WISE ONE WAS happy. For the first time since Old One had made
dead, he did not have to think all the time of what to do next and
what would happen to the others if anything happened to him. Big
Ones’ Friend would think about all that now; he was leading
the band. Of course, he insisted that Wise One was the leader, but
that was foolishness.
Or maybe it wasn’t; maybe it was wisdom so wise that he
thought it was foolishness because he was foolish himself. That was
a thought he had never had before. Maybe he was getting wiser just
by being with Big Ones’ Friend. Big Ones’ Friend
didn’t want to make trouble in the band; that was why he said
Wise One should lead and had given the—the w’eesle—to
show it. His fingers went to his throat to reassure himself that he
really had it.
Then he squirmed comfortably among the dry soft grass and ferns
under the brush shelter Big Ones’ Friend had shown them how
to make, with the warmth and glow of the fire on him, listening to
the wind among the trees and the splashing of the little
moving-water and the sound of the lake behind him. Fire was
wonderful when one learned how to make it and how to keep it safe.
He had been afraid of it; all the People, all the Fuzzies—he must
remember that word—but when one knew about it, it was good. It
frightened all the big animals away. It made warmth when one was
cold. It made meat many-many times better.
But best of all, it made light in the dark. Look, here were
Other She and Carries-Bright-Things and Fruitfinder, beside the
fire, twisting longleaf-tree roots to make . . . to make rope—that
was a Big One word. The People, Fuzzies, had no word for it because
they had never known of it. It was long after dark. Without fire
they would all have been asleep long ago. And Stonebreaker was
working too, making the chopping-stones to put on sticks. It was
strange that nobody had thought of doing that before, or of putting
pointed stones on longer sticks to stab with. That made killing
hatta-zosa—goofers—much easier; Stabber and Lame One had killed
four today, after sun-highest time, noon, and it would have taken
the whole band to kill that many with stones and clubs. Big
Ones’ Friend was sitting with Stonebreaker now, fitting one
of the cutting-stones onto a stick.
This was the fourth night since they had come to this place.
They had slept around a fire at the place where they had first met
Big Ones’ Friend. The next morning Big Ones’ Friend had
given them the Wonderful Food of the Big Ones, all he had, a little
for each of them. He had told them that at Wonderful Place the Big
Ones gave it all the time to all Fuzzies, as much as they wanted.
After that, all of them had wanted to go to Wonderful Place and
make friends with the Big Ones, even Big She. They had wanted to
start at once, but Big Ones’ Friend had said that they should
build a floating-thing, a raft, and go down the river and over to
the other side. He had said that all the time and work they put
into this would be saved, that it would be far-far to go up to
where this river was little enough to cross without a raft.
Big Ones’ Friend had made a little show-like out of sticks
to show the big raft he meant that they should make. He said the
Big Ones often did this, first making something little before
making it big to use. Then they had come to this place, and he had
said it was a good place to make the raft. So they had made camp,
and he had showed them how to make this shelter, and had made a
place for their fire, and dug a long hole for the barba-koo fire.
Then they had begun digging roots and making rope, and Big
Ones’ Friend had built fires at the roots of the trees he had
wanted for the raft, and burned them till they fell. They cut off
the branches with the chopping-stones—axes—he and Stonebreaker made
out of hard-stone they had found up the little stream, but the
trees themselves were too big to cut in that way, so Big
Ones’ Friend made fires to burn them into logs. This was
dangerous; even Big Ones’ Friend was afraid about this. These
fires might get loose and burn everything. That was why he and Big
Ones’ Friend would sit up and watch while the others slept,
and then they would wake Stabber and Big She and Lame One, who were
sleeping now, and after a while they would wake Fruitfinder and
Other She and Carries-Bright-Things, and they would watch till
daylight.
After a while, Fruitfinder and Carries-Bright-Things and Other
She finished the rope they were making and coiled it, and then came
into the shelter and lay down to sleep. Stonebreaker worked on at
the axehead, and Big Ones’ Friend finished putting the one
Stonebreaker had made onto a stick. He took it over to the woodpile
and tried it while Stonebreaker watched. They both laughed at how
good it was. Then he and Stonebreaker came over under the
shelter.
