of these monstrous creatures. One after another
they went down, and there were not half-a-dozen surviving
by the time my companion and I could come to their
help. But our aid was of little avail and only
involved us in the same peril. At the range of
a couple of hundred yards we emptied our magazines,
firing bullet after bullet into the beasts, but with
no more effect than if we were pelting them with pellets
of paper. Their slow reptilian natures cared
nothing for wounds, and the springs of their lives,
with no special brain center but scattered throughout
their spinal cords, could not be tapped by any modern
weapons. The most that we could do was to check
their progress by distracting their attention with
the flash and roar of our guns, and so to give both
the natives and ourselves time to reach the steps
which led to safety. But where the conical explosive
bullets of the twentieth century were of no avail,
the poisoned arrows of the natives, dipped in the
juice of strophanthus and steeped afterwards in decayed
carrion, could succeed. Such arrows were of
little avail to the hunter who attacked the beast,
because their action in that torpid circulation was
slow, and before its powers failed it could certainly
overtake and slay its assailant. But now, as
the two monsters hounded us to the very foot of the
stairs, a drift of darts came whistling from every
chink in the cliff above them. In a minute they
were feathered with them, and yet with no sign of
pain they clawed and slobbered with impotent rage
at the steps which would lead them to their victims,
mounting clumsily up for a few yards and then sliding
down again to the ground. But at last the poison
worked. One of them gave a deep rumbling groan
and dropped his huge squat head on to the earth.
The other bounded round in an eccentric circle with
shrill, wailing cries, and then lying down writhed
in agony for some minutes before it also stiffened
and lay still. With yells of triumph the Indians
came flocking down from their caves and danced a frenzied
dance of victory round the dead bodies, in mad joy
that two more of the most dangerous of all their enemies
had been slain. That night they cut up and removed
the bodies, not to eat—for the poison was
still active—but lest they should breed
a pestilence. The great reptilian hearts, however,
each as large as a cushion, still lay there, beating
slowly and steadily, with a gentle rise and fall,
in horrible independent life. It was only upon
the third day that the ganglia ran down and the dreadful
things were still.
Some day, when I have a better desk than a meat-tin and more helpful tools than a worn stub of pencil and a last, tattered note-book, I will write some fuller account of the Accala Indians—of our life amongst them, and of the glimpses which we had of the strange conditions of wondrous Maple White Land. Memory, at least, will never fail me, for so long as the breath of life is in me, every hour and every action of that period will stand out as