<h2 id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II<br/> <span class="smaller">THE FIRE DEMON</span></h2>
<p>The hairy boy followed the wolf cubs.
These half famished animals, once
released, were even quicker than he was
in scrambling off of the ledge and down the hillside.
The boy watched them go and followed
after them at a remarkably swift pace considering
his short legs. He walked stooped over as if his
massive shoulders and head were too heavy for
his stocky legs to carry, and when he scrambled
over rocks he occasionally stooped very low and
used his long arms as forelegs, resting the weight
of his body on clenched hands, the knuckles of
which were used as the soles of his forefeet. But
this was only occasionally. He preferred to walk
on two feet, although it did seem to be an effort.
He did not know, of course, that he was only a few
thousand years removed from ancestors who
walked on four feet and lived in trees and that
his group of hairy men were only just learning,
comparatively speaking, to stand erect.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>As he shambled down the hill other sensations
besides that of hunger began to manifest themselves.
He realized that he was approaching the
domains of the Fire Demon. The atmosphere
grew warmer, which troubled him a little. Then
as he got further down the hillside he found clouds
of white steam swirling about on the wind. These
struck fear to his heart. Smoke or steam were
agents of the Fire Demon and to be avoided. He
paused in his hurry and wondered whether it was
safe to go further. But still the intoxicating odor
assailed him and urged him on. He crouched
beside a big rock and watched with eager eyes the
progress of the wolf cubs who were making their
way through the steamy mist with caution. Yet
they kept on, and the hairy boy seeing that nothing
had yet happened to them screwed up his courage
and followed after them, always watchful and
alert.</p>
<p>The fog grew thicker. Ahead he seemed to
hear a soft hissing sound. There was an occasional
subterranean rumble too. This made cold
chills race up and down his spine and the hair
between his shoulders began to bristle, a sign that
fear was making him ready for fight. He stopped
now and crouched irresolutely beside a stone for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</SPAN></span>
a long time, so long that the wolf cubs became lost
to him in the mist. He debated in his slow brain
whether he should go on or turn back. Thinking
was a hard process for him. It took him a long
time to come to a decision. Presently, however,
he found himself reasoning thus: he was hungry,
near to starving; he was foodless now because the
wolf cubs were gone, but they had gone on into
the mist and until he had lost sight of them nothing
had happened to them. If nothing had happened
to them perhaps it was safe for him to go
on,—then too that enchanting odor was strong,
very strong. That in the end mastered his fears
and he pushed on.</p>
<p>Deeper and deeper into that mysterious and
awesome steam blanket he penetrated, his courage
screwed up to its highest notch. He felt he was
very brave; indeed he knew he was most brave for
he knew that none of the other hairy people would
dare venture so far into the domains of the terrible
Fire Demon. But then he had the example
of the wolf-dog cubs, his terrific hunger and that
overpowering odor to carry him on. Presently
he discovered that the ground was quite warm
even to his feet that had protective pads of callous
skin nearly an inch thick. Some of the rocks were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</SPAN></span>
hot. He stepped on one, and with a grunt of
surprise jumped aside. Had one of the Fire
Demon’s evil spirits bitten him! That burn took
a great deal of courage out of him and it was some
time before he could force himself to go on. When
he did start forward he avoided every stone and
trod the ground with care.</p>
<p>Suddenly through the mist he heard a sharp
yelp. It was one of the wolf-dog cubs. The hairy
boy knew their language. This was the yelp of
one cub driving the other away from something
to eat. The boy rushed forward determined that
if there was food to be had he wanted it before the
cubs devoured it. A moment later he saw a body
prone on the ground. One of the wolf cubs was
standing on it and tearing great strips of flesh
from it which it devoured with great gusto. But
there were other forms on the ground. The hairy
boy saw them everywhere. A band of horses had
been caught in the valley by the eruption of the
volcano and killed by the terrific heat. They were
little horses with thin legs that ended in three
toed feet.</p>
<p>With a cry of joy the all but famished boy hurried
forward for he recognized in the dead horses
a treat that rarely fell to the hairy people. It was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</SPAN></span>
only by means of the greatest skill in hunting and
the concerted effort of the whole colony that one
of these horses, veritable antelopes, was ever
killed or captured, and when this happened the
whole colony had a feast for the flesh was the most
desirable meat attainable then.</p>
<p>But when the boy reached the nearest of the
band of dead horses he stopped and fear showed
in his eyes. The horse was dead, smitten by the
hand of the Fire Demon. Its flesh and hide looked
far different from that of any horse he had ever
seen. Something had happened. But whatever
that something was the hairy boy knew it was also
responsible for that delectable odor that he had
trailed down the hillside. He could not understand
that the horse, in fact all of the horses of
the band, for there were several hundred scattered
about, had been killed by the intense heat of
the lava and roasted to a turn.</p>
<p>He circled the first horse suspiciously and
looked it over thoroughly. It was the one on the
top of which the wolf-dog cub was standing and
tearing away luscious morsels. The boy watched
the cub. It ate and ate like a veritable glutton,
yet nothing strange or out of the ordinary seemed
to happen to it. The feast of the cub and the odor<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</SPAN></span>
of roasted horse were too much for him. He approached
the carcass and reached over to where
the cub was feasting. The cub growled and snarled
at him. This made the hairy boy angry and he
cuffed it so hard that he knocked it to the ground.
Then he tore off a strip of flesh that the cub had
been chewing at and tasted it.</p>
<p>Never in all his life had anything passed his lips
that gave him greater pleasure. Horse meat had
always seemed wonderful but this horse meat
upon which the hand of the Fire Demon had been
laid was beyond anything he had ever tasted.
Fear, superstition and all else were dominated
by his overpowering hunger and he crouched beside
the cooked horse and glutted himself; indeed
even when his paunch was distended so that his
hairy skin was tight, he still pulled off shreds of
meat and chewed on them. And as he sat there
he felt very comfortable and very happy despite
the fact that steam clouds swirled about him. At
this he wondered and as he wondered his primitive
brain began to reason.</p>
<p>It was a long slow process then and very hard.
Sometimes when his reasoning got too deep or too
complex he found his thoughts wandering and it
was always with an effort that he brought his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</SPAN></span>
mind back to the problem of why he was so comfortable.
In doing this the hairy boy was perhaps
the first of us humans to mentally discipline himself
and solve a problem. There were only a few
thinkers among the hairy people and their
thoughts did not go beyond the making of a stone
hammer. They could not even think to the point
of providing clothing to help keep themselves
warm.</p>
<p>But gradually the hairy boy worked it out. Heat
was the reason for his comfortable feeling. The
atmosphere was delightfully warm, the ground
was warm; so wonderfully warm that he stretched
himself at full length upon it. The food he had
eaten was warm. Assuredly heat was the reason.
The only warmth he had ever known was the
warmth of the sun, but never had he been able to
get as close to real warmth as here. And only
occasionally of late years was the sun so warm as
the old men of the colony said it used to be, while
the cold had gone on year after year being more
bitter until the hair of the hairy folk grew thicker
and thicker. The boy did not know that a great
change was in process; that the earth’s axis had
swung slowly out of position and that year after
year the great ice caps about the poles were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</SPAN></span>
edging their way toward the equator and that centuries
later great glaciers would cover the land
miles deep with ice. Neither did he know that the
volcanic eruption he had witnessed was a forerunner
of this great change.</p>
<p>He did know though that the nights were very
cold and that the days were not the tropical days
the old and weazened hairy men told about and
as he lay there prone on the warm earth struggling
with this new found power of reason, he
wondered after all whether the Fire Demon was
the fearsome thing the hairy people believed it to
be. Here was good that it gave him: the good of
warm food, warm air, warm ground to put his
back against—yet, and he realized it with a shudder,
here were these hundreds of dead horses on
which he and the wolf-dog cubs had feasted, mute
testimony of the wrath of the Fire Demon. Why
was it that one who possessed so much good could
be so fearful? Why was it—but here the problem
became too perplexing for even the hairy boy
and, being full of stomach and warm of body, he
fell asleep, probably the first human being to
sleep prone and lying on his back.</p>
<p>And as he slept the wolf cubs, seeing strange
shapes in the swirling steam clouds, and hearing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</SPAN></span>
strange guttural sounds as of huge animals eating,
searched him out and crept closer to him. They
were frightened at these menacing apparitions,
and being motherless they looked to the hairy boy
for protection, for somehow they felt that it was
his presence that had kept them safe from harm
up there on the hillside under the cliff.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</SPAN></span></p>
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