JAN OF THE JUNGLE & Its Sequel, Jan in India. Otis Adelbert Kline. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Otis Adelbert Kline
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9788027224180
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      Otis Adelbert Kline

      JAN OF THE JUNGLE & Its Sequel, Jan in India

      The Complete Call of the Savage Series: Escapades of a Young Man Raised in Lab in Forests and Swamps of Wildlife

      Published by

      Books

      - Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -

       [email protected]

      2017 OK Publishing

      ISBN 978-80-272-2418-0

      Table of Contents

       JAN OF THE JUNGLE

       JAN IN INDIA

      JAN OF THE JUNGLE

       Table of Contents

       Chapter 1. A Diabolical Scheme

       Chapter 2. In The Bearded Forest

       Chapter 3. Jan’s First Fight

       Chapter 4. Captured

       Chapter 5. The Rope’s End

       Chapter 6. Hurricane

       Chapter 7. Brown Men’s Prize

       Chapter 8. Orgy

       Chapter 9. Chicma’s Attack

       Chapter 10. Outside The Walls

       Chapter 11. The Jungle Demon

       Chapter 12. In A Serpent’s Coils

       Chapter 13. Dr. Bracken’s Clue

       Chapter 14. The Hidden Valley

       Chapter 15. The Black Prison

       Chapter 16. The Day Of Payment

       Chapter 17. A Warm Trail

       Chapter 18. A Death Holiday

       Chapter 19. The River Of Monsters

       Chapter 20. Man-Hunt

       Chapter 21. Forbidden Ground

       Chapter 22. A Perilous Visit

       Chapter 23. The Lotus Mark

       Chapter 24. Caged

       Chapter 25. Raking Claws

       Chapter 26. The Vanquished

       Chapter 27. A Fighting Victim

       Chapter 28. Jungle Man-Hunt

       Chapter 29. The Graven Arrow

       Chapter 30. Enemies

       Chapter 31. Dr. Bracken’s Revenge

       Table of Contents

      Dr. Bracken suavely bowed his Florida cracker patient out of his dispensary. It was in the smaller right wing of his rambling ancestral home on a hummock in the Everglades, near the Gulf of Mexico and five miles from Citrus Crossing.

      The doctor cursed under his breath as a sudden uproar came from the larger right wing of the house, directly behind him. This wing, a place double- locked and forbidden even to his two old colored servants, had no entrance save through a narrow passageway that connected it with his private office in the smaller wing.

      So far as his servants, Aunt Jenny and Uncle Henry, were concerned, a lock was superfluous. The muffled animal-like sounds that came from it were so strange and unearthly that they regarded them with superstitious awe.

      As he closed the door behind his patient it seemed that a mask suddenly slipped from the doctor’s face, so swift and horrible was the change that came over his features. He had been smiling and suave, but as be turned away from the door his demeanor was more like that of a frenzied madman. His teeth, bared like those of a jungle beast at bay, gleamed white and menacing against the iron-gray of his closely cropped vandyke. His small, deep-set eyes burned malevolently, madly.

      Fishing a bunch of keys from his pocket, he opened the door to the narrow passageway, pressed a switch that flooded it with light, and entered, locking it behind him. The roars were louder now. At the end of the passageway he used another key to open a second door, and stepped into the room beyond, pressing a second switch as he did so. The yellow rays of a bulb overhead revealed the stoutly: barred cages that housed his private menagerie within soundproofed walls.

      In the cage at his elbow an African leopard snarled menacingly. Its next- door neighbor, a South American jaguar, padded silently back and forth with head hanging low and slavering jowls slightly parted. In the adjacent cage, the bars of which had been reinforced with powerful wire meshwork, a huge python was coiled complacently around a whitewashed tree trunk, its shimmering