"Ah-h-houk! Great Brothers," roared Raj Bagh. "My mate has told you of Chittagong and his tea gardens, but the middle jungles in India is the place for a Tiger to rule; and for years I was Lord of the Sumna Forests, and the terror of the Gonds, the little black-faced Men who are wondrous Shikaris. Close gra.s.s. Waw-hough! but it was beautiful there. The many red faces of the chewal tree smiled at me, and the purple ears of the sal tree listened to my roar till its great branches trembled in fear. Close hid in the Khagar gra.s.s I would lie and sleep all through the long hot day, and the little Gonds, even the big, white-faced Men, might pa.s.s the length of this cage from me, and not know that I was there. But I would know. Talking, talking always they would go, and if they were up wind, my nose would find them many jumps away.
"I was born there, and Baghni, my Mother, and Sher Bagh, my Sire, taught me all that a Tiger should know of the ways of the Men-kind. But in the end both of them came to their death through the evil ways of these seekers for our lives. Wah, wah, wah-hough! I am a Man-killer.
And why not?"
"You should be ashamed to say so," cried Magh, petulantly, "and before Sa"-zada, too."
"Wah! I was a Man-killer," repeated Raj Bagh, "a killer of many Men, but it was not my fault. When I was a cub my Sire was Lord of the Sumna Jungles; and close to our lair was a _jhil_ to which all animals of those parts came to drink when they were hot, and the hills blazed red with the evil fire of the little Gonds. Chetal, and Nilgai, and Sambhur, and the Ribbed-Faced Deer that coughed like a Wild Dog; even c.h.i.n.kara, the little Gazelle that is but a mouthful for one of my needs--all came there when the forest grew dark; and always when we were hungry, which was often, more came than went away. It was ever the same with Sher Bagh, who was my Sire, and Baghni, always the same way in a kill with them. In those days I watched it often, for I, being a Bagheela, took no part except in the eating. Chita walks not softer in his cage than Sher Bagh would step through the jungle when he was stalking a kill; and then at the end with a rush it was all over.
"But one year it became so hot--why, the rocks burned our pads as we walked; so hot that our _jhil_ dried up, and none of the Jungle Dwellers came to drink. It was hot, so hot, and never a drop of the sweet water falling. The fire crept down from the hills and ate up the small part of the jungle and the gra.s.s, and I think the Jungle Dwellers went to other parts. At any rate, as Brother Bagh has said, we were sore distressed for a kill. Of course, we could go and drink where the other Dwellers dared not, close to the villages of the little Gonds. I remember, being but a Baghela and having little wisdom, saying to Baghni, "Why do we not kill Goru (cattle) and Bainsa, who are here in the hands of the Men-kind?" But Sher Bagh, who had lived into much wisdom, growled, and striking me hard with his paw, said, "Little one, that way comes the full hate of the Men-kind, and we who fear not the Dwellers in the Jungle, fear Man."
"But still we became more hungry, and Baghni, whose milk was my only food, grew unwise and said, "Let us kill the Goru." But Sher Bagh growled at her, and said again, "That way comes the hate of the Men-kind. Now when these little men who are Gonds pa.s.s near to me in the jungle, they salaam and say, "Peace be with you, Sher Bagh, Huzoor Bagh"; and they go in peace, and the fear that is on me when I look in their eyes pa.s.ses away."
"For many nights after that we wandered far through the jungle, I with Baghni, and Sher Bagh by himself in another part. And in the days that were so hot, as I slept, great times of blood drinking and sweet meat-eating came to my mind--but when I woke there was nothing--nothing but hunger pains in my stomach. It was also this way with Baghni and Sher Bagh. Many times Baghni said, "Let us kill the Goru, for of what use is the good will of the Men-kind if we die?"
"At last Sher Bagh also became unwise, and said, "We will kill the Goru, for Baghela and you, Baghni, are starving. When the Goru feed in a herd to-morrow, even in the time of light--which, of course, was the day--together we will creep close in the much-thorned korinda, and kill a Cow; for if we kill one in a herd there will be less trouble, and perhaps it will not be missed of the Men-kind." Wah! I shall never forget the sweet eating of that Goru. And the drink of blood!
Che-hough! it was as though I had been athirst since my birth.
"Sher Bagh dragged the Goru to a jungle of Kakra trees, and we ate it all. But the next day the Horned Ones did not feed in that place, and as we were walking in the close of the daytime Sher Bagh heard the thin-voiced cry of a Gond cart coming over the road; it was like the song of the Koel bird; it was made by the wheels, I think. "There will be Goru to the cart," said Sher Bagh. "Yes, two of them," answered Baghni, "but also one of the Men-kind, a little Gond." "Even now I am hungry," declared Sher Bagh; "when I roar in front of the Goru the little Gond will pa.s.s quickly into a sal tree, and then we can eat of his Bullocks."
