"Did you hear that, Tom?" asked Ned, in a
hoarse whisper.
"Surely," was the cautious answer. "Keep
still, and I'll try for a shot."
"Better be quick," advised Ned in a tense voice.
"The chap who did that yelling seems to be in
trouble!"
And as Ned's voice trailed off into a whisper,
again came the cry, this time in frenzied pain.
"El tigre! El tigre!" Then there was a jumble of words.
"It's over this way!" and this time Ned shouted,
seeing no need for low voices since the other was so loud.
Tom looked to where Ned had parted the
bushes alongside a jungle path. Through the
opening the young inventor saw, in a little glade,
that which caused him to take a firmer grip on his
electric rifle, and also a firmer grip on his nerves.
Directly in front of him and Ned, and not more
than a hundred yards away, was a great tawny
and spotted jaguar--the "tigre" or tiger of Central
America. The beast, with lashing tail, stood
over an Indian upon whom it seemed to have
sprung from some lair, beating the unfortunate
man to the ground. Nor had he fallen scatheless,
for there was blood on the green leaves about
him, and it was not the blood of the spotted
beast.
"Oh, Tom, can you--can you----" and Ned
faltered.
The young inventor understood the unspoken
question.
"I think I can make a shot of it without hitting
the man," he answered, never turning his head.
"It's a question, though, if the beast won't claw
him in the death struggle. It won't last long,
however, if the electric bullet goes to the right
place, and I've got to take the chance."
Cautiously Tom brought his weapon to bear.
Quiet as Ned and he had been after the discovery,
the jaguar seemed to feel that something was
wrong. Intent on his prey, for a time he had
stood over it, gloating. Now the brute glanced
uneasily from side to side, its tail nervously
twitching, and it seemed trying to gain, by a sniffing
of the air, some information as to the direction
in which danger lay, for Tom and Ned had
stooped low, concealing themselves by a screen
of leaves.
The Indian, after his first frenzied outburst
of fear, now lay quiet, as though fearing to move,
moaning in pain.
Suddenly the jaguar, attracted either by some
slight movement on the part of Ned or Tom, or
perhaps by having winded them, turned his head
quickly and gazed with cruel eyes straight at the
spot where the two young men stood behind the
bushes.
"He's seen us," whispered Ned.
"Yes," assented Tom. "And it's a perfect shot.
Hope I don't miss!"
It was not like Tom Swift to miss, nor did he
on this occasion. There was a slight report from
the electric rifle--a report not unlike the crackle
of the wireless--and the powerful projectile sped
true to its mark.
Straight through the throat and chest under
the uplifted jaw of the jaguar it went--through
heart and lungs. Then with a great coughing,
sighing snarl the beast reared up, gave a convulsive
leap forward toward its newly discovered
enemies, and fell dead in a limp heap, just beyond
the native over which it had been crouching before
it delivered the death stroke, now never to fall.
"You did it, Tom! You did it!" cried
Ned, springing up from where he had been kneeling
to give his chum a better chance to shoot.
"You did it, and saved the man's life!" And Ned
would have rushed out toward the still twitching body.
"Just a minute!" interposed Tom. "Those
beasts sometimes have as many lives as a cat.
I'll give it one more for luck." Another electric
projectile through the head of the jaguar produced
no further effect than to move the body
slightly, and this proved conclusively that there
was no life left. It was safe to approach, which
Tom and Ned did.
Their first thought, after a glance at the
jaguar, was for the Indian. It needed but a brief
examination to show that he was not badly hurt.
The jaguar had leaped on him from a low tree
as he passed under it, as the boys learned afterward,
and had crushed the man to earth by the
weight of the spotted body more than by a stroke
of the paw.
The American jaguar is not so formidable a
beast as the native name of tiger would cause
one to suppose, though they are sufficiently dan-
gerous, and this one had rather badly clawed the
Indian. Fortunately the scratches were on the
fleshy parts of the arms and shoulders, where,
though painful, they were not necessarily serious.
