The two men rolled on the ground.
Two yards behind them was the precipice.
All the Captain's efforts were intended to drag the Jaguar to the verge of the abyss; the latter, on the contrary, strove to free himself from his opponent's terrible grasp, for he had doubtless guessed his desperate resolve.
At last, after a struggle of some minutes, the arms that held the Jaguar round the body gradually loosed their hold, the officer's clenched hands opened, and the young man, by the outlay of his whole strength, succeeded in throwing off his enemy and rising.
But he was hardly on his feet, ere the Captain, who appeared exhausted and almost fainting, bounded like a tiger, seized his adversary round the body, and gave him a fearful shock.
The Jaguar, still confused by the struggle he had gone through, and not suspecting this sudden attack, tottered, and lost his balance with a loud cry.
"At length!" the Captain shouted with ferocious joy.
The borderers uttered an exclamation of horror and despair.
The two enemies had disappeared in the abyss.
[What became of them will be found fully recorded in the next volume of this series, called "THE FREE-BOOTERS.">[