<h2 id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII<br/> <span class="smaller">THE WRATH OF THE FIRE MONSTER</span></h2>
<p>Og off with the wolf cubs, had a premonition
that all was not well. A strange
feeling of impending catastrophe haunted
him. He watched the wolf cubs to see whether
they sensed anything wrong, but they gave no
sign. Og’s instincts were keener even than theirs
in this emergency, for he knew that something was
amiss. He tried to shake off the feeling and
go on with his hunting, but, try as he would, a
strange something seemed urging him to return
to the canyon that had been his home now for
weeks past and, almost despite his own will
power, he obeyed.</p>
<p>Back across the pleasant valley he hurried, his
fire brand and stone hammer held in readiness,
and his sharp eyes and keen ears alert to catch
the first sign of trouble. On he pushed as
swiftly as his short legs would carry him, and
that was with incredible swiftness, all things considered.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</SPAN></span>
On his way he passed several groups
of tree people in the tops of palm trees, and they,
too, seemed to be strangely agitated, seeming to
become more disturbed than ever as he passed
with his fire brand.</p>
<p>Og tested the air with his nose. Something
made him pause and sniff again and again, while
his restless eyes roved the woods and the meadow,
and even the skyline beyond. There was a
strange tenseness about everything, and he saw a
low-hung cloud beyond the tops of the palm trees
that seemed all too near and very menacing. Yet
even then he could not understand what was happening.</p>
<p>On he hurried, and presently he was picking his
way among the boulders in the canyon toward the
sheltering rocks that he called home. Everything
appeared as he had left it. His precious tiger
skin, and other trophies were still rolled in the
corner among the rocks, his pile of sticks was
there, too, and so were his extra stone hammers
and his flint knives. What, then, could be wrong?</p>
<p>He looked about him. Then he gave a grunt of
surprise and crossed over to his stone fireplace.
Scar Face had been there. Scar Face had been
there and stolen some fire from the embers in his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</SPAN></span>
fireplace. Og stooped and picked up a stone hammer
that lay close to the fire and by this token
he knew all that had transpired in his absence.
It was the hammer that he had given the leader of
the tree people. Scar Face, as his kind were wont
to do, had dropped it and left it there, forgetting
it in his excitement at having a fire brand of his
own.</p>
<p>Og picked up the hammer and scrutinized it
carefully, then with it still in his hand, he turned
and looked out across the valley, across the tops
of the trees, to where the low-hung cloud appeared.
It was much larger now and much nearer
and Og could see that it was not as other clouds
in the sky, for it ballooned upward and outward
in great black billows and here and there it was
shot with tongues of flame. Og was chilled with
fear, for he knew that Scar Face had stolen the
fire and carried it off to the bush, and not knowing
its potentialities, had attempted to build himself
a camp fire in the woods. And, in doing it,
he had set the world on fire—loosed the wrathful
Fire Demon. Og could see it all, and he trembled
as he thought of the result, for his mind leapt
back to the volcano and the earthquake when the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</SPAN></span>
wrathful Fire Demon had set the world aflame
once before.</p>
<p>The hairy boy was thoroughly frightened. So,
too, were the wolf cubs now, for they raised their
sharp muzzles to the wind and sniffed apprehensively,
and whimpering drew closer to their
master.</p>
<p>It was a terrible forest fire that Scar Face had
started. A mass of dirty yellow smoke was rolling
skyward and drifting across the heavens. Soon it
began to obscure the sun. Og could see the great
orb through the smoke and it looked sinister and
menacing; like a great ball of fire itself. The air
became heavy and pungent with the odor of burning
vegetation. A great silence seemed to fall
over everything, even the birds were still. Yet a
part of this silence it seemed was an undertone
that struck dread even to the stout heart of the
hairy boy. It was the sinister moan of the fire,
far off it seemed and dreadful, but as it drew
nearer this moan would become a roar as the
flames leapt from tree to tree and tore through
the underbrush devouring everything in their
path.</p>
<p>Og began to wonder about his own safety and
the safety of the wolf cubs. He realized that the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</SPAN></span>
lack of vegetation there in the canyon would prevent
the flames from reaching him. But he realized,
too, that there was sufficient fuel on the
mountainsides above him, and in the pleasant valley,
to bring the flames uncomfortably close, and
blow billowing smoke clouds into the canyon, that
would choke them to death. What was he to do?</p>
<p>Presently he realized that he was not the only
one who was worried. A group of tree people
appeared at the mouth of the canyon, all of them
whimpering in terror. They paused there at the
entrance and looked in at Og as if beseeching
him to help them to safety. Others appeared.
