<h2 id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV<br/> <span class="smaller">SMOTHERING DARKNESS</span></h2>
<p>His bravery giving way to wild panic, the
hairy boy dashed down the narrow
cavern at top speed, dodging in and
out among the stalactites but never once stopping
until thoroughly exhausted. Then, panting, he
came to rest and sat on the cave floor, while the
wolf dogs lay down beside him.</p>
<p>They were very quiet for a long time and Og
tested the air with his keen nose and listened for
the slightest sound coming down the cave, for
he was afraid that he might hear the scraping of
the big snake pursuing him. All was quiet, and
after a time in which he made certain that the
reptile was not following him, Og breathed a sigh
of relief and rested more comfortably.</p>
<p>The cave into which he had plunged went in an
entirely different direction from the one into
which the tree folk had disappeared and Og regretted
this. Once again he felt that dreadful
loneliness stealing upon him. The companionship<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</SPAN></span>
of the tree folk, even though it had not been as
intimate or as congenial as would have been the
company of his own kind, had meant a great deal
to the hairy boy and he was sorry that they had
been separated. In a vague way he wondered
what was happening to them. He doubtless would
have felt lonelier if not envious had he known
that, even as he rested there, the ape men were
swarming out of the cavern into which they had
plunged and, their recent terrifying experience
forgotten, were romping on the side of another
mountain that looked out on a new palm-grown
valley reaching southward.</p>
<p>Og wondered where the cave he had entered led
to, if indeed it led anywhere save into the bowels
of the mountain. With his loneliness, a sudden
indescribable fear of the dark, damp passage
settled down on him. He began to feel as if he
were a prisoner doomed to stay there underground
with the bats and other loathsome denizens
of the caves.</p>
<p>This fear spurred him into action, and although
he was still panting with the exertion of the chase,
he began a feverish, almost panic-stricken search
for a way out of the cave. The darkness was
dense and heavy; almost oppressive. To be sure,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</SPAN></span>
he still had his flickering torch but the feeble rays
of this only served to make the blackness of the
cave seem heavier. He began to feel as if this
darkness was pressing in upon him, trying to
smother him, to bury him alive there under the
great mountain that he knew was above him.</p>
<p>He started forward again, hurrying down the
cave as fast as he could. Sometimes it narrowed
down to openings so small that Og was almost
afraid to try to crawl through them, and each time
the boy wondered whether he had come to a blind
end of the labyrinth of underground passages.
But always these narrow passages widened out
again, though some of them were at times so
narrow that he could hardly force his body
through them without scraping hair, and even
skin, from hips and shoulders.</p>
<p>On and on he traveled. Time seemed long to
Og down there in the blackness and now and then
he despaired at ever getting out again. Yet he
kept on courageously. He must find a way out.
He must get into the sunshine once more. He
could not go on forever wandering about down
there in the blackness.</p>
<p>Vague fears began to obsess him; needless
fears brought on by the oppressiveness of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</SPAN></span>
blackness. What if another earthquake should
occur? What if the cave walls should give way
and the great mountain above him should sag
downward? What if one of these huge pendant
stalactites should drop upon him and pin him
down to hold him a prisoner there in the cave
until he died of hunger or thirst? Thoughts of
hunger and thirst made him both hungry and
thirsty. Og’s nerves were fast going to pieces
under the strain. He plunged madly on, half
frantic now in an insane desire to find the exit to
the cave, and he worked himself into a state of
almost complete collapse.</p>
<p>But just when he had reached utter despair,
something happened that helped him to master
himself and find his poise and lost courage once
more. The narrow cave suddenly widened out a
little more than usual and as Og stepped into
the small room-like vault in the rocks, an odor
that was most disgusting assailed his nostrils. By
the light of the torch he beheld bones scattered
about the floor of the cavern, bones of all shapes
and sizes, some partly gnawed and some with
shreds of decomposed meat still clinging to them.
It was the den of some animal that Og had blundered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</SPAN></span>
into, and his nose told him that it was the
den of a great cave tiger.</p>
<p>For a moment Og was petrified with fear. But
presently he beheld huddled in a far corner the
shapes of two cub tigers, dead now and rotting.</p>
<p>Og could see that they had been dead for some
time and his brain quickened by fear and all that
he had recently gone through told him that these
were cubs of the female tiger he had slain weeks
before. They had starved to death there in the
cave when their mother did not return.</p>
<p>Og smiled grimly, for he was glad to rid the
world of the whelp of this ferocious cat. But he
smiled, too, because he realized that all his recent
panic had been groundless. From the den he
could look down along the passageway ahead of
him and see, not far off, a shaft of soft, warm
light that he knew was sunlight. The exit to
the cave was close at hand.</p>
<p>The hairy boy did not linger. He made for
the entrance and presently he and the wolf dogs
found themselves on a ledge overlooking a valley
that extended away northward. And as he stood
there, below him Og beheld a figure moving; a
man, and one of his own kind.</p>
<p>Og gave a loud halloo, and waved his smoking<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</SPAN></span>
fire torch toward him. The hairy man in the valley
looked up at him thoroughly startled, then
as he saw Og move to climb down from the shelf
into the valley, he gave a cry of fear and dashed
off toward some cliffs on the other side of the valley.
