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TARZAN AND THE ANT MEN

zara and Talaskar will follow you. You have candles?"

They had, and one by one they disappeared into the mouth of the hole, until Tarzan, who had asked to remain until last, stood alone in the gath­ering night gazing at the mouth of the ratel’s burrow, a smile upon his lips. It seemed ridicu­lous to him that Tarzan of the Apes should ever be contemplating hiding from Numa in the hole of a ratel, or, worse still, hiding from little Skree, the wild-cat, and as he stood there smiling a bulk loomed dimly among the trees; the diadets, stand­ing near, untethered, snorted and leaped away; and Tarzan wheeled to face the largest lion he ever had seen—a lion that towered over twice the ape-man’s height above him.

How tremendous, how awe-inspiring Numa ap­peared to one the size of a Minunian!

The lion crouched, its tail extended, the tip moving ever so gently; but the ape-man was not deceived. He guessed what was coming and even as the great cat sprang he turned and dove head­ foremost down the hole of the ratel and behind him rattled the loose earth pushed into the bur­row’s mouth by Numa as he alighted upon the spot where Tarzan had stood.