“Show shining-stone,” Stonebreaker begged.
Big Ones’ Friend took it out of his shoulder bag and
rubbed it for a while between his hands. Then the three of them
leaned together, out of the light of the fire, to look at it. None
of them had ever seen a thing like that, but Big Ones’ Friend
said they were known among Big Ones, and one of his friends, Pappy
Vic, dug many of them out of rock. He had found this one while he
was breaking a piece of hard black rock he had found up the little
stream. It was inside the rock, a stone the shape of a
zarabunny’s kidney. It looked just like any other stone until
it was rubbed; then it shone like a hot coal in the fire. But it
was not hot. This was a not-understand thing; even Big Ones’
Friend did not know how it could be.
“Pappy Jack used to dig for these stones,” Big
Ones’ Friend said. “Then all the other Big Ones found
out about the Fuzzies, and they said Pappy Jack should do nothing
but take care of the Fuzzies and teach them.”
“Tell more about Pappy Jack. Is he Wise One for all the
Big Ones?”
“No. That is Pappy Ben,” Big Ones’ Friend
said. “He is Wise One for Gov’men’. And Pappy Vic
is Wise One for Comp’ny; that is another Big One thing, like
Gov’men’. Pappy Jack is Wise One for all Fuzzies. All
Big Ones listen to Pappy Jack about Fuzzies.”
He talked for a long while about Pappy Jack and about Pappy Vic
and Pappy Ben and Pappy Gerd and Mummy Woof and Pappy George and
the blue-clothes Big Ones, and about Wonderful Place and Big House
Place. It was all wonderful, but hard to understand. There were not
enough Fuzzy words to tell about everything, which was why Big
Ones’ Friend said they must all learn as many Big One words
as they could. They must also learn to make talk from the back of
the mouth, so that the Big Ones could hear them. They were
practicing that now.
After a while, Stonebreaker became sleepy and lay down. Big
Ones’ Friend got out his pipe and tobacco and they smoked,
taking puffs in turn. One of the night-time sky-lights—moons was
the Big Ones’ word—came up. The Big Ones had names for both
of them. This one was called Zerk-Zees. The other, which was not in
the sky now, was called Dry-As. The Big Ones knew all about them;
they were very big and very far away, and they went to them in
flying things. Big Ones’ Friend said he had been on
Zerk-Zees, which looked so small, himself. This was hard to
believe, but Big Ones’ Friend said so.
“You really say for so? You not just make not-so
talk?”
Big Ones’ Friend was surprised that he should ask a thing
like that. “Nobody make not-so talk,” he said.
“I make not-so talk once.” Wise One glad that he
could tell something Big Ones’ Friend did not know about.
“Once I say to others that I see hesh-nazza, damnthing, and
was no damnthing—”
Then he told how he had wanted to go to find the Big One Place,
and the others had wanted to stay where they were.
“So, I tell them I see big damnthing; damnthing chase me.
They all frightened. Was no damnthing, but they not know. They all
leave place, make run fast up mountain to get away from damnthing.
But was no damnthing at all. We go down other side of mountain, not
go back.”
Big Ones’ Friend looked at him in wonder. For all his
wisdom, he would not have thought of that. Then he laughed.
“You ‘wise one’,” he said. “I not
think to do that. But is true I was on Zerk-Zees. Big One take me
there to hide when other Big Ones make trouble, once.”
He told about Zerk-Zees, but it was hard. He didn’t know
the words to tell about it. After a while, they both lay down and
went to sleep.
IT SEEMED LIKE only a moment, and then Other She was shaking
him, crying:
“Wake up, Wise One! Fire burn everything! Big
fire!”
