第 46 节
作者:击水三千      更新:2021-02-18 22:45      字数:9321
  was   the   metal?   From   whence   had   it   come?      What   was   that   tantalizing
  half…conviction which  seemed   to   demand   the  recognition of   his   memory
  that   the   yellow   pile   for   which   these   men   had   fought   and   died   had   been
  intimately connected with his pastthat it had been his?
  What had been his past?           He shook his head。         Vaguely the memory
  of   his   apish   childhood   passed   slowly   in   review   then   came   a   strangely
  tangled     mass   of   faces;  figures    and   events   which    seemed     to  have    no
  relation    to  Tarzan     of  the   Apes;    and   yet  which     were;   even    in  their
  fragmentary form; familiar。
  Slowly and painfully; recollection was attempting to reassert itself; the
  hurt brain was mending; as the cause of its recent failure to function was
  being   slowly   absorbed   or   removed   by   the   healing   processes   of   perfect
  circulation。
  The people who now passed before his mind's eye for the first time in
  weeks   wore   familiar   faces;   but   yet   he   could   neither   place   them   in   the
  niches they had once filled in his past life; nor call them by name。                   One
  was a fair she; and it was her face which most often moved through the
  tangled   recollections   of   his   convalescing   brain。     Who   was   she?      What
  had she been to Tarzan of the Apes?            He seemed to see her about the very
  spot upon which the pile of gold had been unearthed by the Abyssinians;
  but the surroundings were vastly different from those which now obtained。
  There    was    a  buildingthere     were   many     buildingsand     there   were
  hedges; fences; and flowers。          Tarzan puckered his brow in puzzled study
  of the wonderful problem。           For an instant he seemed to grasp the whole
  of a true explanation; and then; just as success was within his grasp; the
  picture   faded   into   a   jungle   scene   where   a   naked;   white   youth   danced   in
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  company with a band of hairy; primordial ape…things。
  Tarzan   shook   his   head   and   sighed。        Why   was   it   that   he   could   not
  recollect?      At   least   he   was   sure   that   in   some   way   the   pile   of   gold;   the
  place     where    it  lay;  the   subtle   aroma     of  the   elusive    she   he   had   been
  pursuing;  the   memory   figure   of   the   white   woman;   and   he   himself;   were
  inextricably connected by the ties of a forgotten past。
  If the woman belonged there; what better place to search or await her
  than the very spot which his broken recollections seemed to assign to her?
  It was worth trying。          Tarzan slipped the thong of the empty pouch over
  his shoulder and started off through the trees in the direction of the plain。
  At the outskirts of the forest he met the Arabs returning in search of
  Achmet Zek。         Hiding; he let them pass; and then resumed his way toward
  the   charred   ruins   of   the   home   he   had   been   almost   upon   the   point   of
  recalling to his memory。
  His   journey   across   the   plain   was   interrupted   by   the   discovery   of   a
  small herd of antelope in a little swale; where the cover and the wind were
  well combined to make stalking easy。                A fat yearling rewarded a half hour
  of   stealthy   creeping   and   a   sudden;   savage   rush;   and   it   was   late   in   the
  afternoon when the ape…man settled himself upon his haunches beside his
  kill to enjoy the fruits of his skill; his cunning; and his prowess。
  His hunger satisfied; thirst next claimed his attention。                 The river lured
  him   by   the   shortest   path   toward   its   refreshing   waters;   and   when   he   had
  drunk; night already had fallen and he was some half mile or more down
  stream  from  the   point   where   he   had   seen   the   pile   of   yellow   ingots;   and
  where   he   hoped   to   meet   the   memory   woman;   or   find   some   clew   to   her
  whereabouts or her identity。
  To the jungle bred; time is usually a matter of small moment; and haste;
  except   when   engendered   by   terror;   by   rage;   or   by   hunger;   is   distasteful。
  Today   was   gone。   Therefore          tomorrow;   of   which       there   was   an   infinite
  procession;      would     answer     admirably   for     Tarzan's    further    quest。    And;
  besides; the ape…man was tired and would sleep。
  A   tree   afforded     him   the   safety;   seclusion   and     comforts   of     a  well…
  appointed bedchamber; and to the chorus of the hunters and the hunted of
  the wild river bank he soon dropped off into deep slumber。
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  Morning found him both hungry and thirsty again; and dropping from
  his tree he made his way to the drinking place at the river's edge。                   There
  he found Numa; the lion; ahead of him。               The big fellow was lapping the
  water greedily; and at the approach of Tarzan along the trail in his rear; he
  raised his head; and turning his gaze backward across his maned shoulders
  glared at the intruder。       A low growl of warning rumbled from his throat;
  but Tarzan;   guessing   that   the   beast   had   but   just   quitted   his   kill   and   was
  well filled; merely made a slight detour and continued to the river; where
  he stopped a few yards above the tawny cat; and dropping upon his hands
  and knees plunged his face into the cool water。                 For a moment the lion
  continued   to   eye   the   man;   then   he   resumed   his   drinking;   and   man   and
  beast quenched   their   thirst   side   by  side   each   apparently  oblivious   of   the
  other's presence。
  Numa was the first to finish。           Raising his head; he gazed across the
  river   for   a   few   minutes   with   that   stony   fixity   of   attention   which   is   a
  characteristic of his kind。         But for the ruffling of his black mane to the
  touch   of   the   passing   breeze   he   might   have   been   wrought   from   golden
  bronze; so motionless; so statuesque his pose。
  A   deep   sigh   from   the   cavernous   lungs   dispelled   the   illusion。     The
  mighty head swung slowly around until the yellow eyes rested upon the
  man。     The bristled lip curved upward; exposing yellow fangs。                    Another
  warning   growl   vibrated   the   heavy   jowls;   and   the   king   of   beasts   turned
  majestically about and paced slowly up the trail into the dense reeds。
  Tarzan of the Apes drank on; but from the corners of his gray eyes he
  watched the great brute's every move until he had disappeared from view;
  and; after; his keen ears marked the movements of the carnivore。
  A plunge in the river was followed by a scant breakfast of eggs which
  chance discovered to him; and then he set off up river toward the ruins of
  the    bungalow      where     the   golden     ingots   had    marked      the   center   of
  yesterday's battle。
  And     when     he   came    upon    the   spot;   great   was    his   surprise   and
  consternation; for the yellow metal had disappeared。                 The earth; trampled
  by the feet of horses and men; gave no clew。               It was as though the ingots
  had evaporated into thin air。
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  The ape…man was at a loss to know where to turn or what next to do。
  There was no sign of any spoor which might denote that the she had been
  here。     The metal was gone; and if there was any connection between the
  she and the metal it seemed useless to wait for her now that the latter had
  been removed elsewhere。
  Everything seemed to elude himthe pretty pebbles; the yellow metal;
  the she; his memory。         Tarzan was disgusted。         He would go back into the
  jungle and look for Chulk; and so he turned his steps once more toward
  the forest。     He moved rapidly; swinging across the plain in a long; easy
  trot; and at the edge of the forest; taking to the trees with the agility and
  speed of a small monkey。
  His   direction   was   aimlesshe   merely   raced   on   and   on   through   the
  jungle;   the   joy   of   unfettered   action   his   principal   urge;   with   the   hope   of
  stumbling upon some clew to Chulk or the she; a secondary incentive。
  For two days he roamed about; killing; eating; drinking and sleeping
  wherever inclination and the means to indulge it