
long time now before it could reach the danger point. The rain was
slackening too.

Stealing a precious moment to glance upward at the sky, Bomba saw
that the clouds were breaking and the sun beginning faintly to shine
through. The wind had sunk to a gentle murmuring, and the last
rumblings of the thunder were dying away in the distance.

Now a foot and leg were free. With more heart, Bomba worked at the
other, and soon cleared away the last of the branches.

He could see more clearly now what had happened to him. A great tree,
torn loose by that last cyclonic burst of wind, had fallen, sweeping
him along with its branches and imprisoning him in the pool.

Lucky for him, thought Bomba, that the boughs had caught him instead
of the trunk. In the latter case, there would have been no escape. His
life would have paid toll to the storm.

He felt of his legs, raising them tentatively and working them till the
blood flowed back in their veins again. To his joy, he established the
fact that no bones were broken, though ligaments and muscles had been
cruelly strained.

Trying to drag himself to his feet, Bomba found that he could not bear
his weight upon them, and was forced at last to drag himself on hands
and knees out of the pool and onto higher ground.

The jungle was friendly again. Far above, the sun streamed out through
broken clouds. Monkeys chattered, parrots screamed, and the timid small
creatures once more ventured out from their hiding places.

In Bomba’s heart was a great thankfulness for his escape. Yet at the
same time he bemoaned the hurt to his legs, since he could not hasten
as quickly as he had hoped to the rescue of Casson, Pipina and little
Pirah.

He dragged himself to his feet, slowly and painfully, resting half his
weight against the trunk of a tree. He looked down at his legs and
found they were torn and bleeding in a dozen places from contact with
the thorny twigs. The rest of his body was badly bruised and cut. He
would rub himself with river mud, his sovereign remedy, as soon as he
could walk.

It took some time for the strength to return to his bruised limbs. And
even when he could move and bear his weight upon them, his gait was no
more than an uncertain wobble.

He was furiously impatient of this infirmity. In this condition he was
as helpless as a wounded tapir. How easily he could become the prey of
any beast of the jungle that might happen to come across him!

Bomba shifted his machete from his right hand to the left and felt for
his bow and arrows. They were gone, torn from him, probably, as the
tree fell upon him.

This was a serious loss, and his heart was filled with consternation.
He made a careful search of the vicinity, but could find no trace of
them.

It was another illustration of the saying that misfortunes never come
singly. First he had been robbed of his revolver. Now he had lost his
bow and arrows. Only his machete was left to meet the manifold dangers
by which he was surrounded and for use against the wily Nascanora and
his braves. He wondered grimly how long even his machete would be left
to him.

But he had to make the best of it. Perhaps he would meet some friendly
natives who would trade him a bow and some arrows for the meat of the
peccary. If not, he would have to shape the weapons himself with his
knife, if he could find suitable material.

Meanwhile he had returned to the pool. There, scooping up great
handfuls of mud, he rubbed it over his torn and bleeding flesh. Then,
impatient of further delay, he started off through the jungle in the
direction of the Giant Cataract.

He realized at last that he was very hungry, and, thinking that his
weakness was partly due to this, he took from his pouch some of the
roasted meat and ate with a relish.

He felt refreshed after this, and proceeded at a much better pace. His
limbs still pained him greatly, and he was forced to stop at frequent
intervals to rest. But he was getting stronger, and his confidence was
returning to him.

His chief concern was the loss of his weapons. At any moment he might
be called upon to use them in defence. His knife, to be sure, was a
terrible weapon at close quarters. Even at some distance he could hurl
it with great precision, as he had on the night when he had sent it
whizzing through the air and buried it in the throat of the jaguar that
was leaping at the white rubber hunters.

But he saved that as a last resort. His main dependence had been the
bow and arrows, that might enable him to make a stand even if attacked
by several enemies at the same time.

They were essential, too, in hunting game for food. But that thought
just now gave him little concern. He could always find jaboty eggs
in the jungle or catch fish in any stream he might encounter. And at
present he was well supplied with dried meat.

If he had been superstitious, he might have thought that a malign fate
had been following him ever since he set out on his journey. There was
the loss of his revolver and harmonica, the enforced return to the hut
when Hondura’s braves had come upon him, the further loss of his bow
and arrows, his submergence in the pool when the tree had trapped him.

A native would have interpreted these things as evidence that the gods
frowned on his undertaking, and would have turned back. But they only
increased Bomba’s determination to play the game out to the end. He
thrived on opposition. What were obstacles for but to be surmounted?

He traveled on for perhaps an hour. Then he came to a clearing among
the dense underbrush. He welcomed this as enabling him to make more
rapid progress.

Suddenly he stepped back, startled. There before him, grazing placidly
beneath the heat of the tropical sun, was a great drove of peccaries,
the fierce wild pigs of the jungle.

Ordinarily, Bomba would have been able to circle that grazing drove so
silently and swiftly that before they had caught the scent of human
presence he would have been far beyond their reach.

And that was the most intense desire in Bomba’s mind at that moment!
He had seen natives after the peccaries had finished with them, and
shuddered at the sight. If they should get at him in the open, his life
would not be worth a moment’s purchase. This would be true even if he
had his weapons. How much more certain would be his fate under present
conditions!

But Bomba now had not as full control of his limbs as usual, and he
made a slight noise as he stepped back into the forest fringe.

The peccary nearest him lifted up its wicked, blunt-nosed head and
sniffed the air. Then, with a snort of rage, it turned in the direction
of the sound and started straight toward Bomba. The rest of the drove
automatically followed their leader.

There was only one thing to be done. Quick as thought, Bomba leaped
for the limb of the tree nearest him, swinging his body clear of the
ground just as the first peccary reached the spot where he had been.
The others followed with such headlong speed that many of them struck
against the trunk of the tree and shook it with their impact.

Not a second too soon, thought Bomba, as he swung himself from branch
to branch until he reached a fork, where he ensconced himself.

Below him at the base of the tree the peccaries were acting like things
demented. They ran around and around in circles, snorting viciously and
stumbling over one another in their fury.

Bomba was thankful that pigs were not like monkeys or jaguars, who were
as much at home among the branches of a tree as they were on the ground.

The peccaries could not climb, and so were powerless to vent their rage
on Bomba. He was safe for the present and could smile grimly as they
gnashed their tusks, those terrible tusks that were like so many knives
and which could so easily slash him to bits.

The boy was filled with resentment against these ferocious creatures.
They could not harm him, but they were delaying him in his pursuit of
Nascanora. For all he knew, they might keep him treed for days. And in
the meantime what might be happening to the captives? His heart was
wrung with anguish at the thought.

An hour passed--another. Then the fury of the peccaries began to abate.
They were short-sighted, and used to holding their heads down as no
longer gazing at their enemy, they soon forgot they grazed. It tired
them to look up. And, his existence. With the stupid peccary, out of
sight was out of mind.

They began to drift away at last, moving aimlessly as though they had
forgotten all about Bomba and the reason for their ferocious attack.

But Bomba’s forced rest had brought renewed strength to his limbs, and
he felt more like his own strong, active self.

Still the lad did not dare start his descent until all of them had
vanished from sight. Then, slowly and cautiously, making as little
noise as possible, he slipped downward through the heavy branches.

He had reached the lowest bough when something bade him pause.

Something was watching him from the jungle, something that he could not
see but could feel!



CHAPTER XII

THE JAGUARS ATTACK


Bomba became suddenly motionless, flattened against the tree as though
he were a part of it.

He did not dare move even to go upward again, for fear that the hidden
enemy would be tempted to come forth from its hiding place.

Bomba had not lived all his life in close contact with the beasts of
the jungle for nothing. His sense of smell was almost as well developed
as theirs.

Now this useful sense told him that his enemy was none other than the
big jungle cat, the jaguar, the most dreaded four-footed denizen of the
jungle.

And there might be more than one of these ferocious beasts. He knew
that they frequently traveled in pairs. His flesh crawled as the full
helplessness of his position came over him.

There he was without bow or arrow or revolver--his only weapon the
machete. His position in the tree rendered him all the more helpless
against the attack of the big cats, for they could climb more swiftly
than could he.

What to do? Where to turn?

There was a stealthy rustling in the bushes, but as yet Bomba could
see nothing. His fingers itched for the comforting feel of his bow and
arrow. He almost groaned aloud when he thought of his lost revolver,
the cherished “fire stick,” that at such close quarters could do deadly
execution.

The faint rustling drew closer and closer. From the corner of his eye
Bomba glimpsed a gleaming yellowish-brown body. Beyond this he could
see the dim outline of another.

Two of them! And what chance would he have even against one?

Sensing his helplessness, the jaguars were gaining confidence. He could
see their eyes now, glowing like sparks of fire. In a moment they would
abandon cover altogether and begin to climb the tree.

Bomba could no longer disguise his presence. The beasts knew that he
was there.

So the boy began suddenly to swarm up through the branches. If he could
crawl out upon a slender bough, so slight that it would barely hold
his weight, there was a possibility that the jaguars would not dare to
venture after him.

It was a frail hope, for Bomba knew that when the jaguar’s blood was
up he was relentless in pursuit of his prey.

Still, Bomba hoped against hope that he at least might find a better
position from which to use his machete. At any rate, it was his only
chance. So he went higher, and higher, his eyes searching for a
strategic position.

His movement stirred his enemies to action. They broke from cover as he
began to swing himself upward. A quick glance downward showed Bomba the
swift advance of the lean, hungry brutes. It would be a race between
them to see which would grasp him first.

Bomba climbed like a monkey, his knife between his teeth. His progress
was lightning swift, fear lending him added celerity. Below him he
could hear the rustling of leaves, the crackling of small branches, as
the foremost jaguar followed him.

A slender bough stretched before him. Out on this Bomba crept, feeling
it sag beneath his weight and not knowing but at any moment it might
break and send him to the ground.

A vicious growl behind him caused Bomba to turn suddenly on his frail
perch, nearly losing his balance as he did so. His eyes searched wildly
for the lithe form of his enemy among the leaves and branches.

It was not easy to discover the beast at first, for at the lad’s
movement it had flattened itself against the trunk of the tree, wicked,
glittering eyes alone awake and watchful.

But in a moment Bomba made out the sinuous figure just below the bough
on which he had taken refuge; caught the glare of those malignant eyes
full upon him.

Winding his limbs about the bending bough and gripping it powerfully
with his left hand, Bomba drew the machete from his teeth and waited.

Below he could hear the second jaguar climbing swiftly, breaking off
the smaller branches as it came, all stealth having been abandoned in
its eagerness to share in the kill.

The branch on which Bomba sat bent suddenly and gave forth an ominous,
crackling sound. The first jaguar had moved upward and had put out a
tentative paw to test the strength of the branch.

Bomba’s heart pounded as though it would force its way through his
ribs. In a few moments now he would know whether he was to live or die.
And with those relentless man-eaters on his track, the odds were all in
favor of death. Even if he were able to beat off one of the beasts, the
other would be on him at once and avenge its mate.

The instinct of the nearer brute told it that the bough on which Bomba
rested would not support the weight of two bodies. So it chose a
heavier one just below that on which the boy was perched, and began to
creep out upon it, tail switching and jaws dripping greedily.

Bomba watched its progress with the same sense of helplessness he had
sometimes felt in nightmares. Death was separated from him only by
feet. A few moments more and the feet would be reduced to inches.

Oh, for his bow and arrows! Oh, for the “fire stick” that would have
so quickly turned the tables on his foe! They would have given him at
least a chance for life. Now his chance was not one in a hundred.

The jaguar crept out still farther upon its branch, ears flattened back
against its head, cruel teeth showing in a snarl of fury.

Bomba’s fingers tensed about the handle of the machete and he shouted,
hoping to disconcert the animal and perhaps make it lose its balance.

But this availed nothing. At the sound of Bomba’s voice the great beast
gave a snarl of rage and lifted its huge paw, armed with terrible claws
that could strip the flesh from the lad’s body.

Bomba met the vicious stroke halfway with a slash of his machete. The
jaguar howled with rage and pain. The cut maddened it. With a ferocious
growl it crouched to spring.

It was then that what seemed a miracle happened!

Bomba, in whose heart despair had entered and who thought that this
was his last moment on earth, saw the body of the ferocious beast
leap suddenly into the air, grasp wildly at anything that promised a
foothold, and then plunge downward through the branches to the ground.

“Help has come!” thought Bomba, scarcely able to believe his eyes and
almost dropping the dripping machete from his hand in the agitation
that possessed him. But from where and from whom?

He heard expressions of jubilation, and two dark-skinned men appeared
beneath the tree.

They were bending over the lifeless cat that had been pierced through
with an arrow, when a rustling among the branches and a low growl
warned Bomba that the second jaguar had turned its attention to its new
foes and was about to attack.

He could see the brute crouched among the branches, ready to spring
upon the two men at the foot of the tree.

“Back! Back into the jungle!” he shouted.

The men had barely time to jump back before the jaguar sprang.

The great vicious ball of fur struck the ground with a thud, not ten
feet away from Bomba’s rescuers, and crouched to spring.

But before it could launch itself into the air two bows twanged.
One shot missed, but the second arrow caught the beast full in one
gleaming, murderous eye and pierced to the brain.

The brute gave a few convulsive struggles and then straightened out
beside its mate.

The situation had changed with the quickness of a kaleidoscope. The
would-be killers had themselves been killed just at the moment that
their victory had seemed assured.

But by whom had their death been brought about? Were these newcomers
friendly or hostile to Bomba? The thought came to the boy that they
might be of the party of headhunters. If so, he might have escaped
death in one form to meet it in another even more terrible.

But as he hesitated, he heard their voices more clearly and recognized
them. Then he waited no longer.

He slid hurriedly to the ground and came face to face with Ashati and
Neram, the former slaves of Jojasta, the medicine man of the Moving
Mountain!



CHAPTER XIII

THE MAD MONKEY


Ashati and Neram dropped to their knees before Bomba, clasping his
hands and bowing their black heads before him. Neram, bending lower,
took one of Bomba’s sandaled feet and placed it on his neck as a sign
that he was slave and Bomba master.

The heart of the lonely boy swelled at this sign of gratitude and
affection. He stooped and raised the kneeling men, and made them stand
on their feet before him.

“You have saved Bomba’s life,” he said with deep feeling. “If you had
not come when you did the jaguars would have killed him. Bomba will not
forget.”

“Ashati and Neram would have been nothing now but bones buried in
the heart of the Moving Mountain if you had not come to their help,”
replied Ashati, who seemed to be the spokesman for the two. “You saved
them from death, and freed them from the cruel yoke of Jojasta, the
medicine man. Ashati and Neram have no master but Bomba, and will go
anywhere in the jungle at the side of Bomba as his slave. Their lives
belong to Bomba.”

“You shall go with me wherever I go,” replied Bomba. “But you shall go
as my friends and not as my slaves. Bomba has nothing to offer you but
friendship. If you will take that and go with him, he will be glad.”

So it was settled, and with many more expressions of gratitude and
devotion on the part of the ex-slaves of Jojasta, Bomba and the two
men set to work to skin and quarter one of the dead jaguars that had
unwittingly furnished them a feast.

While engaged in this and the building of a fire for the roasting of
the best portions of the meat, Ashati and Neram imparted to Bomba news
that he was anxious to hear.

In their wanderings they had noted the bands of Nascanora and his
half-brother, Tocarora, heading in the direction of the Giant Cataract.
This had been only two days before and not far from the place where
they were now standing. From their hiding place in the brush, the
slaves had seen that each party had with it a number of captives.

“Was there a white man among them?” asked Bomba eagerly.

“Yes,” replied Ashati; “an old man, very thin and with white hair.”

Bomba’s heart leaped. Casson then was still alive! He had not succumbed
to the hardships of the journey.

“Can you take Bomba to the place where you saw them and point out to
him the way they were going?” he asked.

“Yes,” replied Ashati. “But they must be a long way from there now, for
they were going fast. And they kept looking behind them as though they
thought men were coming after them.”

The news set Bomba on fire with impatience to be off. Under his urging
and example, the roasting of the meat was swiftly completed. He divided
the food equally between the three of them. Whatever might happen to
them in the future, it was certain that they would not starve.