He kicked Big Ones’ Friend, who was beside him, and sat
up. It was so. Everything was brighter than if both moons were
biggest and shining together, and there was a loud noise of
crackling and roaring. It was coming from where they had been
burning the trees into logs. The fire was burning dry things on the
ground, and even small bushes had caught fire. Fruitfinder and
Carries-Bright-Things had branches and were trying to beat it out,
but it was too big and in too many places. Then he remembered the
whistle, and blew it as hard as he could. By this time, Big
Ones’ Friend was awake and kicking Stabber and saying funny
Big One words that Wise One didn’t know, and then everybody
was awake and all shouting at the same time.
Stabber caught up his spear and started to run at the fire with
it. Big Ones’ Friend caught him by the arm.
“Not kill fire with spear,” he said. “Kill
fire by take dry things away from it. Stop, everybody! Not do
anything; make think what to do first.”
By this time, Carries-Bright-Things and Fruitfinder came back;
Fruitfinder was slapping Carries-Bright-Things with his hands to
put out where her fur had caught fire, and Carries-Bright-Things
was saying, “Fire too big; not able to kill.”
Big Ones’ Friend was yelling for everyone to be quiet. He
picked up his axe and went forward a little, then came back.
“Not put out, too big,” he said. “We go where
fire not burn. Fire always burn way wind blow. Fire not burn on
water. We go into water, try to get behind fire. Then we
safe.”
“But we go away, fire burn up nice sleeping-place. Burn up
rope. We work hard make rope,” somebody was arguing.
“You want fire burn up you?” Wise One asked.
“Then, not make talk. Do what Big Ones’ Friend
say.” He blew the whistle again, and they were all quiet.
“Now what we do?” he asked Big Ones’ Friend.
“Take spears, take axes,” Big Ones’ Friend
said. He was feeling at his shoulder bag to make sure he had
everything and that it was closed tightly. “Go out in water
as far as can. Wait till fire here burn everything up. Then come
out where fire not burn, be safe.”
Carries-Bright-Things had gotten the three sticks with the
kata-jes. She caught Big Ones’ Friend by the arm.
“You put in bag, keep safe,” she was saying.
“Not lose.”
She twisted them off the sticks, and Big Ones’ Friend put
them in his bag. Then he got a long piece of rope and tied one end
about his waist.
“Everybody, wrap around waist,” he said. “We
go in water. Somebody fall in deep place, pull him out.”
Nobody had realized that that could be done. Rope was to tie
logs together; nobody had thought of using it for anything else. He
was called Wise One, and he hadn’t even thought of that. By
this time, the fire was very big. It had caught a tree that had
died from being chewed by goofers and all the branches of it were
burning, and another tree next to it had caught fire. All the dry
things on the ground were burning along the lake and back away from
it, but nothing was burning in the direction from which the wind
came toward the fire.
They roped themselves together, everybody carrying a spear and
an axe, and went out into the water, until finally it was almost up
to their necks. Then they stood still, looking back by the fire. By
that time, it had reached the sleeping-place and it had caught
fire. The ferns and dry grass blazed up, the brush caught fire,
and, as they watched, the pole burned through and everything fell.
Some of the band wailed in grief. That had been a good
sleeping-place, the best sleeping-place they had ever made. Big
Ones’ Friend was saying:
“Bloody-hell sunnabish! All good rope, all goofer skins,
all logs, all burn up. Now have to do again.”
They waited a long time in the water. It grew hot even where
they were. They had to take deep breaths and draw their heads down
under the water for as long as they could and then raise them to
breathe again. The air was hot and full of smoke, and bits of
burning things fell among them. Whole trees were burning now.
Different kinds of trees burned in different ways. Longleaf trees
caught fire quickly, and then the leaves all burned and the fire
went out, and then the branches would catch fire in places. But the
blue roundleaf trees would not catch at first, but then they would
catch all over and great flames would shoot high.
Finally, the fire close to them grew less, though the big trees
were all burning. It had burned far away in the direction the wind
blew. Big Ones’ Friend said that the ground would be hot
where the fire had been, and burn their feet, so they waded along
where the water was shallow to where the small moving-water came
into the lake. The fire had started to burn along this, but not
across it, so they crossed over and started up on the other side.
