第 39 节
作者:击水三千      更新:2021-02-18 22:45      字数:9321
  startling     surprise    which    her   new…found       consciousness       revealed     to  her。
  She   neither   cried   out   nor   moved   a   muscle;   until   she   had   taken   in   every
  detail of the scene which lay within the range of her vision。
  She saw that the lion had killed the ape; and that he was devouring his
  prey less than fifty feet from where she lay; but what could she do?                         Her
  hands   and   feet   were   bound。       She   must   wait   then;   in   what   patience   she
  could     command;        until   Numa     had    eaten    and   digested     the   ape;   when;
  without doubt; he would return to feast upon her; unless; in the meantime;
  the   dread   hyenas   should   discover   her;   or   some   other   of   the   numerous
  prowling carnivora of the jungle。
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  As she lay tormented by these frightful thoughts; she suddenly became
  conscious that the bonds at her wrists and ankles no longer hurt her; and
  then of the fact that her hands were separated; one lying upon either side
  of her; instead of both being confined at her back。
  Wonderingly she moved a hand。              What miracle had been performed?
  It was not bound!         Stealthily and noiselessly she moved her other limbs;
  only  to   discover  that   she   was   free。   She  could   not   know   how   the   thing
  had happened; that Taglat; gnawing upon them for sinister purposes of his
  own; had cut them through but an instant before Numa had frightened him
  from his victim。
  For    a   moment       Jane    Clayton     was    overwhelmed        with    joy   and
  thanksgiving;   but   only   for   a   moment。      What   good   was   her   new…found
  liberty in the face of the frightful beast crouching so close beside her?                  If
  she   could   have   had   this   chance   under   different   conditions;   how   happily
  she would have taken advantage of it; but now it was given to her when
  escape was practically impossible。
  The nearest tree was a hundred feet away; the lion less than fifty。                  To
  rise and attempt to reach the safety of those tantalizing branches would be
  but to invite instant destruction; for Numa would doubtless be too jealous
  of this future meal to permit it to escape with ease。                And yet; too; there
  was     another     possibilitya    chance     which     hinged     entirely   upon     the
  unknown temper of the great beast。
  His belly already partially filled; he might watch with indifference the
  departure   of   the   girl;   yet   could   she   afford   to   chance   so   improbable   a
  contingency?        She   doubted   it。   Upon   the   other   hand   she   was   no   more
  minded to allow this frail opportunity for life to entirely elude her without
  taking or attempting to take some advantage from it。
  She watched the lion narrowly。            He could not see her without turning
  his head more than halfway around。              She would attempt a ruse。          Silently
  she rolled over in the direction of the nearest tree; and away from the lion;
  until she lay again in the same position in which Numa had left her; but a
  few feet farther from him。
  Here    she   lay   breathless    watching     the  lion;  but   the  beast   gave    no
  indication that   he   had   heard   aught   to   arouse   his   suspicions。    Again   she
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  rolled    over;    gaining    a   few    more    feet   and    again    she   lay   in   rigid
  contemplation of the beast's back。
  During what seemed hours to her tense nerves; Jane Clayton continued
  these tactics; and still the lion fed on in apparent unconsciousness that his
  second   prey   was   escaping   him。        Already   the   girl   was   but   a   few   paces
  from the treea moment more and she would be close enough to chance
  springing to her feet; throwing caution aside and making a sudden; bold
  dash for safety。       She was   halfway over in her   turn; her face away  from
  the   lion;   when   he   suddenly   turned   his   great   head   and   fastened   his   eyes
  upon her。      He saw her roll over upon her side away from him; and then
  her eyes were turned again toward him; and the cold sweat broke from the
  girl's   every   pore   as   she   realized   that   with   life   almost   within   her   grasp;
  death had found her out。
  For   a   long   time   neither   the   girl   nor   the   lion   moved。   The   beast   lay
  motionless; his head turned upon his shoulders and his glaring eyes fixed
  upon the rigid victim; now nearly fifty yards away。                 The girl stared back
  straight into those cruel orbs; daring not to move even a muscle。
  The strain upon her nerves was becoming so unbearable that she could
  scarcely   restrain   a   growing   desire   to   scream;   when   Numa   deliberately
  turned back to the business of feeding; but his back…layed ears attested a
  sinister regard for the actions of the girl behind him。
  Realizing      that   she   could     not   again    turn   without     attracting    his
  immediate and perhaps fatal attention; Jane Clayton resolved to risk all in
  one last attempt to reach the tree and clamber to the lower branches。
  Gathering herself stealthily for the effort; she leaped suddenly to her
  feet;   but   almost   simultaneously   the   lion   sprang   up;   wheeled   and        with
  wide…distended jaws and terrific roars; charged swiftly down upon her。
  Those  who   have   spent  lifetimes   hunting   the big   game   of Africa   will
  tell you that scarcely any other creature in the world attains the speed of a
  charging lion。 For the short distance that the great cat can maintain it; it
  resembles nothing more closely than the onrushing of a giant locomotive
  under full speed; and so; though the distance that Jane Clayton must cover
  was relatively small;  the terrific speed   of the lion   rendered her hopes of
  escape almost negligible。
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  Yet fear can work wonders; and though the upward spring of the lion
  as he neared the tree into which she was scrambling brought his talons in
  contact   with   her   boots   she   eluded   his   raking   grasp;   and   as   he   hurtled
  against the bole of her sanctuary; the girl drew herself into the safety of the
  branches above his reach。
  For some time the lion paced; growling and moaning; beneath the tree
  in which Jane Clayton crouched; panting and trembling。                    The girl was a
  prey to the nervous reaction from the frightful ordeal through which she
  had so recently passed; and in her overwrought state it seemed that never
  again should she dare descend to the ground among the fearsome dangers
  which infested the broad stretch of jungle that she knew must lie between
  herself and the nearest village of her faithful Waziri。
  It was almost dark before the lion finally quit the clearing; and even
  had     his  place    beside    the   remnants     of   the   mangled      ape   not   been
  immediately  usurped   by  a   pack   of   hyenas;   Jane   Clayton   would   scarcely
  have dared venture from her refuge in the face of impending night; and so
  she   composed   herself   as   best   she   could   for   the   long   and   tiresome   wait;
  until daylight might offer some means of escape from the dread vicinity in
  which she had witnessed such terrifying adventures。
  Tired nature at last overcame even her fears; and she dropped into a
  deep      slumber;     cradled     in    a   comparatively        safe;   though      rather
  uncomfortable; position against the bole of the tree; and supported by two
  large branches which grew outward; almost horizontally; but a few inches
  apart。
  The sun was high in the heavens when she at last awoke; and beneath
  her   was   no   sign   either   of   Numa   or   the   hyenas。 Only   the   clean…picked
  bones of the ape; scattered about the ground; attested the fact of what had
  transpired in this seemingly peaceful spot but a few hours before。
  Both hunger   and thirst   assailed   her   now;  and   realizing   that   she   must
  descend or die of starvation; she at last summoned courage to undertake
  the ordeal of continuing her journey through the jungle。
  Descending from the tree; she set out in a southerly direction; toward
  the point where she believed the plains of Waziri lay; and though she knew
  that only ruin and desolation marked the spot where once her happy home