<h2 id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV<br/> <span class="smaller">THE FIRST CAMP FIRE</span></h2>
<p>All the horrors of such a terrible death
were apparent to Og and the two wolf
cubs. The hairy boy stood with staring,
fear-bulged eyes and watched the slow, irresistible
movement of the earthy walls as they came together.
He could feel the movement of the ground
beneath his feet as it began to sink downward
and he could feel the vibration of a rumbling
thunderous noise that came up from the nethermost
depths of the earth. A great fear clutched
his heart; a fear that somehow he and the now
whimpering wolf cubs had put themselves into
the clutches of a great and evil spirit who owned
this cave; this huge wound in the hillside.</p>
<p>Yet though almost paralyzed with fear Og’s
brain worked. The Mountain That Walked had
been defeated. He had withdrawn. Perhaps he
was waiting outside in the steam fog or perhaps
he had gone back down into the valley. If he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</SPAN></span>
were waiting outside, to go out meant death. But
to stay in here meant death too, the horrible
death of being buried alive. Outside death was
uncertain. Then too he had a marvelous new
weapon in this fiery stick of his. Perhaps with its
aid and his swift legs he could defeat the mammoth.
It was worth trying. They were deep
inside the crevice. They would have to move
quickly to get out in time for the walls were closing
fast. Already one of the wolf cubs had
started for the opening. Og turned and called to
the other one. It was struggling under a heavy
clod of earth that had fallen upon it and held it
down. Og saw its plight. He was about to turn
and bolt and leave it to its death. But something
made him hesitate. He could not understand this
strange feeling. He did not know that within
him was growing a sense of loyalty and unselfishness
that the hairy people never knew. He did
not realize that this marked him as being a higher
type of human than any hairy man had ever
been, but he did know that an overmastering
desire to help the struggling wolf dog swept away
any selfish thoughts of his own safety, and he
sprang back toward the rear of the crevice, dug
the wolf dog from beneath the caved-in earth,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</SPAN></span>
then, gathering it under one arm and with the
burning resinous torch in the other hand, he began
a mad scramble for the opening of the crevice.</p>
<p>The rumbling beneath his feet grew louder and
more ominous. Earth and rock broke loose from
the walls above and fell about him and on him.
One huge stone struck him on the shoulder and
its jagged corners cut deep through his hair and
flesh. Og cried out with pain and staggered
under the impact. Yet he stumbled and struggled
onward while great beads of perspiration stood
out on his low forehead, and his eyes dilated with
fear. On and on he pushed, while the rumbling
beneath him grew to an angry growl and the
earthy walls on either hand and overhead rocked
and swayed dizzily. The opening was only a little
way ahead now. The first wolf cub had gained
it and scrambled out into the steam filled air.
Og envied him his salvation. He wondered
vaguely whether he could make it or whether,
there within a few short paces of freedom, he
would be caught between the crunching, caving
walls of earth and crushed to death.</p>
<p>He made a mighty effort to gain the opening.
His great muscles swelled under the strain. Blood
leaped through his arteries, the cords of his neck<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</SPAN></span>
stood out and his breath came in great sobs as
he struggled toward the air and light. One leap
more and he would be free, one stride and he
would be out of that terrible cave of grumbling
noise, and crumbling walls. Og leaped.</p>
<p>At the same instant the rumbling developed to
a roar, and a grinding crash, as the wall on either
side of the crevice caved in and the earth settled.
Og reached the air in a cloud of dust and a shower
of earth and stones, and, in a perfect avalanche
of debris, rolled over and over down the hillside,
until he stopped with stunning impact at the foot
of a huge bowlder. For the space of several
seconds he and the wolf cub lay there in a semi-conscious
condition. Then slowly Og came to and
sat up. And the first thing that he looked for
when he became himself again was his fire stick.
He found it close at hand for he had clung to it
even in his mad plunge down the hillside. But of
course its flames were out.</p>
<p>Og picked it up and viewed this fact with disappointment.
The knotty end was a mass of
glowing smoking coals but the flames were gone.
Og crouched beside the bowlder and looked at the
hot end of the stick turning it over and over, and
wondering the while how to rekindle it. He began<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</SPAN></span>
to blow upon it softly. Why he did this he could
not tell. But as he breathed upon it the coals
grew redder and hotter and suddenly a tiny flame
appeared, then another and another until the
torch was rekindled.</p>
<p>Og gave a grunt of surprise at this and his low
forehead wrinkled into a perplexed frown. Here
was a thing that he could slay with his breath yet
he could bring it to life again by breathing upon
it. It was strange indeed, a thing he would have
liked to puzzle over, for he had found that thinking
was a strange and fascinating game. But he
realized that the daylight hours were waning.