"It was as my Sire had said, and we made a kill, and carried them far from the roadside, and had the sweetest eating for two nights. All our strength was coming back to us, and Baghni, purring softly, for she was pleased, said to her Lord, "Did I not say "drink the blood of the Goru," when we were starving, and are they not easy of kill?" But Sher Bagh, looking up in the trees, for it was as we came to the kill for our second night"s eating, answered, "We must be careful, for upon us will surely fall the full hate of these little Gonds; and they claim a kill for a kill, blood for blood; it is their manner of life when they deal with others of the Men-kind."
"I knew that fear of the little Gonds had come strong upon my Sire when he looked up to the sal trees, for, as I have said, it is not of our habit to look up; we fear nothing of the jungle that hides in trees.
The Peac.o.c.ks, and Monkeys, and Crows, even Panther--what are they?
Nothing to claim the time of my kind. Said Sher Bagh to Baghni, "The Goru that go in carts are easy for the kill." "And there are always two of them," answered she.
"This new manner of life by practice became easy to us; we would hide in the khagar gra.s.s or the jowri, which is a nut gra.s.s of the Men, beside the road at the day"s end, and always we would know of the cart"s coming by its voice, that was like Koel bird"s, or the miaou of a Peac.o.c.k. We made many a kill of this kind. And it was this way that I became first of all a Man-killer, even my first kill was of the Men-kind, just an evil chance. It was Baghni who said to Sher Bagh, "Baghela must know the method of a kill. We have now not much hunger, so let him make the next kill of the Goru, and if he misses, it will not matter, for we are well fed."
"I shall never forget that night as I crouched by the road beside Baghni, waiting for the little Gond with his Goru. I was trembling like the tall gra.s.s shivers at the top when one pa.s.ses through it. "Keep still," whispered Baghni; "a little noise makes a hard kill, and much noise is no kill at all." If it had been a Sambhur or a Nilgai we should have had no supper, for the gra.s.s whispered under me as I shook it with my trembling. Then down the road in the early dark came the cart with its snarling voice. Just as the Goru were opposite, Baghni struck me with her tail and cried, "Ah-h-houk!" which means to charge.
As I sprang, being but a Baghela, and my first kill, I was slow, and the Goru jumped, causing me to miss sadly. But I landed full on the cart, and by an evil chance the little Gond was under my paws. Mind, Comrades, with me it was but a kill, and I could not see his eyes, and without intent on my part his shoulder was in my jaws, and in less time than I can tell it I had him in the jungle. It was my first kill, and I was wild--but I don"t want to talk about it. I wish he had beaten me off, even struck me with the thunder-stick, for, after all, what was the kill? not bigger than a Chetal, and it brought the full hate of the Men-kind to us, and Sher Bagh and Baghni were slain."
"By the little Gonds?" asked Hathi.
"The Gonds and the Sahibs," answered Tiger. "Even your people, Hathi, took part in the kill of my Sire and Baghni. But it was our old enemy, hunger, that caused it all. For three nights we waited by the roadside and no carts pa.s.sed. It is true one pa.s.sed; a lodhi cartman, with the wisdom of Cobra, put Pig"s fat on the wheels of his cart, and there was no noise until he was right upon us, even had pa.s.sed, for the stalk had not properly started, you see. "Never mind," said Baghni, "the little Men of a slow wit, the Gonds, will come this way with their Goru, many of them"; but they didn"t. And save for two old Langurs (monkeys) that cursed from a pipal tree as we went back to our _Nullah_, we saw no Dweller of the Jungle, nor of the fields. "The hate of the little Gonds is coming to us," growled Bagh. "And I am so hungry," moaned Baghni. "Baghela should not have killed any of the Men-kind," declared my Sire.
"The Men go to their rest at night, even the little Gonds, knowing that the Jungle Dwellers will not come in great numbers to the fields because of our guard. And it was but an evil chance, too, that I made a kill of the Gond. But when we were most hungered, after many days, one night, not far from our _Nullah_, was a Bullock tied to a tree.
"Waw-houk!" exclaimed Baghni, calling her Lord to the find; "Che-waugh!" said she, "here is a Bail of the Men-kind; make the kill."
""It is of their hate," growled Sher Bagh, "the Bullocks do not come of their own way here to the jungle--we must be careful."
"Half the night was gone before we had stalked all sides of the Goru, but there was nothing--not even up in the sal leaves. That was what Baghni said, for with her sharp eyes she saw Hookus (big green pigeon), resting on a branch, which meant that there was nothing to frighten him. When Sher Bagh had made the kill, he dragged it far away from our _Nullah_. That was most wise, Comrades; it was so that the Men-kind should not find our home.
