Carl Stephenson - Leiningen Versus the Ants.txt

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Leiningen versus the Ants

by CARL STEPHENSON


UNLESS they alter their course and there's no reason why they should, they'll 
reach your plantation in two days at the latest."

Leiningen sucked placidly at a cigar about the size of a corncob and for a few 
seconds gazed without answering at the agitated District Commissioner. Then he 
took the cigar from his lips, and leaned slightly forward. With his bristling 
grey hair, bulky nose, and lucid eyes, he had the look of an aging and shabby 
eagle.

"Decent of you," he murmured, "paddling all this way just to give me the tip. 
But you're pulling my leg of course when you say I must do a bunk. Why, even a 
herd of saurians couldn't drive rne from this plantation of mine."

The Brazilian official threw up lean and lanky arms and clawed the air with 
wildly distended fingers. "Leiningen!" he shouted. "You're insane! They're not 
creatures you can fight--they're an elemental--an 'act of God!' Ten miles long, 
two miles wide--ants, nothing but ants! And every single one of them a fiend 
from hell; before you can spit three times they'll eat a full-grown buffalo to 
the bones. I tell you if you don't clear out at once there'll he nothing left of 
you but a skeleton picked as clean as your own plantation."

Leiningen grinned. "Act of God, my eye! Anyway, I'm not an old woman; I'rn not 
going to run for it just because an elemental's on the way. And don't think I'm 
the kind of fathead who tries to fend off lightning with his fists either. I use 
my intelligence, old man. With me, the brain isn't a second blindgut; I know 
what it's there for. When I began this model farm and plantation three years ago, 
I took into account all that could conceivably happen to it. And now I'm ready 
for anything and everything--including your ants."

The Brazilian rose heavily to his feet. "I've done my best," he gasped. "Your 
obstinacy endangers not only yourself, but the lives of your four hundred 
workers. You don't know these ants!"

Leiningen accompanied him down to the river, where the Governrnent launch was 
moored. The vessel cast off. As it moved downstream, the exclamation mark neared 
the rail and began waving its arms frantically. Long after thc launch had 
disappeared round the bend, Leiningen thought he could still hear that dimming 
imploring voice, "You don't know them, I tell you! You don't know them!"

But the reported enemy was by no means unfamiliar to the planter. Before he 
started work on his settlement, he had lived long enough in the country to see 
for himself the fearful devastations sometimes wrought by these ravenous insects 
in their campaigns for food. But since then he had planned measures of defence 
accordingly, and these, he was convinced? were in every way adequate to 
withstand the approaching peril.

Moreover, during his three years as a planter, Leiningen had met and defeated 
drought, Hood, plague and all other "acts of God" which had come against him-unlike 
his fellow-settlers in the district, who had made little or no resistance. This 
unbroken success he attributed solely to the observance of his lifelong motto: 
The human brain needs only to become fully aware of its powers to conquer even 
the elements. Dullards reeled senselessly and aimlessly into the abyss; cranks, 
however brilliant, lost their heads when circumstances suddenly altered or 
accelerated and ran into stone walls, sluggards drifted with the current until 
they were caught in whirlpools and dragged under. But such disasters, Leiningen 
contended, merely strengthened his argument that intelligence, directed aright, 
invariably makes man the master of his fate.

Yes, Leiningen had always known how to grapple with life. Even here, in this 
Brazilian wilderness, his brain had triumphed over every difliculty and danger 
it had so far encountered. First he had vanquished primal forces by cunning and 
organization, then he had enlisted the resources of modern science to increase 
miraculously the yield of his plantation. And now he was sure he would prove 
more than a match for the "irresistible" ants.

That same evening, however, Leiningen assembled his workers. He had no intention 
of waiting till the news reached their ears from other sources. Most of them had 
been born in the district; the cry "The ants are coming!'" was to them an 
imperative signal for instant, panic-stricken flight, a spring for life itself. 
But so great was the Indians' trust in Leiningen, in Leiningen's word, and in 
Leiningen's wisdom, that they received his curt tidings, and his orders for the 
imminent struggle, with the calmness with which they were given. They waited, 
unafraid, alert, as if for the beginning of a new game or hunt which he had just 
described to them. The ants were indeed mighty, but not so mighty as the boss. 
Let them come!