After they had got fairly started, with Ashati as guide, toward the
spot where the path of the slaves had crossed that of the savages,
Bomba narrated to his companions some of his experiences since he had
left the hut of Pipina.

When he came to the part that concerned the loss of his bow and arrows,
Ashati insisted that the boy should take his and that he, Ashati, could
do very well with his hunting knife. Besides, he would make another set
of weapons at their first resting place.

Bomba would have refused, but seeing that he could not do so without
hurting the feelings of the devoted fellow, at last accepted the gift.

“It was an arrow from that bow that found the heart of the jaguar that
would have sunk its claws in your flesh and ripped it from the bones,”
said Ashati, as he handed it over.

“Bomba has not asked you yet how it was you came just in time to save
his life,” said the lad.

“We hunted Bomba day and night,” Ashati replied. “Our lives were yours,
for you had saved them. We came on your trail in the jungle, and
followed after. Ashati saw you in the tree as the jaguar lifted its paw
to strike. Then Ashati prayed to the Spirit of the Jungle and shot his
arrow. The Spirit made it go straight, and the jaguar died.”

It was now late afternoon, and Bomba and his followers had not traveled
far before the swift tropic night descended on them and forced them to
rest for the night.

Bomba chafed at the necessity, though he himself was almost exhausted
in mind and body by the stirring events of the day that had taxed both
to the utmost.

He was up with the dawn, however, and, rousing Ashati and Neram,
summoned them to share his hasty breakfast and start on the day’s
journey. They obeyed with willingness, though no more than half awake.
Their bodies wasted and their strength sapped by years of deprivation
and torments at the hands of Jojasta could not throw off the fatigue
as readily as the healthy jungle lad, whose veins were pulsing with
vitality.

But Bomba’s quest of Nascanora could not wait. Delay, however slight,
might result in the death of his friends, if indeed they still lived.
If Ashati and Neram could travel at Bomba’s pace, he would be glad to
have them with him, for they were companions in his loneliness and
allies in case of danger.

But if they could not keep up with him, he would have to go on ahead,
leaving them to join him when they could.

But once roused, they seemed as eager as himself to continue the
journey. Even the prospect of an encounter with Nascanora and his
braves did not deter them, as long as they were under Bomba’s
leadership. What they had already seen of him had led them to attribute
to him almost magical power. Their anxiety to please and serve the lad
in every way they could deeply touched Bomba, in whose life loyalty and
service of any kind had been so sadly lacking.

They stamped out the embers of the fire they had built to keep off the
jungle beasts during the night, ate of their supply of jaguar meat,
and struck onward through the forest in the direction of the Giant
Cataract.

The sun rose higher, and with full daylight came a fresh burst of speed
on the part of Bomba. If Ashati and Neram found it hard to keep up with
him, they did not murmur. They would have suffered any hardship rather
than be left behind by him whom they had chosen as their master.

They traveled all day without meeting with any unusual adventure,
pausing only briefly at noon to roast some jaboty eggs they found in
the forest that gave a welcome variation to their meat diet.

The shadows were beginning to gather when they came at last to the spot
where the paths of the slaves and the two parties of headhunters had
crossed.

The trail of the Indians was cold, but it was not difficult for one so
versed in woodcraft as Bomba to pick it up. There was still a little
daylight remaining, and he persisted in utilizing every moment of it to
gain another mile or two before he called a halt for the night.

On and on they went, although by this time they were nearly stumbling
with fatigue. They were penetrating a part of the jungle that was new
to Bomba. Pools, swelled by the recent rain, were frequent, some of
them so deep that it was necessary to cross them by notched trunks of
trees, the crude bridges of the jungle.

Crossing one of these, Ashati, wearied almost to fainting, stumbled
and would have fallen had not Bomba seized him and dragged him to the
safety of the further bank.

They had gone but a few yards farther, Bomba’s eyes straining to detect
the faintly marked trail, when there was a thud, and on the ground
before them, directly in their path, appeared a figure so grotesque in
form and ugly in face that Bomba took a startled step backward and the
two slaves fell to the ground in a fit of shuddering terror.

“The mad monkey!” chattered Neram, and then, as the creature advanced
on them, uttered an ear-piercing shriek.

Gibbering and mouthing ferociously, froth slavering from its jaws, the
huge ape sprang toward Bomba and the cowering slaves.

Bomba was paralyzed at first by the hideous appearance of the beast and
infected to some degree with the superstitious terror that animated
Ashati and Neram. He seemed bereft of the power of movement.

Then gathering together his forces, he sprang backward swiftly and
fitted an arrow to his bow.



CHAPTER XIV

BESET BY ENEMIES


Even as Bomba drew his arrow to its head he found that he felt a
strange unwillingness to inflict injury on this antagonist.

The monkeys were his friends. Often they had helped him when other
foes, much more like Bomba in form and appearance, had sought to take
his life. He could not forget how the swarm of monkeys had turned the
tide of battle in his fight with Nascanora and his braves when they had
attacked the cabin.

So Bomba called to this slavering, hideous object in the language of
the monkeys, trying to show that he was not an enemy.

But if anything, the aspect of the ape became still more fierce and
threatening. It uttered a shrill cry and sprang at the lad with hairy
arms outstretched to grasp him.

Ashati and Neram gave a shout of warning, and seeing that their young
leader was in grave danger, conquered their fear and sprang to his
help.

The bow of the jungle boy sang with a twanging sound as the arrow sped
from it. But the attack of the monkey was so swift that the arrow,
instead of entering the heart as Bomba had intended, pierced the flank
of the brute.

With a howl of pain and rage, the great ape plucked out the arrow, and
swung around upon Bomba with the bloody point of the weapon upraised.

But Bomba was quicker than the ape. He sprang aside and, drawing his
machete from his belt, struck the animal’s arm a blow that cut deep and
caused the blood to spurt into the distorted face of his assailant.

The arrow dropped clattering to the ground, and with a weird and
terrible howl the ape swung itself with its uninjured arm into the
branches of a tree and vanished into the depths of the jungle.

Trembling, Ashati and Neram faced Bomba in that uncanny twilight. For a
while they said nothing, but stood staring solemnly at each other.

It was Bomba who first broke the silence, and in the deep stillness of
the shadow-filled jungle his voice sounded hollow in his own ears.

“The mad monkey! If he is alone, all will be well. But if there are
others----”

“There are others,” interrupted Ashati. “One mad monkey needs but bite
another, and that one too will become mad. It is in that way the evil
spirits get possession of a flock of monkeys and set loose a thousand
demons upon the jungle.”

“And the bite of one sets loose an evil spirit within ourselves, and we
become even as the mad monkeys,” said Neram, his teeth chattering.

Bomba knew that he spoke truly. A kind of hydrophobia would sometimes
be communicated by a snake-bitten monkey to its mates, and by them to
any human being that came within their reach while the epidemic was
raging. He had known of whole flocks of monkeys having been decimated
before the terrible disease had run its course. And at such times there
was no inhabitant of the jungle to be so much feared as a mad monkey.

“We cannot stay here,” said Bomba, looking about him. “We must go on.
Perhaps we shall find shelter, a cave or an abandoned hut of a caboclo,
where we can spend the night and leave this terrible place with the
daylight.”

“Yes, we must go on,” agreed Ashati, and Neram nodded his head in
agreement. “To stay here would be to bring that hurt monkey back for
his revenge.”

“With good fortune we may escape the notice of others of the flock,
since it is night and they may sleep,” suggested Neram.

“Then we must make no more noise than the foot of the jaguar,” warned
Bomba, and, turning, he sped silently and swiftly from the place,
followed closely by his companions.

They had proceeded only a short distance when a horrible chattering
overhead caused them to look up, and in the branches of a tree they saw
two big apes gibbering and grinning at them, with the same awful look
in their eyes that had marked the first one they had encountered.

As the little party moved swiftly on, a large castanha nut struck
Ashati on the shoulder with such force that he was felled to the ground.

Bomba lifted him to his feet and hurried him onward just as a
bombardment of the heavy missiles came pelting down. A hideous wailing
and a sharp, crackling sound like a crazy laugh followed the three
fugitives as they raced onward.

By this time, superstitious terror had taken complete possession of
Ashati and Neram, and Bomba himself could feel the hair rising on his
head. The swift-falling darkness, the knowledge that danger was all
about them, that insane enemies were skulking perhaps behind a tree,
leering at them from branches overhead, crouching in ambush behind a
concealing bush or shrub, at any moment to reach out a hairy arm--all
these things combined to fill them with terror.

Their flight was unreasoning. They plunged through thorn bushes that
tore at their flesh, and felt no pain. They stumbled and fell into
black ooze that might hold writhing snakes, and scarcely thought of
it. To put distance between themselves and this nightmare became their
only aim.

Once a terrible figure dropped upon the neck of Ashati from the
branches above. The native gave a dreadful shriek and threw himself
upon his face.

The mad beast catapulted from the shoulders of Ashati and fell at the
feet of Bomba. It was the work of a moment for the lad to sink his
machete to the handle into the hairy body. The thing crouched as though
to spring, then gave a ghastly screech and sprawled upon the ground.

“He is dead?” asked Neram, coming forward, unbelieving.

At the words, the prostrate Ashati raised himself on hands and knees
and crawled over to where the lifeless brute was lying.

“Dead!” he gasped, and dragging himself to his feet stared hard at
Bomba.

For it was a superstition among the natives that a mad creature was
possessed of an evil spirit that made it immune to death. The fact then
that Bomba had killed one of the mad monkeys so easily filled them with
surprise and hope. If he had killed one, he might kill many. Their
weapons were not as powerless as they had feared.

But their relief was swiftly changed to fear by a strange, weird
rustling among the trees that swelled in volume as they listened, as
though a great storm had entered the jungle and was sweeping all
before it. But there was no storm nor sign of one.

“The mad monkeys!” whispered Bomba. “They have told each other that we
are here. They know that we are few and they are many. Come!”

If their flight had betrayed panic earlier, it was nothing to the fear
that now gave wings to their feet. They might hold their own against a
few. They could not face an army, such as, from the sounds, now seemed
to be in pursuit of them.

But even then Bomba had no hate against his pursuers, such as he felt
toward jaguars and snakes. He pitied them as the suffering victims of a
terrible disorder. None the less, he knew that they were bent on taking
his life and that if it came to a combat it was a case of kill or be
killed.

There was but one hope, and that a slender one; the hope that they
might find some cave or other shelter in which they could barricade
themselves and hold the maddened animals at bay. He knew of no such
place in that vicinity, and even if he had, it would have been
difficult to find it in the dark.

Ashati and Neram, with what breath they had, were muttering prayers to
the Spirit of the Jungle. If ever help was needed, it was needed then.

Onward they plunged through the black night of the jungle, that
terrible rustling as of a mighty wind coming closer and closer with
every moment.

As the pursuing monkeys drew closer to their prey, they began to howl
and jabber horribly. It seemed to Bomba that the whole jungle was one
hideous jangle of sound.

Neram screamed. A hairy arm had reached from a low-hanging branch,
encircling his neck. He struck at it with his knife and stumbled after
Bomba and Ashati.

They were panting, spent. In another moment that awful swarm of
maddened beasts would descend upon them.

Stumbling blindly on, Bomba felt his foot slip into a hollow at the
same time that his body struck violently against a hard substance.

He stretched out his hands and felt rather than saw in the darkness
that he had come to the entrance of a cave.

“Quick!” he gasped, stepping back and nearly falling over the cowering
form of Neram. “Into the cave! Quick!”



CHAPTER XV

LYING IN AMBUSH


The two slaves seemed not to hear Bomba.

Perhaps they were half dead from fright, or perhaps they thought that
the malady that had attacked the monkeys had disordered Bomba’s mind as
well.

Despite his command, they continued to crouch stupidly close to the
ground, striving to keep out of reach of the clutching hands that swung
from the branches overhead.

One great ape dropped to the ground and came swiftly toward them on all
fours, uttering howl after howl, so wild and eerie that it froze the
blood in the veins of the adventurers.

Finding that the slaves were too terrified to heed his orders, Bomba
seized Neram, who was nearer to him, and flung him bodily through the
opening of the cave. He took Ashati by the arm and dragged him forward,
shouting:

“The cave! The cave! Do you hear what I say? Get inside quick, and I
will follow.”

From inside the cave Neram reached out a hand and drew Ashati within
the sheltering blackness.

As Bomba was about to follow, the monkeys, following the leadership of
the great ape that had begun the actual attack, dropped to the ground
and swarmed toward Bomba.

The boy leaped for the gaping mouth of the cave just as the first of
the monkeys grazed his arm with its paw.

Neram and Ashati dragged him further into the depths of the cavern,
while, with a shriek of rage, the baffled monkey, seeking to follow,
dashed instead into the rock surface at the side.

Bomba stubbed his foot, bruising it as he fell forward into the cave.
He stooped down to examine the object and found that it was a great
rock.

“Come, help me!” he cried to the two slaves, who were fully awake now
to the fact that there was hope of escape.

They stooped to aid him, and as the monkeys recovered from their
surprise at the sudden disappearance of their enemies and began to
search out the entrance to the cave, those within rolled the great
stone to the entrance, fairly blocking it.

While they held that stone in place they were safe.

Bomba and his companions sank down on the ground, gasping for breath,
and pressed their weight against the rock.

The weird howling of the enraged monkeys outside their shelter made
them tremble even now, lest their cunning foes should find some other
entrance to the cave and come pouring in to indulge in massacre.

But as time passed and they remained unmolested in their retreat, while
the awful howling of the monkeys died down to a mere jumble of sound,
they began to take courage and hope that all would still be well with
them.

Bomba had feared at first that the cave might be the lair of some wild
beast of the jungle.

But the fact that the stone was so near the mouth of the cave and was
evidently intended to block up the entrance seemed to argue human
occupation. Some native, perhaps, had become an outlaw from his tribe
and had chosen the cave as his home.

When it became certain that the monkeys had tired of their quest and
were straggling off again into the jungle, Bomba ventured to make a
cautious tour of the cave to make sure that his guess had been correct.

Even then he was afraid that at any moment his fingers might touch
something warm and alive but not human.

However, the cave was a small one, and he soon found, to his great
relief, that, save for Ashati, Neram and himself, it was unoccupied.

Tired beyond words, but jubilant at their escape, Bomba returned to the
two, who still squatted on the ground close to the stone that guarded
the entrance to the cave.

Ashati was inclined to indulge in prophecy.

“The Spirit of the Jungle is good,” he stated, as Bomba threw himself
down beside them. “Twice it has saved the life of Bomba. The captives
of the wicked Nascanora and his half-brother Tocarora will be spared.
Bomba will live to seek out Sobrinini, and find from her the secret
that the poor old white man cannot tell. It is for that that the Spirit
of the Jungle has twice saved the life of Bomba.”

“Ahma,” said Neram, which meant “so be it,” as he bowed his head
reverently.

It was not long before all three were asleep, stretched on the ground
against the great rock, so that the slightest push on it would be
certain to rouse them.

But they were undisturbed all through the long hours of the night, and
at dawn awoke, refreshed and ravenous for the great chunks of roasted
jaguar meat they had prepared the day before.

They ate quickly, listening meanwhile for any sounds from the jungle
which might warn them of a further attack on the part of the mad
monkeys.

But, aside from the ordinary jungle noises, everything was as quiet as
they could wish. Unless they were still slyly watched by their enemies,
their escape from the cave should be a matter of no great difficulty.

Nevertheless, both Neram and Ashati were reluctant to leave the
friendly shelter of the cave, and urged that Bomba rest there another
day and night until all danger should be gone.

But Bomba would not listen to this.

“You stay,” he said. “But Bomba must go. If, as you say, it was the
Spirit of the Jungle that twice saved his life yesterday, the Spirit
might be angry if Bomba were afraid and perhaps the next time would not
save him from the hairy arm of the great ape or the sharp claws of the
jaguar. No, Bomba must go.”

So, seeing that he was in earnest and thinking that if the lad were
under the protection of the Spirit of the Jungle they would be also,
Neram and Ashati said nothing more and helped Bomba roll the great
stone from the entrance to the cave.

“Where you go we will go,” said Ashati gently, as the welcome sunlight
streamed in. “Though you will not have us for your slaves, you are our
master. Let Bomba start and we will follow.”

