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TARZAN AND THE ANT MEN
81

There were a few spasmodic struggles before death ensued, during which, had the spear broken, the man would have been badly mauled and per­haps killed, for the cat was relatively as formid­able a beast as is the lion to us. The instant that it died four warriors leaped forward and with their sharp knives removed the head and skin in an incredibly short time.

Tarzan could not but note that everything these people did was accomplished with maximum effi­ciency. Never did there seem to be any lost motion, never was one at a loss as to what to do, never did one worker get in the way of another. Scarcely ten minutes had elapsed from the mo­ment that they had encountered the cat before the detachment was again moving, the head of the beast fastened to the saddle of one of the war­riors, the skin to that of another.

The officer who commanded the detachment was a young fellow, not much, if any, older than the commander of the troop. That he was coura­geous Tarzan could bear witness from the manner in which he had faced what must have been, to so diminutive a people, a most deadly and ferocious beast; but then, the entire party’s hopeless attack upon the Alalus woman had proved that they all were courageous, and the ape-man admired and respected courage. Already he liked these little men, though it was at times still difficult for him to accept them as a reality, so prone are we to dis-­