第 3 节
作者:击水三千      更新:2021-02-18 22:45      字数:9322
  excused   himself   and   retired;   Lady   Greystoke   following   him   very   soon
  after。   Werper; sitting upon the veranda; could hear their voices in earnest
  discussion;   and   having   realized   that   something   of   unusual   moment   was
  afoot; he quietly rose from his chair; and keeping well in the shadow of the
  shrubbery growing profusely about the bungalow; made his silent way to a
  point beneath the window of the room in which his host and hostess slept。
  Here he listened; and not without result; for almost the first words he
  overheard filled him with excitement。             Lady Greystoke was speaking as
  Werper came within hearing。
  〃I always feared for the stability of the company;〃 she was saying; 〃but
  it seems incredible that they should have failed for so enormous a sum
  unless there has been some dishonest manipulation。〃
  〃That is what I suspect;〃 replied Tarzan; 〃but whatever the cause; the
  fact remains that I have lost everything; and there is nothing for it but to
  return to Opar and get more。〃
  〃Oh; John;〃 cried Lady Greystoke; and Werper could feel the shudder
  through her voice; 〃is there no other way? I cannot bear to think of you
  returning to that frightful city。       I would rather live in poverty always than
  to have you risk the hideous dangers of Opar。〃
  〃You need have no fear;〃 replied Tarzan; laughing。 〃I am pretty well
  able    to  take   care   of  myself;    and    were   I  not;   the  Waziri    who    will
  accompany me will see that no harm befalls me。〃
  〃They   ran    away   from   Opar     once;   and   left  you   to  your   fate;〃  she
  reminded him。
  〃They   will   not   do   it   again;〃   he   answered。  〃They   were   very   much
  ashamed of themselves; and were coming back when I met them。〃
  〃But there must be some other way;〃 insisted the woman。
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  Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar
  〃There is no other way half so easy to obtain another fortune; as to go
  to the treasure vaults of Opar and bring it away;〃 he replied。                   〃I shall be
  very  careful;   Jane;   and the   chances   are  that   the   inhabitants   of   Opar   will
  never   know   that   I   have   been   there   again   and   despoiled   them  of   another
  portion of the treasure; the very existence of which they are as ignorant of
  as they would be of its value。〃
  The finality in his tone seemed to assure Lady Greystoke that further
  argument was futile; and so she abandoned the subject。
  Werper remained; listening; for a short time; and then; confident that
  he had overheard all that was necessary and fearing discovery; returned to
  the    veranda;    where    he   smoked     numerous       cigarets   in  rapid   succession
  before retiring。
  The  following   morning   at   breakfast; Werper   announced   his   intention
  of making an early departure; and asked Tarzan's permission to hunt big
  game      in  the   Waziri    country    on   his  way    outpermission       which     Lord
  Greystoke readily granted。
  The   Belgian   consumed   two   days   in   completing   his   preparations;   but
  finally   got   away   with   his   safari;   accompanied   by   a   single   Waziri   guide
  whom   Lord   Greystoke   had   loaned   him。           The   party   made   but   a   single
  short march when Werper simulated illness; and announced his intention
  of   remaining   where   he   was   until   he   had   fully   recovered。      As   they   had
  gone but a short distance from the Greystoke bungalow; Werper dismissed
  the Waziri guide; telling the warrior that he would send for him when he
  was   able   to   proceed。     The   Waziri   gone;   the   Belgian   summoned   one   of
  Achmet Zek's trusted blacks to his tent; and dispatched him to watch for
  the   departure   of   Tarzan;   returning   immediately   to   advise   Werper   of   the
  event and the direction taken by the Englishman。
  The   Belgian   did   not   have   long      to   wait;   for   the   following   day   his
  emissary      returned    with    word    that  Tarzan     and   a  party   of  fifty   Waziri
  warriors had set out toward the southeast early in the morning。
  Werper   called   his     head   man   to    him;   after   writing   a   long   letter  to
  Achmet Zek。         This letter he handed to the head man。
  〃Send   a   runner   at   once   to Achmet   Zek   with   this;〃   he   instructed   the
  head man。       〃Remain here in camp awaiting further instructions from him
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  Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar
  or from me。        If any come from the bungalow of the Englishman; tell them
  that I am very ill within my tent and can see no one。                    Now; give me six
  porters and six askaristhe strongest and bravest of the safariand I will
  march after the Englishman and discover where his gold is hidden。〃
  And so it was that as Tarzan; stripped to the loin cloth and armed after
  the primitive fashion he best loved; led his loyal Waziri toward the dead
  city of Opar; Werper; the renegade; haunted his trail through the long; hot
  days; and camped close behind him by night。
  And   as   they   marched;   Achmet   Zek   rode   with   his   entire   following
  southward toward the Greystoke farm。
  To Tarzan   of the Apes the  expedition   was in the  nature  of  a   holiday
  outing。     His   civilization   was   at   best   but   an   outward   veneer   which   he
  gladly peeled off with his uncomfortable European clothes whenever any
  reasonable   pretext   presented   itself。       It   was   a   woman's   love   which   kept
  Tarzan      even    to  the   semblance      of   civilizationa     condition     for  which
  familiarity had bred contempt。             He hated the shams and the hypocrisies
  of it and with the clear vision of an unspoiled mind he had penetrated to
  the rotten core of the heart of the thingthe cowardly greed for peace and
  ease and the safe…guarding of property rights。               That the fine things of life…
  …art;   music    and    literaturehad     thriven   upon    such    enervating     ideals   he
  strenuously   denied;   insisting;   rather;   that   they   had   endured   in   spite   of
  civilization。
  〃Show   me   the   fat;   opulent   coward;〃   he   was   wont   to   say;   〃who   ever
  originated a beautiful ideal。          In the clash of arms; in the battle for survival;
  amid hunger and death and danger; in the face of God as manifested in the
  display of Nature's most terrific forces; is born all that is finest and best in
  the human heart and mind。〃
  And   so   Tarzan   always   came   back   to   Nature   in   the   spirit   of   a   lover
  keeping   a   long   deferred   tryst   after   a   period   behind   prison   walls。       His
  Waziri; at marrow; were more civilized than he。                  They cooked their meat
  before they ate it and they shunned many articles of food as unclean that
  Tarzan   had   eaten   with   gusto   all   his   life   and   so   insidious   is   the   virus   of
  hypocrisy   that   even   the   stalwart   ape…man   hesitated   to   give   rein   to   his
  natural   longings   before   them。       He   ate   burnt   flesh   when   he   would   have
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  Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar
  preferred it raw and unspoiled; and he brought down game with arrow or
  spear when he would far rather have leaped upon it from ambush and sunk
  his strong teeth in its jugular; but at last the call of the milk of the savage
  mother   that   had   suckled   him   in   infancy   rose   to   an   insistent   demandhe
  craved     the   hot   blood    of  a  fresh   kill  and   his   muscles     yearned    to   pit
  themselves   against   the savage   jungle   in   the   battle   for  existence  that   had
  been his sole birthright for the first twenty years of his life。
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  Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar
  3
  The Call of the Jungle
  Moved     by   these   vague    yet  all…powerful     urgings    the   ape…man     lay
  awake one night in the little thorn boma that protected; in a way; his party
  from   the   depredations   of   the   great     carnivora   of   the   jungle。    A   single
  warrior   stood   sleepy   guard   beside   the   fire   that   yellow   eyes   out   of   the
  darkness beyond the camp made imperative。 The moans and the coughing
  of the big cats mingled with the myriad noises of the