"But if you hadn't shot just when you did, Tom,
it would have been all up with him," commented
Ned.
"Oh, well, I guess you'd have hit him if I
hadn't," returned the young inventor. "But let's
see what we can do for this chap."
The man sat up wonderingly--hardly able to
believe that he had been saved from the dreaded
"tigre." His wounds were bleeding rather freely,
and as Tom and Ned carried with them a first-aid
kit they now brought it into use. The wounds
were bound up, the man was given water to
drink and then, as he was able to walk, Tom and
Ned offered to help him wherever he wanted to
go.
"Blessed if I can tell whether he's one of our
Indians or whether he belongs to the Beecher
crowd," remarked Tom.
"Senor Beecher," said the Indian, adding, in
Spanish, that he lived in the vicinity and had
only lately been engaged by the young professor
who hoped to discover the idol of gold before
Tom's scientific friend could do so.
Tom and Ned knew a little Spanish, and with
that, and simple but expressive signs on the part
of the Indian, they learned his story. He had his
palm-thatched hut not far from the Beecher camp,
in a small Indian village, and he, with others,
had been hired on the arrival of the Beecher party
to help with the excavations. These, for some
reason, were delayed.
"Delayed because they daren't use the map they
stole from us," commented Ned.
"Maybe," agreed Tom.
The Indian, whose name, it developed, was Tal,
as nearly as Tom and Ned could master it, had
left camp to go to visit his wife and child in the
jungle hut, intending to return to the Beecher
camp at night. But as he passed through the
forest the jaguar had dropped on him, bearing him
to earth.
"But you saved my life, Senor," he said to
Tom, dropping on one knee and trying to kiss
Tom's hand, which our hero avoided. "And now
my life is yours," added the Indian.
"Well, you'd better get home with it and take
care of it," said Tom. "I'll have Professor Bumper
come over and dress your scratches in a better
and more careful way. The bandages we put
on are only temporary."
"My wife she make a poultice of leaves--they
cure me," said the Indian.
"I guess that will be the best way," observed
Ned. "These natives can doctor themselves for
some things, better than we can."
"Well, we'll take him home," suggested Tom.
"He might keel over from loss of blood.
Come on," he added to Tal, indicating his object.
It was not far to the native's hut from the place
where the jaguar had been killed, and there Tom
and Ned underwent another demonstration of affection
as soon as those of Tal's immediate family and the
other natives understood what had happened.
"I hate this business!" complained Tom, after
having been knelt to by the Indian's wife and
child, who called him the "preserver" and other
endearing titles of the same kind. "Come on,
let's hike back."
But Indian hospitality, especially after a life
has been saved, is not so simple as all that.
"My life--my house--all that I own is yours,"
said Tal in deep gratitude. "Take everything,"
and he waved his hand to indicate all the possessions
in his humble hut.
"Thanks," answered Tom, "but I guess you
need all you have. That's a fine specimen of
blow gun though," he added, seeing one hanging
on the wall. "I wouldn't mind having one like
that. If you get well enough to make me one,
Tal, and some arrows to go with it, I'd like it
for a curiosity to hang in my room at home."
"The Senor shall have a dozen," promised the
Indian.
"Look, Ned," went on Tom, pointing to the
native weapon. "I never saw one just like this.
They use small arrows or darts, tipped with wild
cotton, instead of feathers."
"These the arrows," explained Tal's wife,
bringing a bundle from a corner of the one-room
hut. As she held them out her husband gave a
cry of fear.
"Poisoned arrows! Poisoned arrows!" he exclaimed.
"One scratch and the senors are dead men. Put them away!"
In fear the Indian wife prepared to obey, but
as she did so Tom Swift caught sight of the package
and uttered a strange cry.
"Thundering hoptoads, Ned!" he exclaimed.
"The poisoned arrows are wrapped in the piece of oiled
silk that was around the professor's missing map!"