Og paused and with disappointment on
his face, watched him go. Then the hairy boy
beheld the cliffs toward which the man was running
and his heart gave a great bound. The cliffs
were pockmarked with holes that Og knew were
the cave dwellings of the hairy men. And at the
alarm cry of the running hairy man, heads appeared
at many of these holes and looked out
across the valley, while from various points in the
woods, other hairy men and women appeared and
ran scrambling up the cliff to dodge into their
home caves for protection.</p>
<p>Og descended into the valley as swiftly as he
could. The tiger had worn a narrow, but well
defined trail from his den into the forest on the
valley bottom, and Og had little difficulty in following
it. Presently he was running through
the forest, with the wolf dogs romping after him.
It was a long way across the valley but the hairy
boy was so eager to reach the colony of hairy
men that he never noticed the distance. He<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</SPAN></span>
plunged forward recklessly, making a great noise,
and occasionally shouting in pure joy at having
found his own people once more.</p>
<p>After a time he arrived at the foot of the cliff.
Here, at the base of the almost perpendicular wall,
was a great rock-strewn flat, where the hairy folk
doubtless worked and played. Above in the cliffs
were a number of holes and crevices, from which
looked many curious faces. Og stood below and
shouted upward:</p>
<p>“Hallo. I am returned. The son of Wab has
come back. I am Og now. I have won my name.”</p>
<p>But in answer came a chorus of shouts of derision,
and from several doorways stones came
pelting down, and Og was forced to duck and
dodge as the ugly missiles whizzed by.</p>
<p>“Stop, stop. You are my people. I am the son
of Wab. Wab, the mighty hunter. Where is he?”
cried Og, from behind a boulder whence he had
dodged to avoid further stones that were hurled
at him.</p>
<p>The hairy boy was startled to receive an answer
from close at hand.</p>
<p>“I am here, O stranger. I, Wab, once the
mighty hunter. I am here ready and waiting for
you, O, stranger. If you are death come take<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</SPAN></span>
me. I am no longer of use to any one. I, the
mighty hunter, am blind and an outcast.”</p>
<p>The voice came from behind a nearby boulder
and, looking, Og beheld the crouching form of a
powerful man across whose face were many scars,
one of which had wiped out both of his eyes. It
was as if a great claw-armored paw had at some
time raked him and all but torn his face away.
Yet despite this disfigurement Og recognized him
as Wab, the mighty hunter, and his father.</p>
<p>“Father, I have returned. It is your son,” cried
the hairy boy, running to his side.</p>
<p>“No. Not my son. My son perished in the
great fire that drove us from our homes many
moons ago. You are Death. I know. I heard the
others shouting that you were coming from the
den of the tiger, with a tiger skin over your shoulders,
and a wand of mysterious power in your
hand; a wand from which fire and smoke flashed.
I know you. You are Death. Not my kin but kin
of the cave tiger, whose claw marks I bear on
my face. The tiger sent you to avenge the
blows of my stone hammer. She feared to come
back herself even though she knew I was blind.
She feared me and she sent you instead. But I
am ready to go with you, Death. I am an outcast<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</SPAN></span>
among my people. I am blind and helpless and
therefore useless. I cannot get my own food and
no one has time to get it for me. They throw me
scraps and bones to gnaw upon sometimes. They
help me up to my miserable little cave sometimes.
But when they are in a hurry and run to save their
own precious lives, they forget me and leave me
here, a blind man, to scramble up the cliffs as
best I can or to remain here and be killed.</p>
<p>“They left me to-day when they ran from you
in dread. They left me here. I sought to hide
myself behind this stone. But when you called
Wab, I knew that you were Death and I knew you
had come for me. So I am ready to go. Take me.”</p>
<p>Og was kneeling beside the man now. “No,
no,” he cried, “I am Life, not Death, for you, my
father. I have slain the tiger that has crippled
you so. I come with a mysterious wand, true.
It is a wand of fire. I have conquered the Fire
Demon. I can make him come from stone and do
my bidding. He guards me against the chill of
night. He dispels the blackness. He keeps me
safe from the sabre-toothed one and all other animals.
I have tamed the wolf dog too. They are
my companions now. I have won me a name. I
am Og, your son Og, and I have come back to protect<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</SPAN></span>
you, to care for you, to hunt for you, and to
fight for a place in the sun for you. It is well.”</p>
<p>“It is well. If this be true then I am happy.
If you are my son, you have been reborn to me.
You have been reborn from the fire. Og, Son of
Fire, are you, and my son, too. And now if this
be true help me, my son, up the cliff to my miserable
cave, where we may talk together.”</p>
<p>And Og reached a strong arm under that of his
father, once the mighty hunter, Wab, and together
they climbed the narrow trail up the cliff. And
the wolf dogs followed slowly after.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />