<h2 id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX<br/> <span class="smaller">SACRIFICED TO SABRE TOOTH</span></h2>
<p>Why had they not killed him?</p>
<p>This question puzzled Og more than
any other. Certainly they had had
ample opportunity. That night, there in the
sequoia forest, they could have strangled him and
left his body for the wolves. Or at any time during
their long tree top journey they needed but to
drop him from the branches of one of the high
palms and the crash to the ground would have
broken every bone in his body. And again, when
they attacked him, Scar Face could have broken
his back, but refrained, or the group of warriors
together could have literally torn him limb from
limb, yet they had not done so. Surely it could
not have been cowardice that had stayed them,
nor yet mercy, for mercy was a quality that Og
knew but little about and the tree men nothing at
all. Why then had he been spared?</p>
<p>Og puzzled with this question many times in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</SPAN></span>
days that followed, and tired his slowly developing
brain to absolute fatigue more than once in
pondering for a reason.</p>
<p>It was strange position he found himself in. He
was a prisoner. He knew this only too well, for
during the hours of daylight Scar Face and some
of his stalwart fighters crouched at points of vantage
and Og knew by their demeanor that he could
not pass them and go where he pleased. But his
was a strange sort of prison. They had hurled
him into a veritable blind canyon carved by nature
in the rocky side of a mountain, whose high walls
tapered from their broad opening into the pleasant
valley, to a narrow declivity behind him that
ended in the black and foreboding entrance of a
great and deep cavern.</p>
<p>Og feared this cave, as did the wolf cubs. They
kept as far away from the black entrance as they
could, and always they watched it with signs of
terror in their eyes. Og could read their fear in
their growls and bristling hair, and instinct told
him, too, that death lurked there in some terrible
form. Just what it was he could not understand,
for his sensitive nose, or delicate ears, or yet that
strange protective instinct that was his, did not
give him any definite indication of what the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</SPAN></span>
danger might be. Still danger, he knew, was there
and he too kept as far away from the cave’s entrance
as possible.</p>
<p>He and the wolf cubs were allowed to roam at
will up and down the canyon, from the cave to
its very mouth, where it looked out upon the broad
and sunlit valley, but beyond this point they could
not go for always Scar Face and his tree people
were on guard to prevent him. It was at the
mouth of the canyon, that, once a day, he found
food. The tree people always at midday left a
pile of strange fruits and stranger nuts for him
to eat. There on a flat rock they laid them and
Og knew by this that they were afraid to come
further inside the canyon in which they had made
him prisoner.</p>
<p>The strange diet of fruit and nuts was at first
distasteful to Og. The hairy people were meat
eaters and fruit formed a very small part of their
diet, save berries and certain roots and barks,
which his people had learned to use. But the tree
folk were not flesh eaters, and they gave him only
what they ate themselves, but they gave in abundance,
and Og, after a day of fasting, found that
he could eat this new food with a certain degree
of relish.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>This being a prisoner was strange and unpleasant
to the hairy boy and for a time he did little
but sit among the jagged rocks, with the wolf cubs
beside him, and wonder what it was all about. But
on the second day, as his numerous cuts and
bruises began to heal, his spirits lifted and presently
he began seeking about for ways out of
his difficulty. The discovery that the tree folk
were prevented by fear from entering the canyon,
although it aggravated his fear of the lurking
menace of the cave, also made him realize that
in his prison he could do about as he chose without
any interference from them. This fact discovered,
Og forthwith set about making himself
weapons, for he felt that he might need them
sooner than he anticipated.</p>
<p>A stone hammer was his first thought, and as
he cast about among the rocks for desirable material,
he could but think of the valuable weapons
he had once possessed in the fire brands. How he
regretted the over-confidence and the lack of vigilance
that had made him let that precious fire burn
out. Oh, if he only knew of some way of rekindling
the flame; of calling back the Fire Demon.</p>
<p>Although there were rocks in profusion scattered
about the canyon, Og was surprised to find<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</SPAN></span>
that there was really a dearth of good material
for a stone hammer. The rocks were all too large
or of the wrong shape, and he spent a great deal
of time searching and wandered all too close to
the foreboding cave, before he recalled quite suddenly,
and with a great deal of interest, the methods
he had employed in getting the stone knife
with which he skinned the wolves that day in the
sequoia forest. He remembered suddenly that,
not finding satisfactory material, he had broken a
sharp scale from the large rock, by pounding it
with another stone. Why not do the same thing
to shape a hammer head?</p>
<p>Og sat down and thought the idea over. Then
he found the best shaped stone he could and puzzled
over it for some time before he proceeded
with his first effort at craftsmanship. The stone
was too heavy and too long. Og realized that if he
could break off one end it would be nearer what
he wanted. He proceeded to beat it against a
bowlder and presently he was rewarded by having
part of it break off, leaving in his hand a rather
good hammer head. But, this achieved, Og was
not satisfied. He surveyed the product and realized
that it was not as satisfactory as the last one
he had possessed. It was too irregular and misshapen.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</SPAN></span>
The question then took form in his mind,
why not reshape it with the aid of other stones!</p>
<p>Elated with the idea, Og proceeded to find another
stone that he could handle, and after a
search he picked up one about the size of his fist
that was black and extremely hard. Og did not
know that he had fortunately found a piece of
flint. With this and the rude hammer head in his
hands he sought out a flat rock, and sitting down
with the hammer head between his knees, proceeded
with his task of shaping it, while the guards
of the tree people looked on from the mouth of
the canyon with apish inquisitiveness.</p>
<p>But Og had not chipped more than a half dozen
strokes when he made a startling discovery, one
that made him experience a strange mixture of
fear and elation. He proceeded first to chip away
a jagged corner of the hammer head with his piece
of flint, when suddenly, and much to his astonishment,
the flint gave off a series of fire sparks. So
startled was Og that he dropped the black stone
and sat staring at it in amazement. He had discovered
fire again.</p>
<p>After a time he picked up the flint and felt it
carefully. It was not hot, yet it contained fire.
