<h2 id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III<br/> <span class="smaller">THE CRACK IN THE EARTH</span></h2>
<p>It seemed strange to the hairy boy that he
should awaken with the same thoughts in his
brain that he had gone to sleep with. Why
did they persist? He could not understand, yet
his brain still turned over the problem of why
the Fire Demon, who could give so much that was
good, could also destroy hundreds of horses, the
fleetest and wariest of the animals he knew. He
could not answer the question but as he pondered
it he began to understand that if all the good of
warmth could be had from the Fire Demon perhaps
it would be possible to make friends with
him and not fall a victim to his wrath. The hairy
boy did not know just how this could be done but
his interest was stirred beyond anything heretofore.</p>
<p>He got up, and although still bloated with food,
he could not resist tearing off a strip or two more
of the roasted horse, then munching on one of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</SPAN></span>
these he began wandering through the swirling
steam, the wolf cubs following him.</p>
<p>Presently he found himself walking through a
layer of black ash that was still warm and felt
very comfortable to his feet. He knew as he recalled
the valley before the eruption that this had
been a huge forest. The heat from the hot lava
lake somewhere down there in the bottom of the
valley had fired this and burned it to cinders.
Only an occasional rampike, charred and gaunt
and weird looking in the blowing steam, told of
the forest that grew there before. The hairy boy
looked at these mute monuments to the wrath of
the Fire Demon with a mingled feeling of awe and
wonder. To see these tree giants charred and
blackened, their twisted limbs shorn from them
and scattered half burned on the ground, revived
to a certain extent the fear that he had had. He
stood and stared at the charred mass a long time
before going on, and then not until he had broken
himself a stout knotted club from one of the fire
hardened rampikes, as if to provide himself with
some sort of a weapon with which to face the mysterious
danger of the Fire Demon.</p>
<p>Yet, despite his fear and trepidation, the hairy
boy was enough a master of his will power to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</SPAN></span>
force himself into exploring the valley further.
Deeper he pushed his way through the misty,
swirling steam, realizing the while that the air and
the earth were growing hotter. From this he
understood that he was approaching what had
appeared to him from the hilltop to be a red hot
lake where the lava had gathered in the valley
bottom.</p>
<p>The steam grew thicker and hotter and ahead of
him and on either hand he heard peculiar hissing
noises, that agitated him a great deal, for he could
not know that it was the hot lava cooling off by its
contact with the cold and moist earth. He went
on but he went with great stealth and caution,
always peering through the steam with club raised
as if expecting at any moment to come face to
face with the Demon that made the fire.</p>
<p>Suddenly the hissing grew more intense and the
air very much hotter. At the same time loomed
through the steam a vast stretch of smooth, black,
polished rock that took queer forms as if it were
so much soft dough that had been poured over the
ground and allowed to harden. All about its edges,
where it came into contact with the ground, jets
of steam were spurting out, each hissing and curling
like huge evanescent reptiles. The hairy boy<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</SPAN></span>
gasped and drew back. Then he stopped and
stood staring, club upraised. He was alert and
ready for danger, but he was frankly curious too.
He could not understand why this black rock that
never had been in the valley before could give
out such intense heat and cause the snaky spouts
of steam that hissed so ominously and lingered in
the air like a swamp fog. He crouched on his
haunches and stared for a long, long time while
the wolf-dog cubs, crowding close to him, looked
at the black rock curiously while their tongues
lolled because of the intense heat.</p>
<p>Finally the hairy boy got to his feet. His curiosity
was mastering his fear and suspicion. He
began to approach the edge of the hot lava bed
very cautiously. As he advanced the heat grew
more intense until his hairy coat dripped perspiration
and water from the condensing steam.
