[The Land of Mystery by Edward S. Ellis]@TWC D-Link bookThe Land of Mystery CHAPTER V 3/4
The light which had been noticed sometime before by the whites was the full flood of the moon's rays, there being no other kind of illumination, so far as they could ascertain, in the native village. The huge pole was without any limbs or appurtenances, but around the space were gathered a score of figures in rapid motion, the meaning of whose actions was a puzzle to the white spectators, until they studied them. Then it was seen they were struggling together, and the conclusion was that they were engaged in some kind of a rough sport, for all the rest of the savages were seated in front of their huts watching the singular spectacle. Naturally they ought to have come closer, and the fact that they did not, suggested that they kept back to give the actors plenty of room for their performances. Not the least impressive feature of the scene was the profound silence which marked it.
The shout that first arrested the attention of Ashman and his companion, must have been some kind of a signal, probably announcing the opening of the proceedings. It was evident that the villagers in the square were struggling hard, for their forms were interlocked and they were divided into two lines, which swayed back and forth as one gained or yielded ground. "It is a wrestling bout," whispered Ashman to his companion, and then, reflecting that their situation was dangerous, the two stopped from the path among the trees, where they would not be noticed by any passing near. Suddenly something like a groan was heard from the body of contesting men.
Almost at the same instant, a command was shouted from the further end of the square, where part of the spectators were gathered. The two lines fell apart, and ran silently and swiftly to opposite points a hundred feet distant, where they abruptly halted as if in obedience to some signal and faced each other. This was stirring enough, but that which riveted the eyes of the white men was the sight of three figures lying prone on the ground, at the foot of the pole. They were as motionless as so many stones.
There could be no mistaking the significance of the sight: they were dead. It may have been some species of sport in which the actors were engaged for the entertainment of the spectators, but, if so, there was an awful earnestness about it, for the stake for which they strove was human life. The two lines faced each other but a moment, when another shout rang out, and they rushed together once more with the fury of two cyclones. By this time, our friends had discovered that no member of the parties was furnished with any weapon other than those provided by nature. Fearful then must have been the struggle, which had already terminated in the death of three of the contestants. But they were at it again with the fierceness of so many cougars fighting in defence of their young. The result was terrifying.
The contest had lasted but a few minutes, and already a couple were on the earth, when one of the combatants, with a cry of pain dashed in almost a direct line toward the spot where our friends were hiding. Had he not been overtaken and dragged back, he would have been upon them before they could get out of the way, and it is not difficult to conjecture what would have followed. The miserable wretch, however, was seized on the very edge of the wood by four others and carried writhing and resisting back to the space. There he was flung down, and, being unable to rise, the others leaped upon him and in a few minutes all was over.
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