They came at noon the second day. Their approach was announced by the wild 
unrest of the horses, scarcely controllable now either in stall or under rider, 
scenting from afar a vapor instinct with horror.

It was announced by a stampede of animals, timid and savage, hurtling past each 
other; jaguars and pumas flashing by nimble stags of the pampas, bulky tapirs, 
no longer hunters, themselves hunted, outpacing fleet kinkajous, maddened herds 
of cattle, heads lowered, nostrils snorting, rushing through tribes of loping 
monkeys, chattering in a dementia of terror; then followed the creeping and 
springing denizens of bush and steppe, big and little rodents, snakes, and 
lizards.

Pell-mell the rabble swarmed down the hill to the plantation, scattered right 
and left before the barrier of the water-filled ditch, then sped onwards to the 
river, where, again hindered, they fled along its bank out of sight.

This water-filled ditch was one of the defence measures which Leiningen had long 
since prepared against the advent of the ants. It encompassed three sides of the 
plantation like a huge horseshoe. Twelve feet across, but not very deep, when 
dry it could hardly be described as an obstacle to either man or beast. But the 
ends of the "horseshoe" ran into the river which formed the northern boundary, 
and fourth side, of the plantation. And at the end nearer the house and 
outbuildings in the middle of the plantation, Leiningen had constructed a dam by 
means of which water from the river could be diverted into the ditch.

So now, by opening the dam, he was able to fling an imposing girdle of water, a 
huge quadrilateral with the river as its base, completely around the plantation, 
like the moat encircling a medieval city. Unless the ants were clever enough to 
build rafts. they had no hope of reaching the plantation, Leiningen concluded.

The twelve-foot water ditch seemed to afford in itself all the security needed. 
But while awaiting the arrival of the ants, Leiningen made a further improvement. 
The western section of the ditch ran along the edge of a tamarind wood, and the 
branches of some great trees reached over the water. Leiningen now had them 
lopped so that ants could not descend from them within the "moat."

The women and children, then the herds of cattle, were escorted by peons on 
rafts over the river, to remain on the other side in absolute safety until the 
plunderers had departed. Leiningen gave this instruction, not because he 
believed the non-combatants were in any danger, but in order to avoid hampering 
the efficiency of the defenders. "Critical situations first become crises," he 
explained to his men, "when oxen or women get excited "

Finally, he made a careful inspection of the "inner moat"--a smaller ditch lined 
with concrete, which extended around the hill on which stood the ranch house, 
barns, stables and other buildings. Into this concrete ditch emptied the inflow 
pipes from three great petrol tanks. If by some miracle the ants managed to 
cross the water and reached the plantation, this "rampart of petrol,' would be 
an absolutely impassable protection for the beseiged and their dwellings and 
stock. Such, at least, was Leiningen's opinion.

He stationed his men at irregular distances along the water ditch, the first 
line of defence. Then he lay down in his hammock and puffed drowsily away at his 
pipe until a peon came with the report that the ants had been observed far away 
in the South.

Leiningen mounted his horse, which at the feel of its master seemed to forget 
its uneasiness, and rode leisurely in the direction of the threatening offensive. 
The southern stretch of ditch--the upper side of the quadrilateral--was nearly 
three miles long; from its center one could survey the entire countryside. This 
was destined to be the scene of the outbreak of war between Leiningen's brain 
and twenty square miles of life-destroying ants.

It was a sight one could never forget. Over the range of hills, as far as eye 
could see, crept a darkening hem, ever longer and broader, until the shadow 
spread across the slope from east to west, then downwards, downwards, uncannily 
swift, and all the green herbage of that wide vista was being mown as by a giant 
sickle, leaving only the vast moving shadow, extending, deepening, and moving 
rapidly nearer.

When Leiningen's men, behind their barrier of water, perceived the approach of 
the long-expected foe, they gave vent to their suspense in screams and 
imprecations. But as the distance began to lessen between the "sons of hell" and 
the water ditch, they relapsed into silence. Before the advance of that awe-inspiring 
throng, their belief in the powers of the boss began to steadily dwindle.

Even Leiningen himself, who had ridden up just in time to restore their loss of 
he...
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