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have to carry it so far from home you would not have to pay them so much, would you?โ€ asked the chief.

โ€œNo,โ€ said Owaza, โ€œbut I cannot dispose of it this side of the coast.โ€

โ€œI know where you can dispose of it within two daysโ€™ march,โ€ replied the old chief.

โ€œWhere?โ€ demanded Owaza. โ€œAnd who here in the interior will buy it?โ€

โ€œThere is a white man who will give you a little piece of paper for it and you can take that paper to the coast and get the full value of your gold.โ€

โ€œWho is this white man?โ€ demanded Owaza, โ€œand where is he?โ€

โ€œHe is a friend of mine,โ€ said the chief, โ€œand if you wish I will take you to him on the morrow, and you can bring with you all your gold and get the little piece of paper.โ€

โ€œGood,โ€ said Owaza, โ€œand then I shall not have to pay the carriers but a very small amount.โ€

The carriers were glad, indeed, to learn the next day that they were not to go all the way to the coast, for even the lure of payment was not sufficient to overcome their dislike to so long a journey, and their fear of being at so great a distance from home. They were very happy, therefore, as they set forth on a two daysโ€™ march toward the northeast. And Owaza was happy and so was the old chief, who accompanied them himself, though why he was happy about it Owaza could not guess.

They had marched for almost two days when the chief sent one of his own men forward with a message.

โ€œIt is to my friend,โ€ he said, โ€œto tell him to come and meet us and lead us to his village.โ€ And a few hours later, as the little caravan emerged from the jungle onto a broad, grassy plain, they saw not far from them, and approaching rapidly, a large band of warriors. Owaza halted.

โ€œWho are those?โ€ he demanded.

โ€œThose are the warriors of my friend,โ€ replied the chief, โ€œand he is with them. See?โ€ and he pointed toward a figure at the head of the blacks, who were approaching at a trot, their spears and white plumes gleaming in the sunshine.

โ€œThey come for war and not for peace,โ€ said Owaza tearfully.

โ€œThat depends upon you, Owaza,โ€ replied the chief.

โ€œI do not understand you,โ€ said Owaza.

โ€œBut you will in a few minutes after my friend has come.โ€

As the advancing warriors approached more closely Owaza saw a giant white at their headโ€”a white whom he mistook for Estebanโ€”the confederate he had so traitorously deserted. He turned upon the chief. โ€œYou have betrayed me,โ€ he cried.

โ€œWait,โ€ said the old chief; โ€œnothing that belongs to you shall be taken from you.โ€

โ€œThe gold is not his,โ€ cried Owaza. โ€œHe stole it,โ€ and he pointed at Tarzan who had approached and halted before him, but who ignored him entirely and turned to the chief.

โ€œYour runner came,โ€ he said to the old man, โ€œand brought your message, and Tarzan and his Waziri have come to see what they could do for their old friend.โ€

The chief smiled. โ€œYour runner came to me, O Tarzan, four days since, and two days later came this man with his carriers, bearing golden ingots toward the coast. I told him that I had a friend who would buy them, giving him a little piece of paper for them, but that, of course, only in case the gold belonged to Owaza.โ€

The ape-man smiled. โ€œYou have done well, my friend,โ€ he said. โ€œThe gold does not belong to Owaza.โ€

โ€œIt does not belong to you, either,โ€ cried Owaza. โ€œYou are not Tarzan of the Apes. I know you. You came with the four white men and the white woman to steal the gold from Tarzanโ€™s country, and then you stole it from your own friends.โ€

The chief and the Waziri laughed. The ape-man smiled one of his slow smiles.

โ€œThe other was an impostor, Owaza,โ€ he said, โ€œbut I am Tarzan of the Apes, and I thank you for bringing my gold to me. Come,โ€ he said, โ€œit is but a few more miles to my home,โ€ and the ape-man compelled Owaza to direct his carriers to bear the golden ingots to the Greystoke bungalow. There Tarzan fed the carriers and paid them, and the next morning sent them back toward their own country, and he sent Owaza with them, but not without a gift of value, accompanied with an admonition that the black never again return to Tarzanโ€™s country.

When they had all departed, and Tarzan and Jane and Korak were standing upon the veranda of the bungalow with Jad-bal-ja lying at their feet, the ape-man threw an arm about his mateโ€™s shoulders.

โ€œI shall have to retract what I said about the gold of Opar not being for me, for you see before you a new fortune that has come all the way from the treasure vaults of Opar without any effort on my part.โ€

โ€œNow, if someone would only bring your diamonds back,โ€ laughed Jane.

โ€œNo chance of that,โ€ said Tarzan. โ€œThey are unquestionably at the bottom of the Ugogo River,โ€ and far away, upon the banks of the Ugogo, in the village of Obebe, the cannibal, Esteban Miranda lay in the filth of the hut that had been assigned to him, gloating over the fortune that he could never utilize as he entered upon a life of captivity that the stubbornness and superstition of Obebe had doomed him to undergo.

TRANSCRIBER NOTES

Misspelled words and printer errors have been corrected. Where multiple spellings occur, majority use has been employed.

Punctuation has been maintained except where obvious printer errors occur.

Illustrations by James Allen St. John (1872-1957) were moved to facilitate page layout. The cover is the original first edition cover, also illustrated by James Allen St. John.

 






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