Making no sound, they went swiftly through the jungle and did not pause
or stop to rest until they had put a great distance between them and
the scene of the fantastic nightmare adventure of the evening before.

When the sun was high above their heads and all the jungle seemed to
fry and crackle beneath the heat of it, Bomba and his companions sat
down to eat the last of the jaguar meat and some berries and nuts they
had gathered by the way. Farther back they had found a stream of clear,
cool water, where they had slaked their thirst.

They resumed their route and had not gone far before they heard the
sound of rushing waters. The sound lent wings to Bomba’s feet, and the
faithful slaves kept pace with him, no matter how fast he went.

They came out soon on the banks of a river. The noise of the foaming
waters had been growing louder and louder until now it smote upon their
ears like thunder. A torrent of black water dashed along the river bed
and leaped angrily against the rocks that studded its course, flinging
a shower of spray upon Bomba and his companions where they stood at the
edge of the fringe of trees that bordered the river.

“The River of Death!” muttered Ashati in hushed tones. “It is so that
our people call it.”

“And it is well named,” said Neram, making a cabalistic sign as though
to ward off evil.

“Beyond the River of Death,” said Bomba in a voice of impatience,
“though so far away that the eye cannot see it, is the Giant Cataract.
Come, let us be quick. Nascanora and his braves cannot be far away.”

They started again, following the course of the stream. Suddenly Neram
paused with his head to one side as though he were listening.

“Hark!” he said, when Bomba would have questioned him. “Someone comes.”

As soon as the words had fallen from his lips, Bomba threw himself upon
the ground and put his ear to it.

Instantly he was on his feet again, drawing Ashati and Neram within
the shelter of the trees, which at that point were growing in great
profusion.

“We will watch as silently as the jaguar watches for his prey,” he
hissed. “Let no one move or make a sound.”

Hidden by the rank marsh grass that formed a perfect covert, the three
lay motionless, not a breath betraying their hiding place.

For what seemed a long time to the intent watchers, no one appeared in
sight. For all that could be seen, the jungle was free from all human
presence and given over to its animal inhabitants.

Unseen himself from the bank of the river, only a few yards away, Bomba
could yet have a perfect view of any living thing that might pass by.
Absolutely still, as motionless as though he were an image of stone,
his eyes alone moved to show that he lived and breathed.

The faint sound of footsteps that they had heard gradually became more
distinct, and at last a solitary traveler came into view. The man was
an Indian, but of a tribe with which Bomba was not familiar. He was
journeying swiftly when those concealed in the long grass caught their
first glimpse of him, glancing again and again over his shoulder as
though he feared pursuit.

Motioning to Neram and Ashati to remain silently where they were, Bomba
wriggled through the underbrush as sinuously as a snake. Not a motion
of the grass betrayed his presence.

Then, without a sound, as though he had risen from the heart of
the earth, Bomba leaped to his feet directly in the path of the
unsuspecting native.

The fellow started back and opened his mouth to yell, but before a
sound could issue from it Bomba had clapped one lean, brown hand over
his mouth and with the other had thrown him prone on the ground.

Kneeling on the chest of his captive, who was too paralyzed by the
suddenness of the attack to make more than a feeble resistance, Bomba
called softly to Ashati and Neram. As though, like Aladdin, he had
conjured them by the rubbing of a lamp, they were instantly at his side.

At their unexpected appearance, the feeble resistance of the native
ceased altogether. He seemed to be stupefied with terror, and stared
from one to the other of his captors with red and watery eyes that
begged for mercy.

“We will not hurt you,” said Bomba, taking his hand from his prisoner’s
mouth while at the same time he motioned Neram and Ashati to grasp the
fellow, should he seek to break away. “Only tell us what you know and
you shall go free. But lie to us,” he added, with a significant motion
toward his machete, “and you die!”



CHAPTER XVI

THE ISLAND OF SNAKES


The native writhed and twisted, the eyes bloodshot with terror at the
threat.

Ashati and Neram came a step nearer with menace in their eyes, and the
captive subsided again, gasping and groaning beneath the pressure of
Bomba’s knee upon his chest.

“Do not kill me! Only do not kill me!” he jabbered. “I will answer you!
You have only to ask.”

“Then listen to me, and listen well.” The fierce, impatient note was
in Bomba’s voice again. “Nascanora, the great chief, the chief with a
black heart, is the man I want to find. Give me news of him and you
shall go free.”

A gleam of hope came into the prisoner’s eyes.

“Yes, yes, I will tell. I will tell you anything I know. But you must
not let Nascanora know that I have told, or he will cut my heart and
fry it over a fire.”

“Nascanora shall not know,” broke in Bomba, as he lightened somewhat
his pressure on the man’s chest and bored him through and through with
his eyes as though to wrench the truth from him. “But if you speak with
a forked tongue your place will be with the dead.”

“I will make straight talk,” asseverated the native. “I do not want to
die.”

“Where is Nascanora? Quick!” demanded Bomba.

“In two days’ time,” replied the trembling native, “he will pass this
spot on the other side of the river.”

“I thought he had already passed,” said Bomba.

“He has,” returned the native. “But he turned back to burn another
village and take some more captives. He will move slowly, for he has
other enemies that he wants to capture near Snake Island, where lives
the old witch, Sobrinini----”

Bomba cried out in astonishment and quick hope.

“You know Sobrinini?” he asked eagerly.

The native marked his change of tone, and seemed encouraged by it. His
terror abated, and he spoke so swiftly that the words stumbled over
each other and Bomba could scarcely make out what he said.

“I know of Sobrinini. Who does not know of her who lives near the Giant
Cataract?” he cried. “But I do not go near her island, for it is full
of snakes and Sobrinini is a woman of evil whose frown means death.”

“Where is this island?” Bomba asked in a fever of eagerness.

“It is called Snake Island. But to go there is to die.”

The native shivered with a superstitious terror as he spoke the words.

Bomba glanced at Ashati and Neram, who had been listening with absorbed
interest to the story of the native and on whose faces was reflected
the same look of fright.

Bomba released his hold upon the prisoner and arose to his feet.

“There are two things I must know,” he said.

“Command, and you shall be obeyed,” returned the native humbly.

“Was there a white man among Nascanora’s captives?”

“I cannot say. He had many captives and he will return as I have said.
That is all that the jungle has told me.”

“How do you go to this island where the witch woman, Sobrinini, lives
with her snakes?” asked Bomba, feeling that the native had spoken the
truth.

The native looked at him with curiosity dawning in his reddened eyes.

“You will not go there?” he cried in horror. “I tell you it would be
better for you to go to the giant anaconda and let him wind his coils
about your body than to seek out Sobrinini on her island that lies
under the curse of the gods. I tell you again that to go there is to
die.”

“That is for me to say,” replied Bomba. “I do not fear Sobrinini. I do
not fear her snakes. I have come a far way to see her and I will see
her. Tell me what I want to know. Bomba does not like to ask a thing
twice.”

In response to this imperative demand, the native jabbered out
directions, telling Bomba the course he must take to reach Snake Island
if he did not wish to be swept to destruction by the rapids of the
River of Death.

When Bomba had extracted all the information he could, he motioned the
native to rise to his feet.

“Listen!” he said. “If I were Nascanora I would kill you, so as to be
sure that your tongue would be still. But Bomba’s heart is not black
like that of the chief of the headhunters. I am going to let you go
free. But if you tell anyone that you have seen me you will find that
Bomba’s knife is sharp and his vengeance is swift. Go now and remember
what I say.”

After the man had disappeared, Bomba wasted little time in discussing
the matter with his companions. For if he were to accomplish all he
hoped to before Nascanora should pass that way, he would have to work
hard and fast.

He was in a ferment of eagerness to visit Sobrinini and wrest from the
strange woman the secret of his birth. He was sure she knew. Jojasta
had said she could tell him. Casson’s queer actions when the name of
Sobrinini had been mentioned and his statement that “Nini would know”
had further confirmed his conviction.

As for the terrors that, according to the native, barred access to her,
he cared not at all. He was used to meeting and overcoming danger. He
would face anything rather than once more be balked in learning what to
him was almost as much as life itself.

With the aid of Neram and Ashati, he cut down one of the smaller trees
near the river bank and began the work of hollowing out a portion of
the trunk in the form of a small canoe.

It was hard work and slow, even with the aid of his companions, who
were skilled in that kind of work, and when the evening shadows fell
along the banks of the River of Death the canoe was only half done.
Impatient as he was, Bomba was forced to wait till morning for the
completion of the work.

At the break of dawn Bomba was at work again. Ashati helped him, while
Neram went off in search of jaboty eggs so that they could conserve
their remaining supply of meat.

Some time later he returned, triumphantly displaying six large eggs.

“There were more there, but I could not carry them,” he said, as he
built a fire with which to prepare breakfast. “I saw a tapir, too, but
could not kill him because I had gone out without my bow and arrows.”

“Foolish one to hunt without weapons,” reproved Ashati, looking up for
a moment from his work. “Ashati would know better.”

“The next time Ashati shall do the hunting,” returned Neram, and went
on stolidly with his preparations.

By the time the sun was high in the heavens the crude canoe was
finished. A paddle was then fashioned from a sapling, that for all its
slenderness was strong enough to breast the current of even that raging
river.

Their temporary captive had explained to Bomba that he must launch his
boat at some little distance up the river, where the current was not
so strong. From there he could let himself go with the rushing waters
until he came to a place where the waters widened out and were not so
tumultuous.

When he reached this portion of the stream, the native had said, he
would see at a distance a long island, the shape of a finger, extending
into the river. After he had reached and passed this on the eastern
side, he would find himself in a place more easily navigable for his
small craft.

Up this calmer stretch of water Bomba had been directed to paddle until
he should come in sight of Snake Island, half hidden behind a jutting
point of the mainland.

Bomba had taken it for granted that Ashati and Neram would accompany
him. There was room for the three of them, and there would be less
danger of capsizing if the canoe were well weighted down.

But though they helped him willingly to carry the canoe to the portion
of the river where it would be safe to launch it, they seemed so
terrified when Bomba spoke of his eagerness to reach Snake Island that
the lad stared at them with amazement.

“You are afraid to go?” he asked.

Poor Ashati and Neram flinched before his accusing gaze and hung down
their heads. For a long moment there was silence, and then Ashati
answered:

“This Sobrinini is a witch and her island is full of snakes. If she is
a witch, she can make the snakes do her bidding. Did not the caboclo
say that to go there was to die?”

Bomba pondered for a while, staring at his companions. He had not their
superstition, but he could put himself in their places and understand
their feelings.

“You have not the reason to seek out Sobrinini that I have,” he
conceded. “Perhaps that is what makes me blind to dangers that you see.
Bomba will go alone. You stay here till I get back.”

At this they cast themselves at his feet, crying out that they would go
with him in spite of their dread of Sobrinini and her island of snakes.

But Bomba would not accept such a sacrifice on their part, and
persisted in setting off alone.

They dropped the canoe into the water, and almost before Bomba had time
to get into it the current caught the frail bark and sent it dancing
out upon the swirling waters like a feather caught in the wind.

The jungle boy needed all his skill to keep the tossing craft on an
even keel and set a straight course down the river. When he could at
last look back, he could see Neram and Ashati standing on the bank like
bronzed statues, looking after him. He knew that in their hearts they
never expected to see him again.

On he went down the river, the canoe caught now by one current, now by
another, sometimes dipping to one side at so sharp an angle that it
seemed it must capsize, then righting itself and dancing on again over
the frothing black water--a frail barrier between Bomba and destruction.

Once the canoe was caught in the iron grip of a cross-current and
rushed at a furious speed toward the rocks that at that point lined the
shore.

Bomba had need of all his strength. Putting all his force upon the
paddle, he grazed the murderous rocks by the fraction of an inch, and
slid lightly, gently into a stretch of calmer water.

The most dangerous part of his water journey was now over. All he had
to do now was to avoid the rocks that at places pushed their heads
above the water and the snags formed by parts of the trunks of trees
that had grown on what was dry ground before the stream had extended
its borders and swallowed them up.

But there were other “snags” too--living snags! The rough, gnarled
bodies of great alligators that swam or floated lazily about, their
backs just showing above the surface. Many were wholly or half asleep,
others turned red and evil eyes on the solitary boatman as he sped
by. Bomba, remembering his last experience with the ferocious brutes,
shuddered to think of what would happen to him if by some evil chance
his canoe should be overturned.

He found the island that was shaped like a finger, and worked his
craft about the further end of it, heading upstream as the native had
directed.

This was more tedious work than his progress downstream had been, but
far less perilous. Bomba paddled with a will, his heart beating high
with hope as he thought that every stroke was bringing him nearer to
Sobrinini and the secret whose answer he was so eager to know.

If he shared to some extent the fears that had taken such strong
possession of Ashati and Neram in regard to Sobrinini and her island
of snakes, his eagerness to learn from the lips of the old witch woman
those facts about his parentage that had been so long denied him drove
all other feelings from his mind.

But as time passed and still each bend of the river failed to disclose
any island answering to the description given by the native, Bomba
became anxious and quickened the long, sweeping strokes of his paddle.

Could the native have deceived him? Was the fellow chuckling at that
very moment at the way he had deceived the white boy who had waylaid
him?

Bomba hardly thought so. The man had spoken under the fear of death,
if he spoke falsely. He knew how indefinite was the native idea of
distance. He had heard Casson say in the old days that when a caboclo
said a place was “not far” he might mean just beyond a bend of the road
or twenty miles away.

Bomba’s first uneasiness came with the lengthening of the evening
shadows. Even if the native had not misled him and his course was the
true one, Bomba did not relish the idea of approaching the island in
the dark, or even at early dusk.

But even as these thoughts troubled his mind and the shadows grew
deeper, he rounded another bend of the river and saw before him the
object of his search. He could not be mistaken. The position and shape
of the island were exactly as the native had described them.

As Bomba, with quickened pulse, drove his canoe among the heavy rushes
that half concealed the land from anyone upon the river, the sound of
singing came to him.

It was not one of the tribal songs of natives with which he was
familiar.

It was singing such as he had never heard before, and the voice of the
singer was so thin and eerie and unearthly in that solitary spot that
Bomba felt the hair rise on his scalp.

“Sobrinini!” muttered the lad, and with a trembling hand parted the
bushes from before his eyes.



CHAPTER XVII

AMID WRITHING SERPENTS


The sight that met Bomba’s eyes was horrible beyond anything he had
ever seen or imagined.

At the extreme end of the island, in mud that oozed about her ankles,
an old withered crone was performing a weird dance, singing to herself
as she did so in a language that was strange to Bomba.

But that was not the part of the performance that held Bomba
spellbound, horror-stricken.

It was the snakes, the ropes of slimy, hideous reptiles that the old
woman wound about her arms, her waist, her neck, even her face, as she
danced faster and ever faster to the strains of her weird, high-pitched
song.

It was then that fear entered into Bomba, a fear such as had never
been felt by him when he battled with the wild beasts of the jungle.
Then he had fought with things of flesh and blood, with something he
could understand. But what he saw now seemed to be tinctured by the
supernatural. His flesh crawled. The scene was revolting and horrible
beyond description.

This must be Sobrinini, this hag that played with and fondled and
petted these hissing reptiles that wound their coils about her body.
She must be a witch, as the native had claimed. How otherwise could she
do a thing like this and remain unharmed?

And if she was a witch--and to Bomba’s primitive, half-taught mind this
did not seem at all impossible--she might have it within her power to
lay a spell upon him, if she wished. Perhaps she might turn him into
one of those very snakes that hissed and writhed about her.

At the thought, Bomba was tempted to flee from the spot. But something
in him, stronger even than his fear, drew him resistlessly toward that
weird figure on the river bank.

He worked the canoe in as far toward the island as he dared and wedged
it tightly among the rushes, trusting that they would hold it for him
until he returned.

He found that the water was shallow, and silently slipped into it
and waded toward the bank. Dread of the piranhas, a dangerous,
sharp-toothed fish, such as infest all the waters of the jungle,
hurried Bomba’s steps so that he was not as cautious in his approach to
Sobrinini as he would otherwise have been.

Although he made for the shore at some distance from the old woman, so
that he might choose his own time for drawing near her after she had
finished with the demon-like dance, he slipped, when he tried for a
footing in the slimy ooze of the river bank, and came down with a heavy
splash.

The sound startled Sobrinini. The weird song died on her withered lips
and she stood staring. The tropic night had fallen now, but a full moon
had risen, and by the light of it Bomba could be seen as he got to his
feet and gained the bank.

At sight of him, a shrill yell pealed from the lips of the old woman,
which brought dark figures running to her from all directions. Bomba
saw one rise up in front of him as though conjured from the earth by
magic. He turned to avoid the outstretched arms of this apparition,
did not see the hole that yawned at his feet, and fell into a nest of
writhing snakes.

He was so paralyzed with horror that he could not move. Perhaps it was
to that that he owed his life. For as the snakes, most of which had
been dozing in the slimy ooze at the bottom of the pit, recovered from
their surprise and coiled to attack, Sobrinini pushed through the crowd
at the edge of the hole and began to sing.

It was a lilting, rhythmic tune, and at the first notes of it the
hideous reptiles surrounding Bomba began to sway to the sound and one
after another slipped over the edge of the pit and slithered away into
the darkness.

Bomba climbed out, with the gray mud plastered over him. Still shaken
at the narrowness of his escape from a terrible death, the lad drew
himself up beside Sobrinini.

The ring of natives, male and female, closed in upon Bomba and the old
witch woman as the sound died on the lips of Sobrinini. Several of the
group carried flaring torches, and by this flickering light the scene
seemed as unreal and fantastic as a dream.

As Sobrinini saw Bomba before her, she turned upon him with a look so
fierce and malignant that the lad involuntarily drew away from her.

“You scared my snakes!” she cried accusingly. “For that you should be
burned by fire and flung into the river for the alligators to feast
on your flesh. It was for their sakes, not yours, that I saved your
life, wicked one. My snakes must not be frightened, my little pets--ha,
ha, ha!” and she went off into such a fit of horrible merriment that
Bomba’s heart froze within him.

If at that moment he could have reached his canoe by any means and left
that fearful place behind him forever, he might have yielded to the
temptation.

But it was too late now. The ring of natives surrounded him, and even
if he succeeded by a bold dash in forcing his way through them, there
was little chance of escape. They would reach him and drag him back
before he could get the canoe clear of the bushes and head for the open
stream.

The impulse to flee lasted but a moment. The next, Bomba pulled himself
together and was his cool, courageous self once more.

Sobrinini had worked herself into a frenzy of fury. She danced about
Bomba in a hideous way, shaking her shriveled fists in the air and
mouthing horribly.

Now she came close to the lad and pushed her wrinkled face in his.
She raised an arm above her head as though to strike him. Bomba stood
unflinching.

She paused suddenly, arrested apparently by something she saw in his
face.

“Ah!” she cried. “Bring the torches nearer.”

The command rang out in a strikingly clear voice and instantly there
was a stir among the natives. Evidently she was accustomed to being
obeyed without question.

One great sullen fellow came forward and thrust his flaring torch
almost in Bomba’s face.

Sobrinini peered closely at the lad for a moment, and then shrank back
with a piercing scream.

“You!” she cried, again coming close and staring at him wildly. “How
came you here? Are you a ghost, Bartow?”

Into Bomba’s heart came a swift feeling of amazement.

What was the meaning of this? Like an echo of the words came the memory
of Jojasta’s cry as Bomba had bent above him when he was pinned beneath
the fallen column. Jojasta had called him Bartow and thought he was a
ghost.

He took a step toward Sobrinini, who was still staring at him fearfully.

“What mean you?” he cried.

Seeing the terror into which their priestess had been thrown, a strange
wild singing rose from the native women as they wove in and out in
fantastic mazes, evidently designed to ward off the evil portent.

The bony fingers of Sobrinini closed on Bomba’s arm. Her voice was
shrill and urgent, as she said in his ear:

“Come with me, Bartow. Ghost or not, come with Sobrinini.”

As in a nightmare, his mind in a tumult of conflicting emotions, Bomba
allowed himself to be led away.

They passed through dank, long grass that sprang from the marshy
ground, and in some places grew as high as Bomba’s head. Once he felt
the slimy body of a snake beneath his foot and leaped aside, only to
feel his foot brush another.

“Be not afraid of the snakes. They are my pets and will not harm anyone
that is with Sobrinini,” crooned the old crone at his side.

She knew her way well, for she moved along the winding trail without
ever looking down, keeping her fascinated gaze on Bomba’s face.

Twice Bomba started to ask her what she meant by calling him Bartow and
a ghost, but twice he was halted by a bony, shriveled finger on his
lips and a croaking cry:

“Hush! Speak not, Bartow, or you will break the spell and shatter it
into a thousand tinkling fragments.”

She went on, muttering to herself, until at last they came to a large
wooden building. A flickering light from its gaping windows threw
grotesque shadows upon the ground.

Bomba felt a dread of entering the place. Like the wild things of the
jungle, he felt safer in the open. But Sobrinini’s hand was upon his
arm, and she dragged him through the doorway. Her manner grew ever more
feverish and wild. She seemed possessed by a terrible excitement. Bomba
did not venture to dispute her will.

He found himself in a strange place, the like of which he had never
seen before. Tearing his glance from the withered mask that was the
face of Sobrinini, he looked about him.

Torches flickered and flared in crude receptacles fastened to the walls
and lighted up the bare and desolate room.

Rows of crude chairs stood upon the uneven wooden floor, and above
these, halfway to the patched and leaking roof, a tiny balcony had been
constructed. At either end of this was a small compartment with rounded
front, meant to represent an opera box, though this of course Bomba
could not know.

At the extreme front of the big room was a raised platform, meant to
serve as a stage of this dismal imitation of an opera house.

As Bomba gazed about him, surprised and bewildered, Sobrinini left his
side, and with a horrid simulation of youth skipped to the platform.

Then she turned and made him a low bow, a hideous smirk cracking the
wrinkles of her withered face.

“Come closer, Bartow. Come closer, dear Bartow! Do!” she urged, in a
voice at first soft and coaxing, but that ended in a shrill cackle. “I
will give you a good seat, Bartow--the best seat in the house--in the
first row center. You can hear me better there than from a box. Come!”
she cried, as he hesitated, her simpering giving place to a terrible
frown. “Why do you stand there blinking at me like a fool? Do not
rouse my wrath, Bartow! The wrath of Sobrinini is a terrible thing, as
no one should know better than you.”

Bomba came forward quickly, alarmed by the swift change in the old
crone’s manner. But she simpered and smirked again when he approached,
and, skipping lightly from the platform, forced him with a playfulness
that Bomba found scarcely less terrifying than her wrath into one of
the crazy chairs close to the stage.

“Now I will sing to you!” she cried, and sprang up again upon the
platform.

Bomba watched with a strange fascination while the old woman danced and
sang in a strange language unknown to him. The lilting songs, even when
sung by that cracked and ruined voice, struck a responsive chord in
the boy and filled him with emotions that he could neither analyze nor
understand.

He did not know that that voice, when in its prime, had thrilled great
audiences that included emperors and kings and had given the singer a
reputation as wide as the civilized world.

Suddenly Sobrinini paused, and fixing Bomba with a strange intent gaze,
sang in a voice that had magically lost most of its raucous quality and
for the moment had become the faint, sad echo of something that had
been supremely beautiful--sang a tender, haunting melody that touched
some almost forgotten memory in Bomba’s heart and filled him with an
exquisite pain.

Somewhere, long since, he had heard that melody! But when and where?

Slowly the music drew him step by step toward that fantastic figure on
the stage.

“Tell me!” he cried imploringly. “Tell me, Sobrinini, was that my
mother’s song?”



CHAPTER XVIII

THE MYSTERY DEEPENS


For an instant the fierce, bright eyes of the old hag softened. Her
bony fingers hovered over Bomba’s hair, as though they would have
stroked it.

Then she threw back her head and laughed, a harsh, cackling laugh that
caused Bomba to wince and shrink back as from the sharp thrust of a
knife.

“Eh, Bartow, you would have a joke with Sobrinini, my fine one,”
croaked the old crone, wagging her finger in Bomba’s face and leering
at him in a way she meant to be facetious. “No, no, Bartow--or Bartow’s
ghost--that was not your mother’s song, but the song of your wife----”

“My wife!” the words broke from Bomba impetuously. “What mean you,
Sobrinini?”

“Ah, you would still have your joke with Sobrinini, eh?” The old woman
leaned forward again and tapped him on the arm with her skinny finger.
“But you cannot forget that song, Bartow, the song your wife sang after
Bonny was born.”

But when Bomba would have questioned her further, she pushed him away
from her and began to sing again.

“La la la! la la la!” she sang.

It was the gay and vibrant melody that poor Casson had tried to sing.

Bomba could do nothing but stand in bewildered silence and watch the
old woman as she danced and sang, whirling about the poor stage with a
nimbleness that was amazing in one of her age.

Confusedly, he tried to think of the things she had said to him, but
beneath the wild spell of that performance he could reason nothing out,
and could only stare dazedly at this wreck of what had once been a
great genius.

What would happen to him, Bomba wondered, when the woman tired of
dancing and perhaps found out that he was not Bartow or Bartow’s ghost
as she thought him then, but only Bomba, a boy of the jungle.

With one last twirl and a deep bow to an imaginary audience, Sobrinini
brought her weird performance to an end. She grinned toothlessly at the
staring boy, and skipped lightly to the edge of the platform.

“Ha, Bartow, like you Sobrinini in the dance that charmed all Paris?”
she chirped, patting Bomba’s shoulder coquettishly. “Sobrinini has not
lost her art. How say you, Bartow?”

Bomba felt that he must keep her in good humor with him if he were to
gain that information about himself for which he had risked so much. He
had already learned something--or guessed something. Perhaps he could
learn more.

“I like your dance,” he told her gravely. “But I like best the song
that Bartow’s wife sang when--when----”

“When Bonny was born?” prompted the old woman, and without waiting for
a reply began to hum again that tender melody that had found its way to
the depths of Bomba’s heart.

It thrilled the boy again more strangely than before. When the song was
done, emotion conquered Bomba’s caution, and he flung out his hands to
Sobrinini, begging her to tell him what she knew about Bartow, about
Bartow’s wife, about the child that she had called Bonny.

But Sobrinini drew back from him, quick suspicion glinting in her eyes.

“No, no! Not now, Bartow, not now! It is another joke that you play on
Sobrinini. No, no! To-night you will sleep here and to-morrow I will
pay back your jokes with some of my own. Come! I will show you where
you are to sleep.”

So saying, and mumbling to herself as she had before, the demented
woman led him out of the strange room with the chairs and platform
that had so bewildered the boy and down a long, dark passage.

There Sobrinini paused and clapped her hands sharply.

As though by magic, a figure appeared out of the darkness before them.

“A torch!” croaked Sobrinini. “A torch to drive the shadows back into
the night. Bring a torch. Make haste.”

The figure disappeared and in a few seconds returned with a light. The
features of the slave seemed savage and sinister in the flickering
illumination.

“Give it to me! Give it to me!” cried Sobrinini irritably. “Now, slave,
begone!”

Instantly the figure vanished again, and Bomba looked about him
apprehensively. For a moment he had the fantastic notion that the
shadows all about him were filled with ghostly figures that appeared
and disappeared by magic and made no noise.

But Sobrinini stalked before him, flaring torch in hand. Bomba followed
her into a room so small that the farthest corners were made bright by
the wavering light of the torch.

As Bomba entered the place he had a strange feeling that he had seen it
before, had been in it before, had once looked about him as he was now
looking at the few articles of furniture and the pictures on the walls.

But even while he felt this so strongly that it seemed almost uncanny,
Bomba knew that it could not be so and that it was impossible he had
ever enacted this scene or anything like it before.

In all his wild life in the jungle, he had never seen anything like
that strange object in one corner of the room, raised from the floor by
posts and covered with a cloth. If Bomba had been told that the strange
object was a bed, he would have been no better informed than before. As
far as he could remember, he had never slept in anything like that in
his life.

While he was taking in the various features of the room, Sobrinini
deposited the torch in a socket on the wall and turned again to Bomba.

“Bartow,” she said, and there was that softened light in her wild eyes
that had appeared there while she was singing the tender lullaby that
Bartow’s wife had crooned to Bonny, “this is where you sleep while you
remain with Sobrinini on her island. Good-night, Bartow, or Bartow’s
ghost, and pleasant dreams!”

Then she turned and, noiselessly as a ghost or a shadow, glided from
the room.

Bomba stood where she had left him, motionless.

What was that strange feeling that made his heart swell within him
until he could not bear the pain of it, that made him reach out wildly,
beseechingly, for some vague, beautiful thing that he had never known,
or only dimly remembered?

What was it that suddenly made him feel his loneliness and desolation
more keenly than he had ever felt it in his life, as though he had been
given for a moment a glimpse of something warm and friendly and sweet,
only to have the curtain fall again and leave him in his solitude, more
utterly alone than he had ever been before?

What was it that drew him haltingly, almost fearfully, across the tiny
room to stop beneath a picture on the wall and, with his hungry eyes
upraised, stare at it intently?

Bomba could not tell. He only knew that within him there was a growing
tumult of emotions, fear, hope, doubt, and a longing so fierce that it
was pain.

Into the jungle lad’s upturned, pleading face the beautiful eyes in
the picture looked steadily and gravely down. It was a lovely face,
girlish and sweet, with soft hair waved back from a broad, low forehead
and with eyes one knew were soft and dark. The lips turned up at the
corners, half-smiling.

Bomba had never seen that beautiful pictured face before, as far as
he could remember. Then how was it that those great eyes looking into
his, those sweet lips parted as though to speak to him, touched
a chord in him that had never before resounded, and increased a
thousandfold his longing for that vague and beautiful thing that he had
never known?

She was even fairer than the woman with the golden hair. Yes, much more
fair and sweet.

Suddenly Bomba’s eyes were full of tears, and he heard himself crying
in a voice that shook:

“Mother! Mother!”

With both hands upraised toward the beautiful face, Bomba slid slowly
to the floor and lay there, his frame shaking with unaccustomed sobs.

Softly, weirdly, tenderly, there floated to the lad, as though from a
great distance, the strain of that sweet melody, the song that Bartow’s
wife had sung to Bonny.

Long after the lullaby had died away Bomba remained there, motionless,
crouched beneath the picture, one arm before his eyes.



CHAPTER XIX

A STARTLING INTERRUPTION


Worn out by the exciting adventures and fierce emotions of the day,
Bomba fell asleep. When he awoke the chill gray of early dawn was
stealing in at the window of the little room.

He was still on the floor beneath the picture. But he would not have
sought the bed in any event. It represented to him something so strange
that he would probably have been unable to sleep in it. The hard floor
on which he now lay or the earth of the jungle or his own hammock was
far more restful and sleep compelling.

At first, only half awake, Bomba had difficulty in remembering the
events of the day before and why he was in the place where he found
himself. He sprang to his feet, rubbed his eyes, and looked about him.

His eyes fell upon the picture of the beautiful lady, and memory
returned to him.

That tender, sweet melody sung by Sobrinini! Bomba had never heard it
till lately, as far as he could remember, and yet felt that he had
known it always. He wondered at the power it had exercised over him.
It had tugged at his heart as though it would pull it out by the roots.

Perhaps, he thought, this was the work of Sobrinini. Was she not a
witch? Certainly, everything he had witnessed since his arrival at
the island tended to that conclusion. The mortal fear in which her
servitors stood of her would seem to indicate the possession of some
supernatural power. Had she woven a spell about him, made him seem to
remember things that had never happened?

Yet this spell, if spell it was, had not been a malignant one. It had
made him strangely happy. The tears that had been forced from him were
tears of joy in the main, and even the melancholy that attended them
had been tender and sweet.

And this emotion had been so rare in the boy’s lonely life that it
brought a rush of gratitude toward Sobrinini. He was not afraid of the
weaver of spells and the charmer of serpents. He stood in awe of her,
but the predominant feeling was of friendship and pity for her demented
condition.

And there was something else that made a tie between them. She had
known Bartow and Bartow’s wife and Bonny. How much that name sounded
like Bomba!

In the dim light of the growing dawn, Bomba came close to the
beautiful pictured face on the wall and studied it wistfully. He could
see love in those eyes as they looked at him. He would ask Sobrinini
for that picture. Perhaps she would give it to him.

He dwelt on it, until every feature was engraved on his memory. From
that time on, he would always be able to see that face, even when his
eyes were closed.

Reluctantly at last he turned away. He had work to do, and time was
pressing. He must find out from Sobrinini what he had come to learn.
And then he must hurry on in pursuit of the captives of Nascanora. He
must be at hand when the party passed the point in the river where
Ashati and Neram were still waiting for him.

He would seek out Sobrinini at once and demand from her an answer to
the questions that tormented him. He would find out who Bartow was and
why he, Bomba, had twice been taken for Bartow or Bartow’s ghost.

With these thoughts in mind and forgetful of the fact that he had had
nothing to eat since the afternoon of the day before, Bomba strode into
the passage and found his way back to the strange room with the chairs
and platform where Sobrinini had sung to him.

The place looked changed to him now. It was not so weird nor mysterious
now that the torches had flickered out and dawn had replaced the
shadows of the night.

If Bomba had expected to find Sobrinini there, he was disappointed.
The great bare hall was deserted, and though he stopped and listened
intently, there was no sign of life anywhere.

Then suddenly there came to him from a distance the sound of singing.
First Sobrinini’s voice--he could not be mistaken in it now--then other
voices joining in a sort of weird chant that chilled the lad’s blood
yet drew him irresistibly toward the point from which the sound was
coming.

Slowly he emerged from the building and found himself enveloped in a
swirling, gray mist.

Yet the sound of the chant served him as a guide, and he went on and
on, now coming closer to the singers, then seeming to draw away from
them as the voices receded.

At last, when he was beginning to think that Sobrinini had again laid
a spell on him and that the voices were ghostly voices, to be heard by
none but himself, he saw a dark form emerge from the mist and after it
another and another.

Bomba stood still and watched. The natives were dancing, flinging their
arms about wildly and intoning their weird chant, now harsh and loud,
now soft like the sighing of the wind through the trees.

It was like a dance of ghosts, and it was not alone the chill damp of
the air that struck cold to Bomba’s heart. He felt as though he were
in some other world, and that an evil one. He had never longed for the
warmth and brightness of the jungle sun as he did at that moment.

But as the natives danced on, as tireless apparently as the ghosts that
Bomba half-thought them, the mist began to clear and the sun struck
through, causing the moisture upon the dark bodies of the dancers to
glisten.

Then, in the center of the ring, Bomba beheld Sobrinini, whirling
wildly in a mad dance, long, gray locks streaming about her, and in
each upflung hand the head of a great snake, while the bodies of the
reptiles coiled about her arms and neck.

Bomba felt a sick faintness come upon him as he watched with repulsion
the loathsome sight. He stepped back a pace or two with an impulse to
shut the scene away from him. But at that moment Sobrinini beheld him
and called to him.

She halted in her dance, and the snakes, uncoiling themselves from
about her arms and neck, as though they knew that their part in the
frenzied performance was over, slithered off quietly into the long
marsh grass and sought their lairs.

Sobrinini darted through the ring of breathless natives, and before
Bomba had guessed her purpose threw her skinny arms about the boy’s
neck.

“Bartow! My Bartow!” she cried, in a loud, cracked voice. “Come and
dance with Sobrinini. Come!”

But Bomba drew back, striving to disengage himself from the clinging
arms of the witch woman. If one of her own loathsome snakes had coiled
about his neck, he could hardly have felt a greater repulsion.

“Come! Come, dance with Sobrinini,” the woman said in a wheedling
voice, as she untwined her shriveled arms to grasp him by the hand. “I
will call back my snakes, and you shall fondle them to show you that
they will not fill your veins with poison or crush your bones when
Sobrinini is nigh. Come! Why do you draw back? What are you waiting
for, Bartow?”

“But I am not Bartow,” blurted out Bomba in his desperation to be rid
of her and learn the truth about himself. “Jojasta, the medicine man
of the Moving Mountain, called me Bartow also. But I am not he. I am
Bomba! Bomba, the jungle boy!”

Sobrinini paused, a look of bewilderment overspreading her sharp
features.

“Not Bartow? Not Bartow?” she mumbled, coming close to peer into the
lad’s face. “No, no, not Bartow, surely. But then you are Bartow’s
ghost.”

“I am no ghost!” cried Bomba. “Bones are in my body. Blood runs through
my veins. See--if you prick my flesh, it bleeds.”

In his eagerness to prove to the old crone that he was human and no
ghostly visitor, Bomba drew forth his machete and thrust the sharp
point of it into his brown, sinewy forearm. Blood welled up from the
slight cut, red, pulsing blood.

“See--I am no ghost!” cried the lad again. “Ghosts do not have blood.
Ghosts do not have bones. One can walk through ghosts as one walks
through the mists of the early morning. Let anyone try to walk through
me, Bomba, the jungle boy!”

The natives had stopped dancing and singing their wild invocation to
the dawn. Now they stood in a half circle about Sobrinini and Bomba,
looking on curiously.

At Bomba’s challenge, not one of them stirred. He looked exceedingly
dangerous, standing in all his splendid strength with the sunlight
glinting on the red point of his upraised machete. It would not be well
to try to walk through him.

The puzzled expression had deepened upon the face of Sobrinini. She
stood regarding Bomba with bewilderment and a dawning suspicion.

“Then if you are not Bartow and no ghost,” she demanded, “who are you?”

And suddenly all the lad’s long groping for the truth, his passionate
eagerness to learn the facts concerning his parents, the many
disappointments he had suffered and the realization of his desperate
loneliness rushed over him in an overwhelming flood, and filled him
with emotion that found vent in a headlong torrent of words.

“Who am I? If I could give you the answer to that question, Sobrinini,
I would not be here. I know nothing about myself except that I am
Bomba, a boy of the jungle, and have spent my life with Cody Casson on
the edge of the swamp. Casson could not tell me who I am nor who my
father and my mother were. He sent me to Jojasta, and Jojasta before
he died said, ‘Go to Sobrinini, she will tell you!’ I have come,
Sobrinini.”

He took a step toward her, hands outstretched.

At that instant there was a wild yell, and a native, panting, the sweat
streaming from him, dashed toward them and flung himself at the feet of
Sobrinini.

“The Great Spirit of the Jungle save us!” cried the frightened wretch,
trembling as with the ague. “The headhunters have come! The great
chief, Nascanora, is at hand!”



CHAPTER XX

IN THE HANDS OF THE HEADHUNTERS


There was a chorus of frightened exclamations and a wild scattering of
the natives that showed the dread that Nascanora’s name inspired in all
the people of that region.

In a twinkling, Sobrinini and Bomba found themselves alone.

The old woman herself had grown ashen. She grasped Bomba by the hand.

“Come!” she said. “I will hide you. Quick!”

But even as she spoke there was a wild yell from the forest, and a
horde of savages, headed by Nascanora himself, burst into the clearing.

Bomba had drawn his knife, determined to sell his life dearly. Seeing
his threatening attitude, the savages were rushing on him with spears
held high when a command from Nascanora halted them.

“Do not kill him--now,” he commanded. “That would be too easy. His
death, when it comes, must be hard and long. And after that his head
shall stand on the wigwam to show how Nascanora deals with his enemies.”

Sobrinini stepped forward, her eyes glaring.

“Beware what you do, Nascanora,” she warned. “Leave this boy alone
and go your way lest I put my spell upon you. It is not well to make
Sobrinini angry.”

There was a murmur of uneasiness among the savages, for the fame of
Sobrinini as a witch had gone far and wide. That Nascanora himself was
not wholly unmoved was evident from the way he evaded the blazing eyes
of the old woman.

But he was made of sterner stuff than his followers, and he had come
too far to be balked of his prey.

“I would have no quarrel with Sobrinini,” he said placatingly. “I do
not wish to hurt her or her people. But the boy must go with me. Else I
will kill all the people on this island and take their heads along for
the women of my tribe to rejoice over. Nascanora has spoken!”

Before Sobrinini could speak, Bomba intervened. To fight against such
odds was hopeless. Flight was equally impossible. He must submit to
capture, and trust to his quick wit and courage to escape later.

“Listen, Sobrinini!” he said. “They are many, and I do not wish that
your people should die. I will go with Nascanora. But first,” he
added, turning to the chief, whose eyes were glowing with a baleful
glare of triumph, “I would ask Nascanora a question.”

“Speak!” said the chief.

“Nascanora is a great chief,” said Bomba. “He is not afraid of anyone.
Is it not so?”

“It is so,” replied Nascanora, rather astonished at the tribute, but
swelling with pride.

“Then will Nascanora fight Bomba alone?” asked the lad. “Fight him with
knives?”

If a bomb had been thrown into the midst of the savages it would not
have created greater surprise. They looked at each other in amazement.
Was the boy mad?

The most astounded of all was Nascanora himself. He could not believe
his ears. To be bearded thus, he, Nascanora, in the presence of his
braves and by a boy! His eyes glowed with fury and his face grew dark
with menace.

“Such idle words will make your death still harder,” he threatened. “It
is not well to mock Nascanora.”

“I do not mock,” returned Bomba quietly. “I would make a compact with
Nascanora. I will fight him with knives. We can throw the knives or
fight hand to hand, as Nascanora chooses. But Nascanora must swear by
his gods and command his braves that, if he is killed, the captives
shall go free. It is for their freedom that I will fight Nascanora.
Surely he is not afraid.”

Lithe, supple, muscular, his head held high as he flung out the
concluding taunt, Bomba gazed full into the glowering eyes of the
chief. He hoped that Nascanora would be goaded into accepting the
challenge. The boy was a master of the machete, either thrust or
thrown. If he should conquer, as he felt sure he would, his victory at
one stroke would free the captives. If he should lose--well, that was
in the hands of fate.

Nascanora’s face was a study. It was working with rage that did not
hide, however, a shade of apprehension. He had tested the boy’s courage
on one previous occasion, and had learned to respect it. He towered
over his captive in size, but he doubted whether he exceeded him in
strength. And he doubted very much whether he equaled him in skill and
agility.

The chief was in a quandary. He knew that his braves were looking on
and wondering at his hesitation. On the other hand, life was dear to
him.

He glared at Bomba. The lad looked unflinchingly at him. And in the
duel of eyes, Nascanora’s were the first to fall.

“It is not for a great chief like Nascanora to fight with a boy,” he
blustered, seeking to cover his defeat. “He shall learn what happens
to them who speak boastful words to Nascanora. Bind his hands and we
will go.”

The command was quickly obeyed. Sobrinini again attempted to interpose,
but Bomba checked her.

“Sobrinini is good,” he said, “but there is no reason why she and her
people should be killed. Bomba will go, but he will come back again.”

“Yes, yes,” she whispered agitatedly. “You will come back. You are
brave. You made Nascanora’s heart turn to water. Sobrinini can see into
the future. You will come back, and then I will tell you what you want
to know.”

Bomba would have urged her to tell him then, but he was roughly
hurried away, leaving Sobrinini to wring her withered hands and mutter
invocations to her gods.

Despite his dangerous plight, Bomba found himself in a strangely
buoyant frame of mind. He still felt the exaltation that came from his
triumph over Nascanora. He had shamed him in the eyes of his braves.
Perhaps that would weaken his prestige with them and make ultimate
escape easier.

He was not oblivious, of course, to the fact that his defiance had made
Nascanora a more bitter enemy than ever. He watched the angry figure
striding along at the head of his braves. Doubtless at this moment the
chief was thinking of some fiendish mode of torture with which to
slake his thirst for revenge.

Before long they reached the part of the island where Nascanora had
disembarked. Here two great war canoes were drawn up. Bomba was pushed
into one of them, then the natives got in. With a few swift thrusts of
the paddle the canoes were sent into the center of the stream. Then
they headed their course for the mainland.

The savages were familiar with the rapids, and, evading the pitfalls of
the river, rapidly neared the other shore.

As they drew closer, Bomba saw the rest of Nascanora’s band camped
close to the shore. In the ring they formed he could see a group of
dejected figures, evidently the captives.

The canoes touched the bank. Bomba was pulled out by a couple of braves
and thrust into the crowd of prisoners. His eyes flew from face to face.

They rested on the frail, tired visage of an old man who rose and
tottered toward him.

“Casson!” cried Bomba.

“Bomba!” exclaimed Casson pantingly as he threw his arms about the
boy’s shoulders.



CHAPTER XXI

THE GIANT CATARACT


The old man sobbed as he hugged the lad to his breast.

Bomba’s joy at the reunion was no less, though his bound hands
prevented him from returning the embrace.

When at last they stood apart and looked fondly at each other, Bomba
was grieved to the heart to see the ravages that the hardships and
miseries of the journey had made in the face and frame of the old
naturalist. The first was so thin as to be almost transparent, and the
latter had wasted to a shadow.

But he was still alive. Bomba had not come too late to see him once
more in the flesh. He would still have a chance of rescuing him and
taking him back to the old cabin where he could end his days in peace.
But the boy’s heart sank as he looked at the bonds on his own wrists
and realized how slight his chances were to rescue anybody while he was
a captive himself.

When their first emotion had somewhat subsided, Bomba had time to look
about for the others that he knew. Many faces were strange to him,
and it was evident that, from the headhunters’ point of view, their
foray had been crowned with great success. They were carrying back an
unusually large number of prisoners, some to be tortured and killed,
others to drag out a lifetime of misery.

Bomba’s eyes lighted on Pipina, who came forward eagerly and threw her
arms about his neck with an outburst of tears and broken ejaculations.
Also, there was Hondura, the Araos chief, who greeted him merely with a
grunt and the habitual stolidity of his race.

Then his eyes fell upon Pirah, the young daughter of Hondura, who,
herself unbound, came running toward him with outstretched arms.

She clasped Bomba’s hands fondly, noting sorrowfully that they were
bound, and snuggled close up to him, smiling in his face. He reached
down, and as she drew near, rubbed her cheek with his.

“Is Bomba glad to see Pirah?” she asked almost happily.

“Yes,” answered the boy, forbearing to add that he would far rather
never have seen her at all than to see her in such a position. “Pirah
saved Bomba’s life when he came to the village of the Araos, and Bomba
will never forget.”

“But no, Bomba, you must not be glad. We are captives,” and the
child’s bright face clouded. “We go as slaves. You may not teach me,
as you did before, to shoot the bow and arrow. Do you remember when
you came to our village that you showed me how to use your bow? But
now--oh, what is to become of you, of me?”

Every word the little girl uttered stabbed Bomba to the heart. She
had saved his life once. She was his friend, and he had all too few
friends. He shuddered to think of what might be the fate of this
innocent child in the hands of the savage headhunters.

Their captors were preparing to break camp and were so busy with their
packing that for the time the prisoners were left to themselves. That
gave Bomba his chance to get together with Casson, Hondura and Pipina,
and exchange experiences.

He learned, to his relief, that they had not been treated as harshly as
he had feared. Their captors had kept them fairly well fed. But they
had told them frankly and gleefully why they did this. They wanted them
to be strong enough to endure for a long time the tortures that would
be meted out to them at the great festival that would attend the entry
of the triumphant warriors into their village.

But however fiendish might be the motive, the fact remained that the
prisoners were fairly strong and well. Bomba was glad of this, as
it would facilitate matters if a chance offered to make a break for
liberty.

He told them in detail of his own adventures, not neglecting the way he
had shamed Nascanora, at which they laughed gleefully. And he brought
new courage to them by telling them that the Araos, with all the
strength they could muster from other tribes, were following on their
trail. At any time now they might appear in sight and deliver them.

While he was talking he looked up and saw two figures approaching him.
They were downcast and abject and held their faces so low on their
breasts that at first he did not recognize them. But as they drew
nearer, he saw that they were Ashati and Neram.

“You here, too?” he said, as they squatted down beside him.

“Yes, master,” Ashati answered for both, while Neram nodded his head
despondently.

“I am sorry,” said Bomba. “How did it come that you fell into the hands
of Nascanora?”

“We were waiting for you near the bank of the river,” replied Ashati,
“when we heard the march of feet. We hid in the jungle, hoping that the
enemy would go past and not see us. But they had with them the man you
caught and who told you the way to go to the island of Sobrinini. He
led them to the place where you met him, and they beat the bushes till
they found us.”

“And that man told Nascanora that I had gone to the island, and that is
why they came there for me!” exclaimed Bomba.

“We should have killed the man while we had him on the ground,” stated
Neram.

“No,” said Bomba. “But it would have been well to have bound him and
left him with you until after Nascanora had passed by. Yet the man
swore by his gods that he would not tell.”

“Nascanora has ways of making men speak,” put in Ashati significantly.

“His heart is as black as Jojasta’s was,” declared Neram, as though
that summed up the total of human depravity. “He will torture us with
fire and steel and then place our heads on the wigwams of his people.”

“I do not think so,” said Bomba. “Sobrinini told me that I would get
away from him. And Bomba will not leave his friends Ashati and Neram
behind.”

The news helped to dissipate the gloom on the countenances of the
slaves.

“If Sobrinini said so, it must be true!” exclaimed Ashati, “for she is
a witch.”

“The greatest in all the jungle,” confirmed Neram. “She is very wise.
Her snakes whisper in her ears and tell her what will be in the days
to come.”

They turned away much cheered and comforted, and just then their
captors gave the signal for the march.

The prisoners were herded roughly together in the center of the
marching columns, so that there could be no possible chance to escape.
Fortunately, they had had a long rest while the war party under
Nascanora had been making the raid on Snake Island, so they were in
fairly good condition for the journey, and that the journey would not
be a long one was now evident from the thunderous sound that grew
ever louder and louder in their ears. They were approaching the Giant
Cataract, where dwelt Nascanora and his people.

To the hapless prisoners, that sound was like the knell of doom.

The thunderous sound increased in volume, and suddenly at a turn in the
trail, the most magnificent sight that Bomba had ever seen burst upon
them.

They had reached the Giant Cataract!



CHAPTER XXII

RUSPAK GLOATS


From a great bluff, hundreds of feet in height, a huge torrent of water
poured down into a gorge beneath and rose again in an ocean of spray.
The sound was deafening. The mass of waters gleamed with all the colors
of the rainbow. It was almost beyond the imagination of a dreamer.

It made Bomba catch his breath and stand entranced. For a few minutes
he forgot that he was a prisoner, forgot the horrors that might await
him. His soul drank in the beauty of this mighty cataract and its
splendor. He had heard of its wonders, but had never dreamed it could
be like this.

But there was little time to dwell on its grandeur and sublimity. The
harsh voices of their guards drove the prisoners on. To the besotted
minds of their captors the cataract was nothing, except that it
signified that they were once more at home and now could revel in the
torture of their victims.

The main village lay near the foot of the fall, and from this now came
pouring out the women and children and old men of the tribe.

There were shouts of delight as they saw the number of prisoners that
their warriors had brought with them. They gathered about the captives,
taunting and jeering at them and striking them with sticks until the
guards intervened, not out of pity, but in order that the captives
might be kept in good condition for the horrid festival that Nascanora
was planning.

The prisoners passed through the streets of the village and their
hearts sank, for they saw the human heads, shriveled and blackened
by the sun, that were fastened on poles on the tops of the wigwams.
They had evidently been there a long time. Now a new collection was in
prospect.

In the center of the village was a rough stockade. Into this the
prisoners were corralled and left under the supervision of guards,
while the others of the band dispersed to their homes.

The captives sank down under a pall of horror. This, then, was the end
of the trail. A day or two more, while their captors were preparing for
the great festival of blood, and then torture and death.

The only calm and collected person in the whole enclosure was Bomba.
Not that he was dwelling in a fool’s paradise. He did not disguise from
himself the awfulness of the situation. But he faced it unflinchingly.
His courage had never been at a higher pitch. His mind had never worked
more clearly. He could die, and die bravely, if need be. But he meant
to live.

He was making things as comfortable as he could for Casson and little
Pirah when he heard his name spoken. He looked up quickly and saw
before him Ruspak, the medicine man.

It was Ruspak that Bomba had once captured in the jungle and compelled
to accompany him to the cabin where Casson lay at the point of death.
Against his will, Ruspak had been forced to minister to the sick man,
whom his native medicines finally brought back from the grave. When
this had been done, Bomba had dismissed the medicine man with gifts and
they had parted with professions of friendship.

But how insincere those professions had been on the part of Ruspak and
how deeply he had resented the affront to his dignity as a medicine man
was evident now by the malignity in his eyes and the gloating smile on
his lips.

“So Bomba, the mighty Bomba, is a prisoner in the hands of Nascanora!”
he jeered. “He finds now what happens to one who insults the messenger
of the gods.”

Bomba looked at him quietly, but made no answer.

“Where now is the white man’s magic?” Ruspak sneered, as he looked
mockingly at Casson. “Where is the puma that kept guard before the
door?”

Still Bomba kept quiet, and looked at his tormentor with a contempt
that stung Ruspak to the quick.

“So Bomba has lost his tongue,” snapped the medicine man. “But
Nascanora will find that tongue. He will pull it out with redhot
pincers. Then he will cool Bomba’s mouth with water. You came to the
Giant Cataract. You see plenty water. Bomba shall have water. We will
fill his body with it till he bursts.”

Still Bomba disdained to answer.

“Bomba is strong,” mocked Ruspak. “Very strong. That is good. He can
stand torture for a long time before he dies. His eyes can be plucked
out, and still he will live. He can be burned with torches in a hundred
places and still he will live. His fingers can be cut off one by one,
and still he will live. Death will seem very sweet to Bomba. He will
pray for it, but it will be a long time before it comes. Nascanora will
see to that.”

But all his recital of the horrid tortures that were preparing for
Bomba failed to elicit a single word from the contemptuous captive, and
Ruspak at last left him and went away, mumbling to himself and licking
his lips in anticipation.

Bomba turned to Casson and Hondura, who were seated near by. He hoped
that they had not heard all that Ruspak had said. But the tears in the
faded eyes of Casson showed that he had heard all too clearly and that
his heart was wrung with anguish.

“Do not mind him,” the lad soothed the old man, as he patted him on
the shoulder. “He speaks big words, but they are like the wind in the
trees. If my hands had not been bound, it would have been a bad thing
for Ruspak.”

“He has a black heart and a tongue that is as bitter as the aloe
plant,” said Hondura.

Bomba glanced around to see that none of the sentries were observing
him.

“Hondura,” he said, “slip your hand under the puma skin that covers my
chest, reach up near my neck and tell me what you find.”

Hondura did so, and drew back his hand quickly as it touched something
hard and sharp.

“It is your machete,” he whispered.

“Yes,” replied Bomba in the same low tone. “I hung it there in a noose
when I heard the headhunters were coming. After they had bound my
hands, they were in such a hurry to get away from the witch, Sobrinini,
that they did not search me. They thought of it afterward, but when
they looked for it in my belt it was gone, and they thought I had lost
it or left it in Sobrinini’s house. But it is here, and it will be a
good friend to Bomba.”

Hondura’s eyes lighted up as he grunted his satisfaction.

“It may yet find the heart of Nascanora,” he said.

“Perhaps,” assented Bomba. “But first the hands of Bomba must be free.
When it is dark, Hondura will take the knife and cut the bonds of
Bomba, not all the way, or the guards may notice, but so near through
that Bomba can burst them when he wills.”

“Hondura will do so,” promised the Araos chief.

The tropic night soon fell and the darkness was made more intense than
usual by the absence of moon or stars. A great storm was gathering.
Claps of thunder deafened their ears and vivid lightning flashes shot
across the sky.

Before long the windows of heaven were opened, and the rain came down
in a deluge. It was a veritable cloudburst.

There was a shedlike structure in the stockade, used for storage of
fodder for the cattle, and into this the prisoners huddled, finding
some shelter from the fury of the elements.

For hours the torrential rain persisted. All that time Bomba’s brain
was at work thinking out plans of escape, rejecting one, seizing on
another, and weighing the chances of all. The case was desperate, but
his spirit was indomitable.

Presently he noted a change in the sound of the cataract. The rains had
swelled it tremendously, and its roar had increased. But it was not
this that the jungle lad especially noted. It was a series of sharp
reports, of splintering crashes, of jars that shook the earth, that
caused him to listen in wonder.

Then he heard a loud screaming as of men and women in panic, a rushing
of many feet and hoarse shouts that sent the guards scurrying from
their posts in terror.

“The rocks of the falls are breaking! The cataract is coming down on
the village! Run! Run! Run!”



CHAPTER XXIII

A MAD STAMPEDE


Bomba was on his feet instantly, his mind working with precision and
rapidity.

He sensed in a moment the full meaning of the calamity and the
advantages that he and the other captives might reap from it.

The enormous bulk of water that had swelled the volume of the cataract
from the rain had broken the rocks that formed its brink. These had
given way so that the course of the cataract had changed, and part of
the water that had previously fallen into the gorge was now sweeping
down on the doomed village.

In accordance with his promise, Hondura had severed the boy’s bonds so
that only a single strand was left. This he snapped like thread.

The guards had gone, forgetting all about the prisoners in the wild
instinct of self-preservation. They had joined the rabble that were
now rushing from their huts and through the passageways between, only
intent for the moment on getting away from the waters that threatened
to overwhelm them.

Bomba called Hondura and Pipina to his side.

“The gods have been good to us,” he cried. “We must go now and go
quickly. They will not think of us until their fright is over. Hondura,
get your people and lead them out. Pipina, take care of Casson. I will
take Pirah--carry her if necessary--and go in front. Keep close to me.”

In a twinkling his orders were carried out. The prisoners, stirred to
new life by this unexpected chance of escape after all hope had been
lost, responded to the call of their chief, hurried out of the stockade
and mingled with the frantic, fleeing headhunters.

Not the slightest notice was taken of them by their captors. The night
was very dark, and in their excitement it was impossible for the
headhunters to distinguish friend from foe. All thought was lost save
that of getting away from the doom that threatened them.

Bomba’s marvelous sense of direction stood him in good stead. Dark as
it was, he knew exactly the way he meant to go.

Luckily it was not the way in which the majority of the panic-stricken
people had chosen. They were pressing toward the north. Bomba’s plan
was to go toward the south, retracing the path they had followed that
afternoon.

This had a double advantage. With every step he would be widening the
distance between the prisoners and their captors. If he could once win
clear of the crowd, he and his companions would have a whole night’s
start in case of pursuit.

Then, too, he felt sure that by this time the people of Hondura’s
tribe, with what auxiliaries they could have mustered, had set out
to rescue their chief. At any time now they might be met coming, and
coming in such force that they would have a good chance for victory, if
it came to a fight with the headhunters.

Bomba hurried on in the lead, protecting and shielding little Pirah in
every way he could. Pipina and Casson were close behind, and the rest
of the prisoners, led by Hondura, followed at their heels.

The party of captives had almost reached the end of the straggling
village when a huge figure loomed up before them. He was hastening in a
direction opposite to them, but not at such a headlong pace, as though
he had a certain dignity to maintain which forbade too much yielding to
fright.

Bomba could not see his face, but he knew that there was but one such
towering figure in the tribe. It was Nascanora!

Bomba handed over Pirah to Hondura. Then he felt for his knife.

He still kept up his pace, hoping to pass the chief without being
noticed. But there was something in his stride or form that aroused the
chief’s suspicions.

“Stop!” he commanded, barring the way and stooping down to peer into
the boy’s face.

Bomba had pulled out his knife from its hiding place by the blade. He
had no time to grasp the hilt, but with all the power in his muscular
arm he swung the heavy weapon, and the iron haft struck Nascanora right
between the eyes. The giant chief went down as though he had been hit
by an axe.

Like a flash, Bomba dragged him out of the road and threw him into the
bushes at the side.

“Better make sure with the point of the knife,” suggested Hondura.

“No,” said Bomba, “I will not kill a man who cannot fight. He will not
wake till morning, and then we shall be far from here.”

His hopes were higher now as he pressed on. His one fear had been that
Nascanora might rally his people and pursue his former prisoners. That
fear now had vanished. Without their chief the headhunters would be
confused and bewildered, and, not knowing what to do, would probably do
nothing.

But now another enemy threatened. The waters of the cataract that had
already wiped out most of the village were expanding into the open
country. Already it was lapping at the fugitives’ heels, as though
determined to draw them back and overwhelm them. It retarded their
progress. Their feet stuck in the clammy ooze. The water kept rising
higher and higher. It reached their ankles. It reached their knees. It
seemed as though it were destined to conquer.

Then, just when it seemed that hope must be abandoned, an inspiriting
cry came from Bomba.

“The road is leading upward!” he shouted. “We are coming to a hill! The
waters shall not have us!”

There was a jubilant chorus of shouts as the party struck the incline,
and in a few minutes they were on ground above the swirling waters of
the mighty river. The Giant Cataract had reached out for them, but they
had eluded its grasp!

It was an exhausted but happy throng of refugees that sank down upon
the slope as soon as they had reached a safe distance.

Their situation had changed as though by the waving of a magician’s
wand. Two hours before they had been helpless victims in the hands of
the headhunters, doomed to torture and to death. Now their enemies
were scattered, demoralized, fleeing for their lives from an enemy as
pitiless as themselves.

The rain had ceased now, and the traveling promised to be easier.
Bomba gave them a little time to rest, and then the journey was resumed.

The lake that now extended between them and their enemies was another
element in their favor. It would be some time before the waters would
subside so as to make pursuit possible.

All through the night the little party pressed on, and not until the
first glimmer of dawn appeared in the eastern sky did they stop to make
camp and obtain a much needed rest on the banks of the River of Death.

While the Indians scurried around in the forest to find jaboty eggs,
nuts, and fruit for the morning meal, Bomba climbed a great tree on the
bank of the river to look back on the trail they had traversed.

From the top he could see for many miles. His keen eyes scanned the
horizon, but could detect no traces of pursuers.

With his heart temporarily at rest, he was about to descend when he
became conscious of a swaying, rocking motion of the tree. At the same
moment a shout came from below:

“The tree is falling! Come down! Quick!”



CHAPTER XXIV

IN THE SWIRL OF THE RAPIDS


The warning to Bomba came too late.

The tree had been undermined by the current, swelled by the recent
rain. It had probably been tottering to its fall when Bomba climbed it,
and his weight and his movements among the branches determined its fate.

Bomba was too high to jump. From such a distance he would surely have
broken a limb and possibly his neck. He could only cling tightly to the
bough on which he found himself and trust to chance.

Slowly the tree toppled, and then, with a tremendous splash, fell into
the river. Its momentum carried it for a moment beneath the surface.
Then it came up again with Bomba, drenched and sputtering, still
holding tightly to the bough.

Fortunately he had been on the landward side of the tree, so that he
was on the upper side as the tree swirled in the current.

Now, as his eyes cleared, he found that he was not alone. Ashati and
Neram had been standing at the foot of the tree, and as its great
roots tore loose from the ground they caught the two ex-slaves and
flung them with the force of a catapult far out into the stream.

They had made for the tree as the nearest haven of safety, and now
climbed up into the branches and drew as near as they could to Bomba.

The lad’s first impulse, when he found himself afloat, was to plunge
into the river and swim for the bank, two hundred feet away. But even
as the thought came into his mind he caught sight of the scaly body and
horrid head of an alligator between him and the shore. The brute would
have had him before he had gone twenty feet.

By this time the tree had been caught in the rapids, those terrible
rapids of the River of Death whose power Bomba had already tested.

Had it been merely the trunk of a tree on which they found themselves,
they would have been tossed off in a moment. But the great spreading
branches kept it from turning over. Even at that, it was tossed about
like a chip, and great waves broke over it, threatening at any moment
to dislodge Bomba and his two companions, who had to hold on with all
their might to prevent being swept away.

The horror of their position was intensified by the presence of a swarm
of alligators, whose eyes had detected them and looked upon them as
certain prey. The monsters swam about the tree on every side, at times
dashing up from underneath with wide open jaws, in the hope of reaching
them and pulling them down.

Ashati and Neram thought that their last hour had come, and Bomba was
inclined to agree with them. The tree might stay there, buffeted back
and forth, for days. They could not guide it. They dared not leave it.