Night was coming on and he knew now that with
the Stalking Death abroad and probably many
other animals down there in the valley feeding on
the roasted horses, it would not be safe for him to
linger. He thought of the cave under the cliff
where he and the wolf cubs had taken refuge first
and he decided to go there for the night.</p>
<p>Both cubs were close at hand, though the one he
had rescued was unable to walk. Og gathered
this one under his arm and calling to the other
started out of the valley and toward the towering
cliffs that he could see in the distance through the
steam. As they made their way forward Og<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</SPAN></span>
glanced at the hill where the crevice had been.
What had been the crown of it was now a deep
depression still filled with dust clouds. Og turned
his head away for the thoughts that he and the
cubs might even now be buried under that mass of
rock and dirt were very unpleasant.</p>
<p>They were a long way from their refuge and Og
hurried for he feared to be caught down there in
the valley at nightfall. Night was the time when
all the great beasts hunted and feasted and he
knew that he would make a choice meal for the
Stalking Death, the great panther, or Sabre
Tooth, the huge cave tiger, as had many another
hairy man in the past. Indeed, it was with a
sense of relief that the hairy boy scrambled up
the steep mountain side and crawled in under the
shelter of the overhanging cliffs, for already the
terrific hunting roar of the giant cave tiger was
waking the echoes and in the gathering twilight
this was a blood chilling sound to hear for the
hairy men of that age.</p>
<p>Shelter gained, Og’s attention came back to the
fire stick which he still carried. It was then that
he noticed for the first time, and with consternation,
that the stick, once as long as his arm, was
now less than a quarter its original size. Here<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</SPAN></span>
was another perplexing phase of this new thing
that he thought he had mastered but which he now
found he could not at all understand. Why had
the stick grown shorter? Where had the rest of
it gone? Did this thing devour the wood? Was
that what it ate?</p>
<p>Crouched up there on the shelf under the cliff
Og experimented anew. He tried to see if the
thing ate wood. He found another stick and held
it into the flame. The red fingers reached out
and took hold of it and, because this was soft
wood, the fire consumed it quickly; ate it all so
fast that Og had to drop it before it burned his
fingers. There on the stone ledge it burned itself
out. Og tried to feed the flames leaves. These
were eaten up so swiftly that the hairy boy was
frightened for a moment. He tried more sticks
and more leaves, then he tried to feed it a stone.
This it would not eat and Og marveled, for had
he not got it from a stone originally?—yet here
it refused to eat other stones. This red thing,
this animal that could be slain or brought to life
with a breath, that came from stone yet would
not eat stone, was indeed a mystery.</p>
<p>Og held the fast shortening pitchwood torch in
his hand and pondered. He saw the charred<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</SPAN></span>
remains of the stick and leaves he had burned
lying about him on the ledge. From these he
gleaned still a new idea. He gathered more sticks
and leaves in a pile, then laid the burning torch
among them. And presently he had a fire that
delighted him; a fire that gave him warmth and
light and which he could keep alive so long as he
fed it sticks and leaves.</p>
<p>Thus was born five hundred thousand years ago
up there on the ledge below the cliff the first
campfire and as this hairy boy crouched before
it and watched it with consuming interest while
he basked in its warmth and light, he chanted
softly to himself,“Og, Og, Og, Og,” which was his
way of telling himself and the wolf cubs that he
was a great man, that he had made a wonderful
discovery and that he well deserved the name he
had given himself.</p>
<p>And as he crouched there the roar of Saber
Tooth, the tiger, and the wail of the Stalking
Death, the giant panther, floated up to him
through the night, from the valley below where
they quarreled over the cooked horses, but somehow
Og felt strangely happy and comfortable by
his fire. The light and the heat and the flickering
flame tongues gave him a sense of protection in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</SPAN></span>
the night, a sense of protection that no other hairy
man had ever felt; and the wolf cubs, sprawled
in the warm glow, gave him an added feeling of
companionship. He was happy, so happy that he
wanted other hairy people to know about it; to
see what he had achieved; to witness his triumph
over the Fire Demon.</p>
<p>He began to think then of the other hairy people
who had fled from the wrath of the volcano. He
thought of Wab, his father, who was a mighty
hunter with the stone hatchet. Og had a vague
feeling that he was even a greater man than his
father now.</p>
<p>He thought of Gog, the fierce old warrior with
the scarred face and ugly disposition who was
chief of the hairy people because no one had the
courage to dispute it. Og hated him for many a
hard cuff and unnecessary beating. He was a
greater man than Gog now and he found malicious
pleasure in the thought of taking his fire animal
among his people and making Gog jealous with
the flame that would be his. If he could conquer
the Fire Demon assuredly he could conquer Gog.
The old chief would never dare come near him
while he held a fire brand in his hand.</p>
<p>Og decided to set out to find the hairy people<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</SPAN></span>
again since the roars and wails that came up from
the steaming valley told him all too plainly that it
was no longer safe for him to remain in that
vicinity.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</SPAN></span></p>
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