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He felt other hands at his throat, rough hairy hands that reached over his shoulders from behind.  He cast a terrified glance backward, and the hairs of his head stiffened at the sight his eyes revealed, for grasping him from the rear was a huge, man-like ape.  The bared fighting fangs of the anthropoid were close to his throat.  The lad pinioned his wrists.  Neither uttered a sound.  Where was the grandmother?  Condon’s eyes swept the room in a single all-inclusive glance.  His eyes bulged in horror at the realization of the truth which that glance revealed.  In the power of what creatures of hideous mystery had he placed himself!  Frantically he fought to beat off the lad that he might turn upon the fearsome thing at his back.  Freeing one hand he struck a savage blow at the lad’s face. His act seemed to unloose a thousand devils in the hairy creature clinging to his throat.  Condon heard a low and savage snarl.  It was the last thing that the American ever heard in this life.  Then he was dragged backward upon the floor, a heavy body fell upon him, powerful teeth fastened themselves in his jugular, his head whirled in the sudden blackness which rims eternity—a moment later the ape rose from his prostrate form; but Condon did not know—he was quite dead.

The lad, horrified, sprang from the bed to lean over the body of the man.  He knew that Akut had killed in his defense, as he had killed Michael Sabrov; but here, in savage Africa, far from home and friends what would they do to him and his faithful ape?  The lad knew that the penalty of murder was death.  He even knew that an accomplice might suffer the death penalty with the principal. Who was there who would plead for them?  All would be against them. It was little more than a half-civilized community, and the chances were that they would drag Akut and him forth in the morning and hang them both to the nearest tree—he had read of such things being done in America, and Africa was worse even and wilder than the great West of his mother’s native land.  Yes, they would both be hanged in the morning!

Was there no escape?  He thought in silence for a few moments, and then, with an exclamation of relief, he struck his palms together and turned toward his clothing upon the chair.  Money would do anything!  Money would save him and Akut!  He felt for the bank roll in the pocket in which he had been accustomed to carry it.  It was not there!  Slowly at first and at last frantically he searched through the remaining pockets of his clothing.  Then he dropped upon his hands and knees and examined the floor.  Lighting the lamp he moved the bed to one side and, inch by inch, he felt over the entire floor.  Beside the body of Condon he hesitated, but at last he nerved himself to touch it.  Rolling it over he sought beneath it for the money.  Nor was it there.  He guessed that Condon had entered their room to rob; but he did not believe that the man had had time to possess himself of the money; however, as it was nowhere else, it must be upon the body of the dead man. Again and again he went over the room, only to return each time to the corpse; but no where could he find the money.

He was half-frantic with despair.  What were they to do?  In the morning they would be discovered and killed.  For all his inherited size and strength he was, after all, only a little boy—a frightened, homesick little boy—reasoning faultily from the meager experience of childhood.  He could think of but a single glaring fact—they had killed a fellow man, and they were among savage strangers, thirsting for the blood of the first victim whom fate cast into their clutches.  This much he had gleaned from penny-dreadfuls.

And they must have money!

Again he approached the corpse.  This time resolutely.  The ape squatted in a corner watching his young companion.  The youth commenced to remove the American’s clothing piece by piece, and, piece by piece, he examined each garment minutely.  Even to the shoes he searched with painstaking care, and when the last article had been removed and scrutinized he dropped back upon the bed with dilated eyes that saw nothing in the present—only a grim tableau of the future in which two forms swung silently from the limb of a great tree.

How long he sat thus he did not know; but finally he was aroused by a noise coming from the floor below.  Springing quickly to his feet he blew out the lamp, and crossing the floor silently locked the door.  Then he turned toward the ape, his mind made up.

Last evening he had been determined to start for home at the first opportunity, to beg the forgiveness of his parents for this mad adventure.  Now he knew that he might never return to them.  The blood of a fellow man was upon his hands—in his morbid reflections he had long since ceased to attribute the death of Condon to the ape.  The hysteria of panic had fastened the guilt upon himself. With money he might have bought justice; but penniless!--ah, what hope could there be for strangers without money here?

But what had become of the money?  He tried to recall when last he had seen it.  He could not, nor, could he, would he have been able to account for its disappearance, for he had been entirely unconscious of the falling of the little package from his pocket into the sea as he clambered over the ship’s side into the waiting canoe that bore him to shore.

Now he turned toward Akut.  “Come!” he said, in the language of the great apes.

Forgetful of the fact that he wore only a thin pajama suit he led the way to the open window.  Thrusting his head out he listened attentively.  A single tree grew a few feet from the window.  Nimbly the lad sprang to its bole, clinging cat-like for an instant before he clambered quietly to the ground below.  Close behind him came the great ape.  Two hundred yards away a spur of the jungle ran close to the straggling town.  Toward this the lad led the way. None saw them, and a moment later the jungle swallowed them, and John Clayton, future Lord Greystoke, passed from the eyes and the knowledge of men.

It was late the following morning that a native houseman knocked upon the door of the room that had been assigned to Mrs. Billings and her grandson.  Receiving no response he inserted his pass key in the lock, only to discover that another key was already there, but from the inside.  He reported the fact to Herr Skopf, the proprietor, who at once made his way to the second floor where he, too, pounded vigorously upon the door.  Receiving no reply he bent to the key hole in an attempt to look through into the room beyond. In so doing, being portly, he lost his balance, which necessitated putting a palm to the floor to maintain his equilibrium.  As he did so he felt something soft and thick and wet beneath his fingers. He raised his open palm before his eyes in the dim light of the corridor and peered at it.  Then he gave a little shudder, for even in the semi-darkness he saw a dark red stain upon his hand. Leaping to his feet he hurled his shoulder against the door.  Herr Skopf is a heavy man—or at least he was then—I have not seen him for several years.  The frail door collapsed beneath his weight, and Herr Skopf stumbled precipitately into the room beyond.