That was strange. It was black. The cooling<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</SPAN></span>
volcanic rock from which he had lighted his
resinous torch first was also black. Was this,
then, the same kind of fire rock? Og searched
about and found a stick. He touched it to the
flint; held it there a long time yet no tiny spirals
of smoke rewarded him as he expected. Still he
knew the fire was in the rock. It leapt out when
he struck it against another rock. He tried it, and
with the second tap more sparks flew.</p>
<p>Og examined the flint carefully; turned it over
and over, felt it again, tried once more to light
the stick, then, still holding it in his hand, he sat
and thought and thought and thought, until his
brain grew tired. The fire was in the rock, of
that he was certain, but how to get it out and in
his possession, under his control, was a vexing
question.</p>
<p>Ere long the hammer head was shaped to his
satisfaction. To secure a handle and tough bark
with which to lash both stone and stick together
was not difficult, for among the rocks was scrubby
vegetation that yielded him both of these necessities.
Og put his now valuable chipping flint in
a safe place, while he worked diligently but carefully
at making the rest of his hammer.</p>
<p>The coming of night was fraught with unpleasantness<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</SPAN></span>
for Og. A prisoner there in the canyon,
with the menacing entrance of that mysterious
black cave behind him, and the guards of the tree
people on the alert and closing his only way of
escape, made more acute his inherent fear of the
hours of darkness. How glad he was to have the
company of the faithful wolf cubs then.</p>
<p>Before night was well upon him, Og and the
wolf cubs climbed as high as they could on the
sides of the canyon and, huddled behind a huge
bowlder, with their faces turned toward the rear
of the canyon and the entrance of the cave.</p>
<p>And it was well for Og that he decided to climb
part way up the canyon wall and take shelter
behind the bowlder, for hardly had he become
comfortably huddled down with the wolf cubs
nestled close to him, when the narrow confines of
the canyon echoed with a wild blood-chilling roar
and, through the blackness of the canyon, Og
could see in the entrance of the cave two glowing
eyes and the outline of a huge sabre-toothed tiger.</p>
<p>Softly, yet swiftly, Og reached out and covered
the mouths of the wolf cubs, for he knew that a
whimper or growl from them would bring the
great beast down upon them in an instant. Then
like statues, without the movement of a muscle,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</SPAN></span>
they sat there and watched the great beast come
slowly forth from the cave, stretch itself and
yawn, then test the wind by throwing up its massive,
ugly head. And as Og watched just a glimmer
of the real idea for his imprisonment in the
canyon took shape in his brain. Had they left
him there as a sacrifice to this beast?</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus6.jpg" width-obs="450" height-obs="600" alt="" /> <p class="caption">It was trying to trace the direction of an odor</p> </div>
<p>Og was close to the truth of the matter, though,
of course, he could not know all of the details of
how the great, sabre-toothed one, at times, made
life miserable for the people of the tribe of Scar
Face, appearing suddenly and collecting toll from
their numbers, only to disappear just as suddenly
and leave the pleasant valley quiet and unmolested
for weeks. To the tree people the great
tiger was a terrible monster and a mysterious
one. They knew that it came from the cave and
returned to it. They thought that it slumbered
there and came out only occasionally, when extremely
hungry. They did not know that this cave
ran clear through the base of the mountain, and
was really a backdoor to the great beast’s real
den, which opened into another valley beyond the
mountains, a far more desirable valley from the
tiger’s point of view than that of the tree people,
for hunting was better there with beavers, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</SPAN></span>
sloths, oxen, deer, and wild horses in abundance,
any one of which made a better meal for him than
did the thin and wiry tree people. That was why
the great sabre-toothed one left the den only occasionally
by the back door to hunt in the valley of
the tree people. Her periodical visits, however,
were terrifying to the ape men, for always the
great cat caught one of their number out in the
open, or, failing this, climbed one of the tall palms,
in which the tree people made their rude homes,
and tore down the rough and flimsy platforms
they had learned to build, and wiped out a whole
family in its ferocious effort to get at least one
victim to take back to the den. That was why
Scar Face and his people had carried Og all the
way back to the valley, and that was why the
whole tribe rejoiced when he was brought in a
prisoner. For weeks they had been dreading another
visit from Sabre Tooth, and they felt that
if they could furnish a victim she would leave
them unmolested for a time at least.</p>
<p>Og sensed a great deal of this as he and the
wolf cubs crouched trembling behind the big bowlder
part way up the canyon wall and he watched
the great beast pick its way slowly and deliberately
among the rocks while fear gripped his heart.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Suddenly the tiger stopped and lifted its nose
toward the sky, at the same time moving its
head and thick muscular neck slowly from side to
side. It was trying to trace the direction of an
odor that came down on the night wind, and Og
instinctively knew that the odor was his odor
and that the sinister beast had detected his presence
in the canyon.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</SPAN></span></p>
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