"When our hunger was gone Baghni said, "We will eat again when the sun"s light pa.s.ses once more." "No," growled my Sire, "we will not come back to the kill, for the hate of the little Gonds will be here when they see that we have eaten of the Goru."
"That was wise also. To make sure, and to teach me, a Baghela, Sher Bagh took us down wind from the drag next night, and the scent of the Men-kind came strong in our faces. "Our enemies are there," declared Bagh.
"Being a Baghela I thought this fine play, and by the cunning of my Sire we killed what we found tied in the Jungle, but never went back to the drag. Even once in the dark, as we hunted, hearing the grunt of a Goru, and going up wind to it, Sher Bagh knew that the Hunters were waiting in the sal and pipal trees over the bait, so we went back to the _Nullah_ and rested on lean stomachs."
"Your Sire was too clever for them," commented Magh, as Tiger ceased speaking for an instant.
"Perhaps it was clever," answered Raj Bagh. "But in two days more something came to us that no Jungle Dweller can withstand: a full beat of the Jungles.
"Being but a Baghela," sighed Raj Bagh, "I did not know what it was when the beat commenced; I thought that the forest winds were in an evil temper, but Sher Bagh cried to Baghni, "Quick! we must go far, for now comes the hate of the white-faced kind, for the beat is their way of a kill." We lay quiet in our _Nullah_, thinking they might pa.s.s.
"Tap, tap, tap!" I heard on one side, much like the klonk, klonk! of Mis-gar (coppersmith bird). "What is that?" I asked my Sire.
""The sal trees cry because they are stricken by the Beaters," he answered. "Tum, tum, tum-m!" I heard from the other side of the _Nullah_. "Is it the belling of a Nilgai?" I asked. "The little Gonds who are of this beat call with their drums," answered Sher Bagh. "All the jungle is falling," I cried. "It is the coming of Hathi," answered my Sire, "for it is a beat of many Hathi. Come, Baghela, come, Baghni,"
he called, and we stole like frightened c.h.i.n.kara through the sal and pipal jungle.
""To the Baghni-wali nulla!" (tigress valley) cried Sher Bagh to us as we followed. But as we sought to enter this place of many caves a Beater smote at us with the thunder-stick from a tree, but that was only to frighten us away, for Bagh whispered, "The Beaters are not to make the kill."
""Here will be little spoor for them to follow," growled Sher Bagh as we ran. Soon we thought we had lost those who sought our lives. As we rested for a little while in some thick, wild plum bushes they came all about us. There were many Hathi, and on three of the Hathi were little caves----"
"Haudas," corrected Elephant. "That is the way the Men-kind ride on my back when we are in the beat."
"And the Men had thunder-sticks with which they smote Sher Bagh and Baghni. "Waw, waw-houk!" roared my Sire when he was struck--"Che-waugh!" he cried to me, "flee, Baghela, while I charge."
With a rush he sprang on a big Hathi"s nose, and I think he got even to the hauda, for the Hathi turned and ran, screaming with pain; and I, seeing this, broke from my cover and charged back through the Beaters who were on foot. Just in my path I saw one of the Beaters striking two sticks together. Being cross because of my hot pads, and what they had done to Sher Bagh, I seized this one, and took him with me.
"After that, I lived alone, and because the Jungle Dwellers had fled from those parts, and because of the wrong we had from these Gonds, I became a Man-killer, eating that which was put in my reach."
"How did they catch you?" questioned Wolf.
[Ill.u.s.tration: "MY SIRE ... SPRANG ON A BIG HATHI"S NOSE."]
"Because I sought to change my way of life," answered Bagh, "and leaving the Man-kill I made to satisfy my hunger with a Goat. I heard the Goat cry at night-time," continued Bagh, "and after a careful stalk, finding nothing of the presence of Man, I sprang on Bakri the Goat----"
"And the Goat captured you," cried Magh, gleefully.
"Together we fell into a deep hole that had been dug by the evil little Gonds. Though I ate the Bakri I could not get out again, and in the morning the Men were all about me, both white and black. How the little Men reviled me! But it seemed the Sahibs wanted to take me alive, so they dug another hole close to the one in which I was, put a big wooden cage with a door to it down, and then with long spears broke through the walls between the cage and the hole I was in. Of course, I was glad enough to go any place; besides, they threw down on me their dreadful fire. I sprang in the cage and the door dropped behind me. Then many of the Men-kind pulled the cage out with ropes, and I was sent here to Sa"-zada."
Fifth Night
The Story of the Tribe of King Cobra
[Ill.u.s.tration]
[Ill.u.s.tration]
FIFTH NIGHT
THE STORY OF THE TRIBE OF KING COBRA
It was the fifth night of the Sa"-zada tales. As usual, Hathi, Grey Wolf, and all the other animals, jostling each other merrily like a lot of schoolboys, had gathered in front of Tiger"s cage.