They came at first in family groups of threes and
fours, and they gathered among the bowlders at
the entrance of the canyon, where they crouched
shivering with fear, and alternately watched the
ever-increasing smoke cloud and the actions of
the hairy boy. Still they came. In larger groups
now; sometimes a dozen or a score at a time. Soon
the entire entrance of the canyon was blocked with
the mass of them, but still they came. Hundreds
of them there were. Og marveled at their great
number.</p>
<p>The fire was increasing to terrific proportions
and drawing steadily nearer. The undertone that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</SPAN></span>
had at first sounded like a far-off moaning became
a steady roar, punctuated now and then by a great
snapping and cracking, or a crash as some mighty
tree, its trunk burned through, crashed to the
ground. The tongues of flame that shot upward
and split the rolling smoke bank like flashes of
lightning were fiercer now, and the air was hot and
heavy and pungent with the smoke. There was a
constant rain of fine cinders and charred bits of
sticks, some of them still hot and carrying live
sparks of fire. When these fell among the mass
of tree people squalls of terror arose and there
was a wild scrambling and milling about in their
mad effort to get out of the way of the dropping
ashes.</p>
<p>Soon they began to crowd in through the mouth
of the canyon, packing themselves into the declivity
like a huge flock of sheep. Og watched them
and wondered what would happen to them when
the leaping fire roared across the pleasant valley
and up the mountain’s sides overhead. Indeed,
he wondered with great fear what was going to
happen to him, too, when that situation developed.</p>
<p>The smoke was growing dreadfully thick even
down there close to the ground. It was a black
pall across the heavens by this time shutting out<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</SPAN></span>
the sun completely and a draught was drawing
thick billows of it into the canyon. The tree people
began coughing and spitting and rubbing their
eyes. Some of them were quick to discover that
the air was clearer and fresher close to the ground
and many of them threw themselves prone among
the stones and lay that way breathing in the
meager quantity of smoke-free air that lingered in
crevices between the rocks.</p>
<p>A terrific wind was roaring through the canyon.
It was a torrid wind, hot and scorching, for it
was created by the fire itself, a terrific draught
that whirled aloft great chunks of charred and
still smoking wood and dropped them among the
terror-stricken tree dwellers. Screams of pain
and anguish were added to the noise of the fire
and Og shuddered as he saw some among them
clutch at back or side and shriek with pain.</p>
<p>But the hairy boy was just as uncomfortable
as the tree people and in almost as much of a
panic. It was all too evident to him now that he
could not live long in the canyon. The thick acrid
smoke was in his lungs and he was coughing and
spitting with the rest of them. His eyes burned
like balls of fire themselves, for the smoke had
scorched them until they were raw and painful.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</SPAN></span>
He was busy, too, dodging the rain of charred
wood and hot cinders and more than one singed
his hair and bit deep into his flesh. It was a terrible
situation and the hairy boy was put to it
to find a way out of the difficulty.</p>
<p>He had clung to his refuge under the shelter of
the bowlders where he had made his home for days
past, but he was fast realizing now that this was
a far from satisfactory place to hide in the face
of this terrible threatening peril. But where was
he to go? In desperation he peered through the
smoke for some better rocky refuge; some more
protected corner of the canyon. And suddenly he
found it. Through a rift in the swirling smoke
bank he beheld the black opening of the sabre-toothed
tiger’s cave. It was an awesome place
to think of venturing into, but better by far than
any refuge the canyon afforded.</p>
<p>Eagerly Og gathered up his tiger skin, his best
knife and hammer, and his still burning fire brand.
Then, calling to the cowering wolf cubs, he started
to bolt through the smoke. But suddenly he
paused. He thought of the tree people. He knew
they would never think of the cave as a refuge
nor have the courage to venture into it if they
did think of it, and they would all perish there<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</SPAN></span>
in the canyon. He would show them. He would
lead the way.</p>
<p>He raised his voice in a great glad shout which
some of the ape men heard even above the roar of
the fire. They looked at him in astonishment,
and when they saw him beckoning and calling
them to follow, one by one they broke away from
the huddling, cringing mass and trailed him
through the swirling smoke cloud. And presently
Og was leading the whole tribe in the direction
that safety lay.</p>
<p>It was a bold and daring thing that he was
doing, and when Og reached the yawning entrance
of the great cave he stood before it irresolutely,
with the ape men cowering behind him and peering
into the sinister blackness of the interior. Not
so the wolf cubs, however. Once they saw the
cave they dashed inside. Og noticed that they
never hesitated, nor did they utter a single growl
of warning. Indeed, it was with a relieved whimper
that they sought this refuge and Og took
heart and stepped inside, but he slung his tiger
skin back over his shoulders and clutched his
hammer and fire brand ready for action as he
went deeper into the great cave.</p>
<p>Only a few moments longer did the tree people<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</SPAN></span>
hesitate, then with much squealing and pushing
and shoving the whole tribe crowded inside and
began to follow the hairy boy whose fire brand
torch dispelled some of the blackness and showed
them the way through narrow passages that led
deeper into the bowels of the mountain where
the air was free from smoke and cool and damp
and delightful to their singed and badly burned
bodies.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</SPAN></span></p>
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