From the contemplation of his own plight, his thoughts turned to those
on shore. He was thankful that they were safe for the moment. Hondura
was there to lead them, and the wily chief knew all the lore and
craft of the jungle. With the start he had over his enemies and the
probability that he would soon fall in with his own warriors coming to
his rescue, Hondura would probably win through.

And Bomba knew that the old chief and his people would take good care
of Casson. Good old Casson! Would he ever see the old man again, the
lad wondered.

But a different and more welcome turn was given to his thoughts when
Bomba discovered that the fierce tossing had ceased. The tree had been
thrown from the rapids into smoother water, and was now drifting in the
grip of a strong current in the same direction that Bomba’s canoe had
taken two days before.

In a little while the point of land resembling a finger had been
reached and passed, at so little distance that it would have been easy
to swim to it, had it not been for the monster caymen that still kept
pace with them.

Ashati and Neram had recovered their spirits, now that they had escaped
the grip of the rapids.

“The Spirit of the Jungle is good!” exclaimed Ashati.

“It will not be long before we touch land somewhere,” prophesied Neram,
hopefully.

“Yes,” said Bomba, as his eyes caught sight of Sobrinini’s domain
looming up before them, “and the land will be Snake Island.”

At this name of ominous import a shudder ran through Bomba’s companions.

“The island of the witch woman!” exclaimed Ashati, making cabalistic
signs to ward off evil.

“The woman with the evil eye which brings death to everyone on whom it
falls!” said Neram with a shiver.

“Listen!” said Bomba. “You talk like foolish men. Is Bomba dead? Yet
Sobrinini’s look fell upon Bomba. She is a wise woman. Did she not say
that I would come back to Snake Island? And is Bomba not going back? I
do not like her snakes. But she has done no evil to Bomba, and she will
do no hurt to Bomba’s friends. And Ashati and Neram are my friends.”

The boy’s words brought some reassurance to his companions, but not
enough to banish their fears wholly, and it was with great trepidation
that they viewed the dreaded island as the tree drew ever nearer.

As for Bomba himself, he was almost glad at the accident which had at
the time seemed so disastrous. He would not of his own accord have
taken the time just now to visit Sobrinini again, eager as he was to
renew his questioning. She had been on the very point of telling him
what he wanted to know when Nascanora and his braves had broken in upon
them. Perhaps this time he would be more fortunate.

He was immersed in these thoughts when to their ears came a wailing
cry, so weird, so uncanny, so long drawn out, that it chilled their
blood.

It came from the direction of the island, but, strain their eyes as
they might, they could detect no human figure from whom the cry might
have issued.

The sound was the signal for another outbreak of fear on the part of
the ex-slaves. They were brave enough when facing human or animal foes,
as they had shown in their combat with the jaguars, but when brought in
contact with what they regarded as supernatural, their hearts melted
within them.

They whimpered and cowered and glanced at the water, as though they
were almost willing to take their chances with the alligators rather
than approach the island they deemed accursed.

But they had drawn nearer now and they could detect an agitated,
tumultuous group of figures on the shore.

The wailing cry came again, so near this time that Ashati and Neram
nearly lost their grip on the boughs.

Then from out the fringe of trees that lined the shore shot a small
canoe, paddled with frantic energy by a withered old woman, her
straggling locks streaming behind her head, her face convulsed with
fear.

“Sobrinini!” cried Bomba.



CHAPTER XXV

THE RESCUE OF SOBRININI


With Bomba, to think was to act.

In a moment he had made his way out on the bough to a point where the
foliage thinned out and there was a chance of his being seen.

“Sobrinini! Sobrinini!” he shouted at the top of his voice.

At the call, the old crone ceased paddling for a moment and turned her
haggard face in the direction of the tree.

“Who calls?” she cried shrilly. “Who is it that calls Sobrinini?”

“It is Bomba!” shouted the lad, at the same time shaking the bough of
the tree violently to attract her attention.

She caught the movement of the foliage, and, peering closely, saw the
outline of Bomba’s face and form.

“Bartow!” she cried. “Or is it Bartow’s ghost? You have come to see
Sobrinini die.”

“No!” replied Bomba. “I have come to help Sobrinini live. Come
quickly!”

This last admonition was prompted by the sight of another boat
containing several natives of the island putting out from the shore. He
sensed at once that their errand was hostile.

Sobrinini saw them too, and with a few strokes of her paddle brought
the canoe directly beneath the jungle boy.

Bomba dropped lightly into the canoe, and then held it steady until
Ashati and Neram had time to follow his example.

The other boat was coming on rapidly now, and time was pressing. Bomba
took the paddle from Sobrinini’s hands and pressed her gently to the
bottom of the boat.

But before he dipped the paddle into the water he drew his knife and
shook it menacingly at the approaching natives.

“Go back or you will die!” he shouted. “This is the knife that
frightened Nascanora. It made his heart like that of a woman. Who are
you to stand before it when even the chief of the headhunters was
afraid?”

It was a wholesome reminder, and it had an immediate effect. They
recognized Bomba now as the jungle boy whose challenge Nascanora had
been afraid to accept. That scene had made an indelible impression upon
their minds. They stopped paddling, and excited jabbering ensued.

Bomba faced them for a full minute. Then with a disdainful gesture
he replaced the knife in his belt, as though they were foes too
insignificant to bother with any further, took up the paddle, and
without once looking behind him made for the opposite shore.

His evident fearlessness and contempt decided the issue. The pursuing
party, after a little irresolution, gave up the chase and turned the
prow of their boat in the direction of Snake Island.

Sobrinini had said nothing coherent since her rescue, but sat crouched
on the bottom of the boat mumbling to herself, her long, disheveled
hair shielding her face. Bomba regarded her curiously from time to
time, half expecting to see one or more snakes make their appearance.
But it soon became apparent that all her horrid “pets” had been left
behind in her hurried flight.

Ashati and Neram kept as far away from her as they could, crowding
against each other to avoid contact with the “witch” whose name spread
terror through all that region.

Why had she fled from the island where she had so long held sway? Why
had her formerly submissive slaves turned against her? Bomba longed to
question her, but had to defer that to another time. He wished that she
had brought with her that picture, the picture of that sweet, beautiful
woman, whose eyes had looked so fondly into his.

After a long siege of paddling, the boat touched the farther shore.
Bomba jumped out and pulled the canoe far up on the shelving bank. Then
he helped Sobrinini out, while Ashati and Neram leaped ashore quickly,
glad to be freed from their enforced proximity to the witch.

At Bomba’s command, the men scattered to gather a little food from
the forest, and soon returned with nuts and berries that partially
satisfied their hunger.

Bidding them stay where they were, Bomba penetrated some distance into
the jungle to see if he could pick up the trail of Hondura and his
party.

He had not gone far before he began to sniff. He smelled smoke. His
eyes followed the indications of his nostrils, and he finally caught
sight of a shred of smoke rising above trees not far distant.

He was about to drop on his hands and knees and creep through the brush
to reconnoiter, when he heard a sound that made his heart leap with
delight.

It came to him faintly, and yet was unmistakable. Somebody was playing
a harmonica!

Reassured now, but still not abandoning his habitual caution, he moved
forward until from the shelter of a bush he could see encamped in a
clearing, while they prepared their midday meal, a large party of
natives, evidently on the warpath, as they were armed to the teeth.

He knew them at once. They were the Araos coming to the rescue of their
chief. There was Lodo, evidently in command, a little apart from the
rest. And there was Grico, squatting on his haunches and bringing weird
sounds from Bomba’s harmonica for the delectation of his mates.

Bomba stepped from the shelter of the bush, his hands upraised with
palms outward in sign of friendship.

There was a chorus of ejaculations, a hurried grasping of weapons, and
then shouts of pleasure as they recognized the newcomer.

They crowded about him with every manifestation of delight,
overwhelming him with questions. And cries of joy went up as Bomba, in
as few words as possible, told them what had happened and that Hondura
with the ex-captives must be close at hand and coming to meet them.

Instantly their meal was forgotten as they gathered up their weapons
and supplies and prepared to go forward to greet their chief, their
women, and their children.

Grico, the man with the one eye and the split nose, had listened to
Bomba’s story with such absorbed interest that he still held the
harmonica loosely in his hand. Bomba reached out coolly and took it
from him.

Grico looked astonished and sheepish. And he was still more abashed
when Bomba, noting a protuberance in Grico’s pouch, reached in and drew
out the precious revolver.

“It was good of Grico to keep these for Bomba till he should come back
again,” said the boy in the friendliest of tones, as he stowed away the
treasures in his pouch.

His look was so kindly, so innocent, that Grico did not know what to do
or say. Ordinarily this would have meant a fight. But Grico knew that
Bomba was a bad opponent to pick for a fight, and, besides, at this
moment, the boy was high in the favor of the tribe.

And Bomba’s eyes were very compelling, despite their friendliness.
Grico had never heard of an iron hand in a velvet glove, but he felt
that something of that kind was very close by.

So he swallowed hard for a moment, and then took advantage of the
opening that Bomba had given him.

“Y--yes,” he stammered. “Grico found them in the jungle and kept them
for Bomba.”

“Grico did well, and Bomba will not forget,” said the lad gravely.

It was arranged hastily that Bomba should go back and get his
companions and then join the war party as they went forward to meet
their chief.

Ashati and Neram greeted Bomba’s news with cries of delight. Sobrinini
showed no emotion whatever. It was doubtful whether she understood.
She was sunk in a state of apathy, the natural reaction from her
exciting experiences.

It was difficult to get her to her feet at all, but the need was urgent
and Bomba put his strong arm under hers, and with Ashati and Neram made
as good time as possible in the direction of the line of march.

Luckily, their journey was not prolonged, for before an hour had passed
a joyous hubbub not far ahead told them that the two parties had joined
forces. Hondura and the ex-prisoners were once more with their own
people.

Bomba was welcomed with wild acclaim when he came into view. Casson and
Pipina especially greeted him with tears and embraces that testified
how deeply they were moved.

There was a great feast to celebrate the reunion, followed by a long
powwow between Hondura, Grico and Lodo. Bomba was invited to join the
conference, but declined, as he felt this was a matter that concerned
them chiefly and he did not want to take any responsibility for the
future movements of the tribe.

The result of the powwow was that the natives formed themselves into
two bands. One, consisting of picked warriors under the leadership of
Lodo, with Grico as his lieutenant, proceeded toward the Giant Cataract
to give battle to the headhunters and remove forever, if possible,
that menace to the peaceful tribes of the region.

Others, under the guidance of the aged chief, Hondura, convoyed the
rescued women and children in the direction of their maloca, which they
planned to rebuild.

The grateful Hondura detailed eight of his men to make two litters on
which they bore Casson and Sobrinini, who had reached the limit of
their strength, to the cabin of Pipina.

When their paths at last diverged, Hondura and Bomba clasped each other
by the shoulders and vowed eternal friendship. Pirah wept bitterly at
the separation, and could only be comforted by Bomba’s promise to come
to see her before long.

Bomba had cherished a vague hope that something dramatic would take
place when Casson and Sobrinini were brought face to face. He hoped the
meeting would unlock the floodgates of memories which they shared in
common.

But to his bitter disappointment nothing of the kind occurred. Age had
changed each so utterly that neither recognized the other. They looked
at each other indifferently, and then their eyes turned away.

He had not named either one to the other as yet, and both were so
apathetic that they showed no curiosity. But though disheartened,
Bomba did not wholly despair. When they should get to the cabin of
Pipina he would try again.

Ashati and Neram had begged to be allowed to go along with Bomba, and
he had willingly agreed. The faithful fellows were devoted to him heart
and soul, and they might be of great service to him whenever he should
be compelled to absent himself from the cabin.

Shred by shred, in monosyllables and muttered exclamations, Bomba
gathered, as he walked beside Sobrinini’s litter, the reason for her
flight from the island. He had already guessed it pretty accurately.

Her harsh rule had for a long time galled the natives, who sought
an excuse for rebellion. That excuse had been found in the visit of
Nascanora. They had expected that she would annihilate him on the spot.
Was she not a witch? But when, on the contrary, Nascanora had triumphed
and taken her guest from under her protection, their belief in her
supernatural powers failed, their long-smothered resentment broke
forth, and she had been compelled to flee for her life.

The little party reached the cabin of Pipina without any untoward
happening, the braves departed for their maloca, and the little
household, now increased by three, was reëstablished.

Bomba waited till several days had elapsed and his aged charges had
become rested and strengthened after their exhausting experiences
before he broached the subject that was nearest his heart.

Then, one evening after supper, he turned to them as they were sitting
dreamily in the large room of the little cabin.

“Casson!” he said. “Sobrinini! Look upon each other and tell me what
you see.”

They started at his sharp command, and gazed bewilderedly at him, then
at each other.

At first there was no recognition, but as they gazed fixedly a dawning
wonderment came into their eyes.

Casson was the first to speak.

“Sobrinini!” he cried. “No, that is not Sobrinini. Sobrinini was
beautiful. Sobrinini could sing. And yet--and yet----”

“Casson!” exclaimed Sobrinini in her turn. “It cannot be Casson. He was
young and strong, and his hair was like that of the raven. But I am
Sobrinini. I can sing. Listen!”

She sprang to her feet and sang in her cracked voice the song that
Bomba had heard in the language he did not understand. As she sang,
Casson began to beat his withered palms together in applause, and
finally got to his feet and started to dance about the room.

It was weird and uncanny, and Bomba looked on, fascinated yet
horrified, until the song ended, the dance stopped, and the aged
participants sank trembling in their chairs.

“You do know each other!” cried Bomba. “And you know about my father
and my mother. Tell me, oh, tell me who they were, where they are! Tell
me!”

They looked at him, trying to gather their poor scattered wits. Casson
rubbed his forehead with his hand.

“Ask Jojasta,” he muttered. “I cannot remember. The door is closed. But
Jojasta knows. Ask him.”

“But Jojasta is dead!” exclaimed Bomba.

“Oh, yes,” replied Casson. “You told me he was dead. Then ask
Sobrinini. Nini will know.”

In desperation, Bomba turned to the woman.

“You tell me,” he begged. “You were going to tell me when Nascanora
came. Tell me now!”

“I forget--I forget,” murmured Sobrinini. “I cannot tell you, Bartow.”

“I am not Bartow,” said Bomba.

“Then you are his ghost,” muttered the crone.

“No, no!” cried Bomba. “Look at me. Try to remember.”

She stared at him long and hard.

“If you are not Bartow nor Bartow’s ghost, you are his son,” she
declared. “Andrew Bartow and Laura--yes, her name was Laura--had a son
who was named Bonny. She used to sing to him like this--” and again
she crooned the tender cradle song that had stirred Bomba so strangely.

She relapsed into meditation, still humming that haunting song.

“Yes,” prompted Bomba eagerly. “Where are Bartow and Laura now? And
Bonny----”

“Bonny!” she repeated. “Oh, yes, Bonny was stolen. He was stolen from
home by--by--Japazy! That was his name--a half-breed. Japazy hated
Bartow and hated Casson, too. I do not know why he hated them. And
then--and then--oh, I cannot remember! But ask Japazy--he will know.
Look for Japazy on Jaguar Island above the cataract.”

Her voice died away in disjointed mutterings, and from neither her nor
Casson could he get anything clearer that evening nor in the days that
followed.

The boy was desperate. It seemed that the half-demented man and woman
could get no further. Bomba had got merely a clue.

But that in itself was something. How Bomba followed it up and what
exciting perils and adventures he met in fulfilling his task will be
told in the next volume of this series, entitled: “Bomba the Jungle Boy
on Jaguar Island; or, Adrift on the River of Mystery.”

From the pain and disappointment in his heart Bomba sought relief with
his wild friends of the forest. They could always sympathize with his
mood and in some degree understand it. To them he talked, and they
chattered in reply. And his sore heart was eased in their companionship.

One day, when he had been playing his harmonica and Doto, the monkey,
and Kiki and Woowoo, the parrots, and others of their mates were
gathered around him, there was a crashing in the bushes, and faithful
Polulu, the giant puma, bounded into the clearing.

The others scattered like magic as the formidable beast came up to
Bomba, purring and rubbing his head against him.

