<h2 id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX<br/> <span class="smaller">GOG PASSES ON</span></h2>
<p>Og, tired but triumphant, with a dead goat
slung over his shoulders and the wolf
dogs trotting at his heels, returned to
the home cave just before nightfall, as all of the
cave dwelling people did, for not even the bravest
was willing to be caught far from the protection
of the colony when darkness came on.</p>
<p>But as he approached the cave he experienced
a sensation of fear and dread. He knew instinctively
that something was wrong, for the fire in
the doorway had burned down to just a smouldering
heap of dying embers. Og knew that Wab
would never have been so inattentive unless something
had happened.</p>
<p>Hastily he went forward calling, but as he
entered the big cave his heart fell, for Wab was
not about. He noted instantly that one of his
stone hammers was gone from its accustomed
place and that Wab’s cherished flint knife had disappeared<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</SPAN></span>
from the cleft in the rock wall where he
always kept it.</p>
<p>The strange demeanor of the wolf dogs added
a great deal to the discomfort that these observations
caused him, for so soon as they entered the
cave they bristled and growled and stepped about
in stiff-legged anger just as they always did when
Gog visited the cave. They sniffed at the ground,
too, and trotted a little way from the cave in the
direction of the forest.</p>
<p>Og could almost read the problem, but just then
two hairy men, Big Face and Crooked Feet,
passed, going toward the spring, and when they
saw Og they told him of how they had seen Wab
go off hunting with Gog that morning.</p>
<p>In an instant the whole situation dawned on
Og. Gog had taken his helpless father off into the
forest and Og instinctively knew that treachery
of some sort or another was afoot.</p>
<p>He heaped sticks onto the fire and sat down for
a few moments to think things over. Night was
coming on. The forest would be a terrible place
to travel in at night. But he thought too of his
father and the terror that must come upon a man
all but blind who might be left to wander about
in the forest alone.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>That thought was enough for Og. He must find
his father. He must risk any dangers or any of
the night terrors to find Wab. Hastily he made
two fire brands and ignited them. Then, arming
himself also with stone hammer and a long flint
knife, he called to the wolf dogs. The animals he
quickly made to understand just what was wanted
of them, and when they did know their mission
they bounded forward despite the fact that they
were tired, and with noses to the ground followed
the trail of Wab and Gog, while Og swung along
behind them at a remarkably swift pace despite
the fact that he too was tired from his day’s
efforts.</p>
<p>Into the black fastness of the forest they
plunged, their only light being the glimmer from
Og’s torches. Despite his courage and the importance
of his mission, Og could not stifle the
natural, instinctive fear that possessed him as he
dodged in and out among the trees, his eyes and
ears alert for any signs of danger.</p>
<p>Southward they swung toward the mountain
range that cut their valley off from the valley of
the warm lands beyond, and presently they began
to mount the thickly wooded slopes. Strange
night noises they heard aplenty. To most of these<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</SPAN></span>
the wolf dogs paid little heed, but when from afar
they heard the terrifying roar of a cave tiger and
the answering challenge of some wandering cave
leopard, the hair on their backs bristled. So did
that of Og, and he actually trembled with fear
despite the stoutness of his heart. This traveling
at night through the forest was a fearsome thing
to do, and time and again he was tempted to seek
the shelter of some huge bowlder, and build a
great fire beside which to spend the remainder
of the night.</p>
<p>But the thoughts of his father somewhere here
in the terrible forest, and without fire (for Og
knew that Wab, or Gog either, would never travel
with a fire in his hand the way he did), spurred
the hairy boy on to move faster and put aside the
desire to build a big protective fire at least until
he had found his father.</p>
<p>Upward on the mountain side they climbed, the
wolf dogs following closely the trail that Gog and
Wab had taken. On and on they pushed, soon
panting and out of breath. Og’s lungs were
pumping, too, and he sucked in air in great gasps;
but still he climbed and kept pace with the hurrying
dogs.</p>
<p>Soon they reached the gently rolling summit,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</SPAN></span>
where if it had been daylight they could have
looked into the valley below. But as they halted
there a brief space to catch their breaths, Og gave
a loud and startled grunt, for from below him,
and in the direction the wolf dogs were straining
to go, rolled up to him a loud, booming sound.
Og had little difficulty in recognizing it as the war
noise of his old captors, the tree people. And
this all added to his feeling of alarm, for he could
tell by the volume of the sound that there were
many ape-like men below there in the valley and
they were very angry.</p>
<p>If Og and the wolf dogs had hurried before
now, they fairly raced through the blackness of
the forest. Down the slope they crashed, the
booming noise growing louder and nearer at every
step. And as they plunged forward both Og and
the wolf dogs grew more and more excited, until
presently the hairy boy found himself beating his
chest with one clenched hand and roaring at the
top of his voice while the dogs set up a fierce
barking that added to the general din of the
occasion.</p>
<p>Suddenly the booming sound, which now seemed
close at hand, stopped and Og became aware of
big forms swinging among the branches of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</SPAN></span>
trees. Sticks came pelting down out of the blackness,
too, and he could see myriads of green eyes
glowing at him and he could hear teeth gnashed
and clicked together. Still he rushed forward
until presently he broke into a clearing where was
massed a horde of milling, chattering tree people.</p>
<p>His coming, however, caused panic and consternation
among them. They saw his flaming
firebrand and they scattered and fell back. And
the parting of the mass left a lane open that
extended to a huge rock where, with their backs
to this wall, stood Gog and Wab, each with a
blood-smeared stone hammer clutched in his hand
while before them laid a pile of writhing bodies
of tree people. Og could see at a glance that it
had been a terrible battle and that Gog and Wab
were all but done for. Indeed, Gog, dripping
blood from a hundred terrible wounds, staggered
and swayed as he stood there, and Wab had to
lean against the rock for support.</p>
<p>At Og’s coming the conflict ceased for most of
the ape people scattered and took to trees where
they stared down, chattering loudly and gnashing
their teeth in anger and fear. Og strode across
the bodies of the fallen ones and, standing there<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</SPAN></span>
beside Wab, his burning torch held high, glared
about.</p>
<p>By the light of the flickering flames he could
see great, long-armed, crouching forms all about.
Some of these he recognized as the powerful
fighters of Scar Face. And presently he discerned
the old fighter himself, coming slowly
toward him, grimacing and chattering and holding
up his hands as a sign of peace. Og beheld him
with interest and not a little pleasure, for often
he had thought of him and wondered whether he
had been able to escape the terrible forest fire
that he had started when he stole a firebrand and
ran off into the forest with it.</p>
<p>By grunts and signs, Og showed his peaceful
intention too, and presently Scar Face communicated
the fact that the hairy boy had not come to
wage war on them, for the chattering and scolding
ceased and slowly some began to approach, while
others, the trouble over, scattered among the trees
and became lost in the night.</p>
<p>Og turned his attention then to Gog and Wab,
both of whom had collapsed and now lay huddled
and forlorn at the base of the big bowlder.
Eagerly Og searched his father for signs of life,
for he feared that the old hunter had passed on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</SPAN></span>
because of the many wounds he had received,
and it was with great relief that he discovered
still a strong heart beat.</p>
<p>Gog, however, had fared far worse than Wab.
Fierce and terrible as a fighter, and valiant in
battle too, the old leader, his treachery forgotten
in the lust of combat, had carried the brunt of
the fight from the very beginning, wielding a
mighty hammer and crushing skulls right and left.
The consequence was that the tree people had
attacked him with utmost fierceness, as scores of
bleeding wounds testified. When Og examined
him he found the old leader all but dead. Indeed,
even as the hairy boy leaned over him, Gog’s
heart stopped beating and Og turned from him
with a shudder. The fierce old warrior had
passed on to the land of dead men.</p>
<p>By signs and grunts Og made Scar Face understand
that he wanted to carry the unconscious
Wab back over the mountain and into the valley
of the hairy people, and when the tree man understood
he was quick to lend his tremendous strength
and between them they carried the limp form of
Og’s father up the slope to the top of the mountain.
There Scar Face refused to go farther, so
Og shouldered the burden alone and picked his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</SPAN></span>
way slowly down the rocky, wooded slope, with
the wolf dogs, tails drooping, at his heels. It
was a hard journey for the tired hairy boy, and
day was breaking over the eastern mountain tops
before he reached the council grounds and the
friendly shelter of the big home cave, where he
could rest once more and care for the many
wounds of his father.</p>
<p class="titlepage">THE END.</p>
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