Closer and closer he moved until he was almost
within touching distance of a big black globule
of the cooling lava that was detached from the
main mass. Then he reached out with the stick
he still carried and tapped it curiously.</p>
<p>A strange thing happened. Each time the stick
came into contact with the hot rock a wisp of blue
smoke went up as the heat scorched the wood.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</SPAN></span>
This was puzzling to the hairy boy. Why did this
happen? He tapped and tapped again; then he
examined the scorched end of the stick and felt
of it. It was very hot. It burned him. He
grunted and pulled his hand away. Then he sat
and thought for a long time until his slow brain
reasoned that the rock burned the stick, and the
heat that the stick carried from the rock burned
his hand. The stick carried the heat from the
rock for a little while; then the heat mysteriously
disappeared.</p>
<p>Still he sat and thought and slowly a question
took shape in his mind. If the stick carried the
heat for a little while just by tapping on the rock,
why wouldn’t it carry heat for a long while if he
held the stick onto the rock a long time? Perhaps
it would, then that would be a way of taking
with him the good of the Fire Demon and leaving
behind the bad. He wanted the heat the Fire
Demon could give but he wanted to leave behind
the power it had to kill and destroy.</p>
<p>He decided to try an experiment. He reached
forth and held the stick against the rock. Slowly
the blue smoke appeared. It grew and grew in
quantity; then suddenly a tiny red flame began to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</SPAN></span>
lick at the end of the stick, for the lava had set
the pitchy knot on fire.</p>
<p>When the hairy boy saw the flame he grunted
in terror, dropped the stick and leaped backward
in fear. Of course, the tiny flame went out. The
boy sat and watched the stick for a long time, and
his brain was so busy that his round head positively
hurt. What were these sinister red and
orange things that had licked at the end of the
stick? Were they the fingers of the Fire Monster?
If they were, why had they not held the
stick and consumed it?</p>
<p>He picked up the stick and tried the experiment
again. Once more the flames appeared, but went
out when the stick was dropped. Again he tried,
but this time he held the stick longer. While he
held it he found that the flames waxed stronger
and grew bigger. He studied them curiously,
holding the stick at arm’s length, and, while he
watched, he wondered whether, after all, these
flames were not the beneficial thing that the Fire
Monster had to give him. They were hot. He
could carry them by carrying the stick away. Yet
he could kill them by merely dropping the stick
or tapping it on the ground. He tried it again
and again, and each time he lit the stick and put<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</SPAN></span>
it out he sensed a feeling of elation within him.
He felt as if he were doing a masterly thing. He
could awaken or conquer the Fire Monster at will.
It was wonderful; almost a triumph. The hairy
boy felt as proud as he had the day he had leaped
out from behind a rock and slain his first wild goat
with a stone hammer that he had borrowed from
his father’s cave.</p>
<p>He was so elated by the knowledge that he was
master of the fire that he began to dance up and
down in a peculiarly weird sort of a way and drum
on his chest with his fists, chanting the while, “Og,
og, og, og, og,” which to him meant “I am a great
man now; no longer a boy. I am the conqueror;
Og, the conqueror.” And thus it was that he gave
himself a name, after the manner of the hairy
folk. Og he was to be thenceforth, for he felt that
he had won this name, for among the hairy men
only the people who had achieved something notable
were entitled to a name.</p>
<p>After that for almost an hour he amused himself
by lighting and putting out the stick and
slowly a sense of self-confidence grew within him,
and he no longer had the awe and fear of the Fire
Demon. Indeed he held the burning end of the
stick quite close to him, watched the flames curiously,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</SPAN></span>
felt their heat, broke off slivers from the
other end of the club, lit them and knocked them
out. Once he breathed hard upon one of these
splinters and it went out. Here was a discovery,
indeed. With his very breath he could kill the
Fire Demon. He blew hard upon the flames that
curled about the pitchy knots of his club to prove
it and they went out too. After that he lost all
fear of the Fire Monster. Anything so weak that
he could conquer it with his breath was not at all
to be feared.</p>
<p>He held the stick to the lava to light it again,
his mind intent on what he was doing; indeed he
had been so fascinated with his experiments that
he had forgotten everything, even the wolf-dog
cubs. He had not noticed how the hair on the
back of their necks bristled or how they cowered
with tails between their legs while they looked
furtively into the swirling steam behind them. In
truth, the first that he realized that anything was
amiss was when both cubs with a frightened snarl
tried to crowd between his legs for protection. At
the same moment a snort sounded behind him,
followed by a strident trumpeting.</p>
<p>Og, flaming stick in hand, jumped up with a
start to behold but vaguely through the steam a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</SPAN></span>
massive hairy and tusked head with upraised
trunk and sinister little eyes, looming above him.
Og knew only too well what it was and his heart
all but stopped when he saw the evil thing. His
people called it The Mountain That Walked, the
great shaggy haired mammoth. They were so
big and so strong and so fearless that even Sabre
Tooth, the great cave tiger, slunk from them.</p>
<p>For one horror-fraught second the hairy boy
stared at the terrible, massive head and trunk
that waved slowly back and forth above him. He
knew the great beast had marked him as an
enemy. He knew that the curled trunk would
strike swiftly and surely, that the great coils
would close about him and that with one powerful
toss he would be hurled skyward to fall and be
trampled under the heavy feet of the ponderous
beast. It was a terrible death to face and Og
shrank back and shuddered as he watched the
great trunk. He was so frightened he was no
longer master of himself. It was as if the wicked
little eyes had hypnotized him and held him spellbound.
Slowly, with a weaving motion, a sinister
swaying from side to side, the great trunk bent
toward him, ready to strike.</p>
<p>Suddenly the boy thought of the stick; the fire<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</SPAN></span>
brand that he held in his hand. It gave him courage.
With a wild yell he leaped and whirled the
burning club above his head aiming a blow at the
big beast. The flaming end swept within a foot
of the great animal’s face and with a snort it
drew back. In that instant the hairy boy, still
clinging to the lighted stick, bolted off through the
fog of steam, the wolf cubs at his heels.</p>
<p>As swift as the wind he ran, and the giant mammoth,
now thoroughly aroused, vented a thunderous
trumpet and raced after him with an awkward
shambling gait.</p>
<p>Although he was clumsy and ponderous the
mammoth covered the ground as swiftly as Og
did, his long trunk reaching out before him ready
to seize his victim the instant he came within
reach.</p>
<p>Had it been a long race Og most certainly would
have been captured. He knew this too and he fled
with swiftness borne of utter panic for he could
hear the heavy thuds of ponderous feet close
behind him, and the whistling, snorting of its
breath seemed almost at his back. But fortunately
as he raced on through the steam fog there suddenly
appeared before him a great crevice rent
in the hillside by the earthquake that had attended<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</SPAN></span>
the volcanic eruption. It was like a deep but
narrow wound in the hill, and Og knew that if he
climbed into this the great mammoth could not
follow. True, his snake-like trunk could reach
inside but Og felt that if he could crawl beyond its
length the animal could not force his body into the
narrow opening.</p>
<p>With safety in sight Og leaped forward with
renewed speed and literally hurled himself into
the crevice, the wolf-dog cubs falling over each
other to scramble in behind him. In a panic all
three struggled, stumbled and crawled over rocks
and earth clods and forced themselves back into
the deepest, narrowest confines of this crack in
the earth. There in the darkness that was lighted
only by the tiny flames of the still burning torch
that Og had clung to, they waited.</p>
<p>Presently The Mountain That Walked, with
thunderous tread and whistling breath, reached
the crevice. For a moment the great beast
stopped and peered inside. Then scenting his
enemy within he reached his snaky trunk into the
earthy cave, and groped about.</p>
<p>The hairy boy and the wolf cubs shrank back
trembling. To have this horrible thing within a
few feet of their faces, was a terrible experience<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</SPAN></span>
and for a time it shattered the courage of the trio.
But when it became apparent that the animal
could not reach them Og grew braver, so brave in
fact that presently he fell to shouting terrible
insults at the beast and brandishing his fiery stick.
Indeed he mustered the courage to crawl close
enough to the twisting trunk to jam the fire stick
into its folds.</p>
<p>With a roar the trunk was withdrawn immediately
and the hairy boy, laughing with glee,
turned toward the cowering wolf cubs as if seeking
their approval for his brave deed.</p>
<p>But the smile on his face was transformed into
an expression of horror, for as he looked toward
the end of the crevice he saw to his consternation
that the walls on either side were slowly drawing
closer together. Clods of earth and heavy stones
were falling, jarred loose by the slow but irresistible
movement of the walls. The earth that had
been pushed upward by volcanic action was slowly
settling again. The crevice was closing and they
would be buried alive.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</SPAN></span></p>
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