“Good old Polulu!” exclaimed Bomba, as he caressed the great head
affectionately. “He is one of Bomba’s best friends. Bomba is glad to
see him. But Bomba cannot stay with Polulu long. He is going on a long
journey. For Bomba’s place is not here. He is not a native of the
jungle. He has a soul. He is white. Yes, Bomba is white. And Bomba’s
soul cannot be at rest until he dwells among the white people.”


THE END



THE BOMBA BOOKS

By ROY ROCKWOOD

[Illustration]

_12mo. Cloth. Illustrated. With Colored jacket._

_Price 50 cents per volume. Postage 10 cents additional._


_Bomba lived far back in the jungles of the Amazon with a half-demented
naturalist who told the lad nothing of his past. The jungle boy was a
lover of birds, and hunted animals with a bow and arrow and his trusty
machete. He had only a primitive education, and his daring adventures
will be followed with breathless interest by thousands._

   1. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY
   2. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AT THE MOVING MOUNTAIN
   3. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AT THE GIANT CATARACT
   4. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY ON JAGUAR ISLAND
   5. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY IN THE ABANDONED CITY
   6. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY ON TERROR TRAIL
   7. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY IN THE SWAMP OF DEATH
   8. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AMONG THE SLAVES
   9. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY ON THE UNDERGROUND RIVER
  10. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AND THE LOST EXPLORERS
  11. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY IN A STRANGE LAND
  12. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AMONG THE PYGMIES
  13. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AND THE CANNIBALS
  14. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AND THE PAINTED HUNTERS
  15. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AND THE RIVER DEMONS
  16. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AND THE HOSTILE CHIEFTAIN
  17. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY TRAPPED BY THE CYCLONE
  18. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY IN THE LAND OF BURNING LAVA


These books may be purchased wherever books are sold

_Send for Our Free Illustrated Catalogue_

  CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY, Publishers      New York



THE BASEBALL JOE SERIES

By LESTER CHADWICK

[Illustration]

_12mo. Illustrated. Price 50 cents per volume. Postage 10 cents
additional._


  1. BASEBALL JOE OF THE SILVER STARS
     _or The Rivals of Riverside_

  2. BASEBALL JOE ON THE SCHOOL NINE
     _or Pitching for the Blue Banner_

  3. BASEBALL JOE AT YALE
     _or Pitching for the College Championship_

  4. BASEBALL JOE IN THE CENTRAL LEAGUE
     _or Making Good as a Professional Pitcher_

  5. BASEBALL JOE IN THE BIG LEAGUE
     _or A Young Pitcher’s Hardest Struggles_

  6. BASEBALL JOE ON THE GIANTS
     _or Making Good as a Twirler in the Metropolis_

  7. BASEBALL JOE IN THE WORLD SERIES
     _or Pitching for the Championship_

  8. BASEBALL JOE AROUND THE WORLD
     _or Pitching on a Grand Tour_

  9. BASEBALL JOE: HOME RUN KING
     _or The Greatest Pitcher and Batter on Record_

 10. BASEBALL JOE SAVING THE LEAGUE
     _or Breaking Up a Great Conspiracy_

 11. BASEBALL JOE CAPTAIN OF THE TEAM
     _or Bitter Struggles on the Diamond_

 12. BASEBALL JOE CHAMPION OF THE LEAGUE
     _or The Record that was Worth While_

 13. BASEBALL JOE CLUB OWNER
     _or Putting the Home Town on the Map_

 14. BASEBALL JOE PITCHING WIZARD
     _or Triumphs Off and On the Diamond_


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  CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY, Publishers      New York



THE GREAT ACE SERIES

By NOËL SAINSBURY, JR.

Author of THE CHAMPION SPORT STORIES

[Illustration]

_12mo. Cloth. Illustrated. Jacket in colors. Price 50 cents per volume.
Postage 10 cents additional._

_Here is a series of rattling good flying stories told by an expert.
A boy-aviator’s adventures in the wilds of New Guinea, Arabia, South
America and other strange lands. Billy Smith, son of an eminent
explorer, learns to pilot a seaplane aboard a Naval Air Station, and
immediately fares forth upon a series of the most exciting cruises and
mysterious quests by air, by land and by sea that have ever fallen to
the lot of man. The author, a traveller and ex-naval aviator, brings
many of his own adventures into these tales. Every boy with a drop of
red blood in his veins will want to join Billy Smith in his thrilling
quests._


1. BILLY SMITH--EXPLORING ACE
   _or By Airplane to New Guinea_

  The story of a fourteen-year-old lad, taught to pilot a seaplane by
  his uncle, Lieut.-Commander on a Naval Air Station. Together they are
  forced down at sea, and Lieut.-Com. Smith is so impressed with the
  lad’s courage in this trying situation that he takes Billy with him to
  New Guinea to help search for Billy’s father.


2. BILLY SMITH--SECRET SERVICE ACE
   _or Airplane Adventures in Arabia_

  Billy Smith again proves his mettle in a series of adventures that
  take him to Port Sudan on the Red Sea and the Holy City of Hejaz.


3. BILLY SMITH--MYSTERY ACE
   _or Airplane Discoveries in South America_

  Doctor Stanton, bird man of the Natural History Museum disappeared in
  the Amazon Jungles. The Smiths, father and son are ordered to find
  him, and the trail leads to an outpost rubber plantation, where Billy
  is lost in the jungle and captured by the cannibal Mangeroma Indians.


4. BILLY SMITH--TRAIL EATER ACE
   _or Into the Wilds of Northern Alaska_

  Another exciting story. Billy Smith and his pal, Nuky, with the aid
  of Billy’s father set a trap to catch desperate gangsters which they
  succeed in doing after many thrilling adventures.


5. BILLY SMITH--SHANGHAIED ACE
   _or Malay Pirates and Solomon Island Cannibals_

  Billy shanghaied while on a search for a missing steamer and one
  passenger in particular, escapes in time to be of vast help, after
  all, and bring off a famous rescue in the South Sea Islands.


These books may be purchased wherever books are sold

_Send for Our Free Illustrated Catalogue_

  CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY, Publishers      New York



MYSTERY AND ADVENTURE BOOKS FOR BOYS

_12mo. Cloth. Illustrated. Colored jackets._

_Price 50 cents per volume._

_Postage 10 cents additional._

[Illustration]


=SOUTH FROM HUDSON BAY=, by E. C. BRILL

  A thrilling tale of the coming of settlers from France and Switzerland
  to the wilderness of the Prairie country of the Red River district.

=THE SECRET CACHE=, by E. C. BRILL

  The father of two boys, a fur hunter, has been seriously injured by an
  Indian. Before he dies he succeeds in telling the younger son about a
  secret cache of valuable furs, who starts off to find the cache, and
  after many adventures succeeds.

=THE ISLAND OF YELLOW SANDS=, by E. C. BRILL

  An exciting story of Adventure in Colonial Days in the primitive
  country around Lake Superior, when the forest and waters were the
  hunting ground of Indians, hunters and trappers.

=LOST CITY OF THE AZTECS=, by J. A. LATH

  Four chums find a secret code stuck inside the binding of an old
  book written many years ago by a famous geologist. The boys finally
  solve the code, learn of the existence of the remnant of a civilized
  Aztec tribe inside an extinct crater in Arizona. Their many stirring
  adventures makes a story of tremendous present-day scientific interest
  that every boy will enjoy.

=THE CORTEZ EMERALD MYSTERY=, by J. A. LATH

  A huge emerald--credited as part of the treasure of the famous
  explorer, Cortez, in the 16th Century is stolen from a museum at
  Roller University. This absorbing mystery tells how four chums succeed
  in tracing the gang responsible.

=THE PHANTOM SHIP=, by JAMES (“COACH”) SCHERMERHORN, JR.

  Rock Cranton in trouble, calls on his old coach in Dexter College to
  come to his assistance. The Coach comes a running, and that is the
  beginning of a strange mystery yarn that no boy will want to lay down
  until it is completed.


These books may be purchased wherever books are sold

_Send for Our Free Illustrated Catalogue_

  CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY, Publishers      New York



CHAMPION SPORTS STORIES

By NOËL SAINSBURY, JR.

[Illustration]

_Every boy enjoys sport stories. Here we present three crackerjack
stories of baseball, football, and basketball, written in the
vernacular of the boy of to-day, full of action, suspense and thrills,
in language every boy will understand, and which we know will be
enthusiastically endorsed by all boys._

_Large 12mo. Cloth. Illustrated. Jacket in color. Price 50 cents per
volume. Postage 10 cents additional._


1. CRACKER STANTON
   _Or The Making of a Batsman_

  Ralph Stanton, big, rawboned and serious, is a product of the
  backwoods and a crack rifle shot. Quick thinking and pluck bring him a
  scholarship to Clarkville School where he is branded “grind” and “dub”
  by classmates. How his batting brings them first place in the League
  and how he secures his appointment to West Point make CRACKER STANTON
  an up-to-the-minute baseball story no lover of the game will want to
  put down until the last word is read.


2. GRIDIRON GRIT
   _Or The Making of a Fullback_

  A corking story of football packed full of exciting action and good,
  clean competitive rivalry. Shorty Fiske is six-foot-four and the
  product of too much money and indulgence at home. How Clarkville
  School and football develop Shorty’s real character and how he
  eventually stars on the gridiron brings this thrilling tale of school
  life and football to a grandstand finish.


3. THE FIGHTING FIVE
   _Or the Kidnapping of Clarkville’s Basketball Team_

  Clarkville School’s basketball team is kidnapped during the game for
  the State Scholastic Championship. The team’s subsequent adventures
  under the leadership of Captain Charlie Minor as he brings them
  back to the State College Gymnasium where the two last quarters of
  the Championship game are played next evening, climaxes twenty-four
  pulsating hours of adventure and basketball in the FIGHTING FIVE....


  CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY, Publishers      New York



SORAK JUNGLE SERIES

By HARVEY D. RICHARDS

[Illustration]

_The name Sorak means War Cry in the Malay country. He grows up among
the most primitive of the Malay aborigines, and learns to combat
all the terrors of the jungle with safety. The constant battle with
nature’s forces develop Sorak’s abilities to such an extent that he is
acknowledged the chief warrior in all his section of the jungle._

_12mo. Cloth. Illustrated. Jacket in color. Price 50 cents per volume._

_Postage 10 cents additional._


1. SORAK OF THE MALAY JUNGLE
   _or How Two Young Americans Face Death and Win a Friend_

  Two boys, Dick and Jack Preston are shipwrecked off the Malay
  Peninsula and are rescued by Sorak. Their adventures in trying to get
  back to civilization make an absorbing story.


2. SORAK AND THE CLOUDED TIGER
   _or How the Terrible Ruler of the North Is Hunted and Destroyed_

  A huge clouded tiger, almost human, leads a pack of red dholes into
  Sorak’s country, and it takes all of Sorak’s ingenuity, and the aid of
  his friends to exterminate the pack.


3. SORAK AND THE SULTAN’S ANKUS
   _or How a Perilous Journey Leads to a Kingdom of Giants_

  Sorak and his friends are trapped by a herd of elephants, and finally
  run away with by the leader to an unknown valley where a remnant of
  Cro-Magnon race still exists. Their exciting adventures will hold the
  reader enthralled until the last word.


4. SORAK AND THE TREE-MEN
   _or the Rescue of the Prisoner Queen_

  Captured by a band of Malay slavers, Sorak and his friends are wrecked
  on an island off the coast of Burma in the Mergui Archipelago. Their
  escape from the island with the Prisoner Queen after a successful
  revolution brings the fourth book of this series to an exciting and
  unusual conclusion.


  CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY, Publishers      New York



TOP NOTCH DETECTIVE STORIES

By WILLIAM HALL

[Illustration]

_Each story complete in itself_

_A new group of detective stories carefully written, with corking
plots; modern, exciting, full of adventure, good police and detective
work._

_Large 12mo. Cloth. Illustrated. Jacket in color. Price 50 cents per
volume._

_Postage 10 cents additional._


1. SLOW VENGEANCE
   _or the Mystery of Pete Shine_

  A young newspaper man, whose brother is on the police force, becomes
  strangely involved in the mysterious killing of an Italian bootblack.
  Suspicion points to a well-known politician but he proves that it was
  impossible for him to have done the deed. Then the reporter, who for a
  time turns detective, gets a clue revolving about a startling, ancient
  method of combat. He follows this up, watches a masked duelist and,
  with the help of a girl, catches the murderer who justifies his deed
  on the plea of Slow Vengeance. You will be interested in reading how
  the reporter got out of a tight corner.


2. GREEN FIRE
   _or Mystery of the Indian Diamond_

  A golf caddy who has a leaning toward amateur detective work, together
  with his younger cousin, are accidentally mixed up in the strange
  loss, or theft, of a valuable diamond, known as Green Fire. It was
  once the eye of an East Indian idol. To clear his young cousin of
  suspicion, the older boy undertakes to solve the mystery which deepens
  when one man disappears and another is found murdered on the golf
  course. But, by a series of clever moves on the part of the young
  sleuth, the crime is solved and the diamond found in a most unusual
  hiding place. A rapidly moving, exciting tale. You will like it.


3. HIDDEN DANGER
   _or The Secret of the Bank Vault_

  A young detective, who, in his private capacity, has solved several
  mysteries, decides to open an office in another city. He meets a young
  bank clerk and they become partners just when the clerk’s bank is
  mysteriously bombed and the cashier is reported missing. It is not
  until next day that it is discovered that the bank vault has been
  entered in some secret manner and a large sum stolen. The regular
  detectives declared “spirits” must have robbed the bank but the two
  young detectives prove that a clever gang did it and also kidnapped
  the aged cashier. Not a dull page from first to last. A clever story.


  CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY, Publishers      New York



NORTHWEST STORIES

By LeROY W. SNELL

[Illustration]

_A new group of stories laid in the Canadian Northwest by Mr. Snell,
a master writer of the glories and the thrilling adventures of the
Canadian Northwest Mounted Police. Each book is an individual story,
well written, beautifully bound, and contains a story that all boys
will enjoy._

_Large 12mo. Cloth. Illustrated. Jacket in color. Price 50 cents per
volume._

_Postage 10 cents additional._


1. THE LEAD DISK

  Tom Baley, leaving college goes north into Canada, hoping to join the
  Northwest Mounted Police. His application is turned down by his own
  uncle, an officer on the force, but after many thrilling adventures
  and encounters with the Disk Gang he is able to win the coveted
  uniform.


2. SHADOW PATROL

  Luke Myers is sent into the Caribou Mountains to solve the mystery of
  The Shadow, about whom many conflicting stories are told. There are
  struggles with the outlaws, and finally a great running battle down
  the fog-obscured mountain trails ... at the end of which the outlaws
  are captured and the mystery of The Shadow is solved.


3. THE WOLF CRY

  Donald Pierce is sent to solve the mystery of his father’s
  disappearance, into the unmapped barrens where King Stively weaves his
  web of wickedness, and rules a territory the size of a small empire
  with a ruthlessness and cunning that baffles the best of the Mounted
  Police. Behind all is the dread Wolf Cry which causes brave men to
  shudder....


4. THE SPELL OF THE NORTH

  Sergeant David Stanlaw, stationed at Spirit River, is puzzled by a
  local killing, the disappearance of the body, the finding of a code
  message, and by the mystery of the “Listening Forest,” which casts a
  shadow of dread over the little town of Wiggin’s Creek. With the help
  of Jerry Bartlett they capture the leaders of the gang and solve the
  mystery of the “Listening Forest.”


5. THE CHALLENGE OF THE YUKON

  Robert Wade whose patrol runs from Skagway on Chattam Strait north
  into the Yukon country follows in the wake of a stampede to a new gold
  strike. With the aid of his friend, Jim MacPhail, Wade frustrates the
  outlaws, who try to trap the whole town behind the “Pass of the
  Closing Door,” and then races them to and across the breaking ice
  floes of the Yukon. A strong adventure story all boys will enjoy.


  CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY, Publishers      New York



TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:


  Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.

  Emboldened text is surrounded by equals signs: =bold=.

  Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.

  Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.

  Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.




*** End of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Bomba the jungle boy at the giant cataract : Or, Chief Nascanora and his captives" ***

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