Big Ones’ Friend untied the rope from around his waist, and
they wrapped it around the staff of a spear; Big She and Lame One
carried it.
Animals were in the woods, all frightened by the fire. They came
close enough to a takku, a zarabuck, to kill it with their spears.
But why should they? They would only have to carry the meat with
them, and it might be that they would have to run fast to get away
from the fire. The little stream turned and came from the direction
the fire was burning. Then they came to a place where there was
fire on their side too. Everybody was frightened because Big
Ones’ Friend had said that fire would not cross a
moving-water, but he could see how this had happened: the wind had
carried little burning-things over it, and started new fires.
“We go away from here,” Big Ones’ Friend said.
“Soon be fire all around. Go away through woods; keep wind in
face.”
Everybody began to run. The brush was thick. After a while, Wise
One saw Lame One running alone with his spear and axe, and then he
saw Big She with only an axe. Big Ones’ Friend would be angry
with them; they had thrown away the spear on which the rope was
wrapped. The brush became more thick, and now there were also long
vines. These vines would be good to tie logs together for a raft.
He would try to remember them when they came to build a new raft.
He was going to speak of it to Big Ones’ Friend, but when
they stopped to catch their breaths, Big Ones’ Friend was
saying the funny mean-nothing Big One words. Maybe he was
frightened. This was a bad place to be, with the fire so near.
At first the moon, Zerk-Zees, which was more than half round,
was on their left as they ran, and a little in front. After a
while, he saw that it was almost directly in front of them, though
it was only a little higher. He spoke of this to Big Ones’
Friend and also to Stabber. They stopped, and Big Ones’
Friend got out his point-north thing, and made a light with his
firemaker. Then he said more Big One words.
“Wind change. Maybe change more, maybe bring fire to us.
Come, make run fast.”
They floundered on through the brush and among the vines and
trees. After a while they came to a big moving-water, not as big as
the one that made wide lake-places, but still big. They could not
cross. There was argument about what to do. The fire was up the
river, but if they went down they would come to where it came into
the lake, and that would be a bad place to get out of. He looked in
the direction of the fire and was glad that he could not see yellow
flames, though all the sky was bright pink. The wind still blew
toward the fire, so they decided to go down the river.
The brush became less thick, and here were tall longleaf trees.
There were animals all about, moving in the woods, frightened by
the fire. Then, ahead they saw the light of Zerk-Zees shining on
the lake.
“Not go that way,” somebody—Wise One thought it was
Stonebreaker—said.
“Not go across moving-water either,” Big She said.
“Too deep.”
“Make raft,” Big Ones’ Friend said.
“Little raft. Get big sticks, tie together with rope, put
things on. Some get on raft, some swim. Who has rope?”
Nobody had the rope. Lame One and Big She had thrown it away to
run faster. Big Ones’ Friend said one of the mean-nothing
words, then thought for a moment. “We go along lake, that
way.” He pointed east, where the thin edge of Dry-As was just
above the horizon. “Go back to place fire start. Maybe all
dead, ground cool. Then we be safe.”
Fruitfinder said he was hungry. Now that it was said, everybody
else was hungry too. They found a goofer, so frightened that
Stabber just walked up to it and speared it. Big Ones’ Friend
took out his knife, skinned it, and cut it up. They did not make a
fire to cook it. Nobody, not even Big Ones’ Friend, wanted to
make fire here, and they did not want to wait while it cooked. They
all ate it raw.
While they were eating he smelled smoke, but thought it was an
old smell in his fur. Then Carries-Bright-Things said she smelled
smoke, and so did Stonebreaker. They stopped eating and looked
about. The fire was much brighter, and they could see yellow flames
among the red pink glow over the trees.
Big Ones’ Friend said, “Jeeze-krise go-hell bloody
damn! Wind change again. Fire that way, wind come from fire, bring
fire here!”
WISE ONE WAS happy. For the first time since Old One had made
dead, he did not have to think all the time of what to do next and
what would happen to the others if anything happened to him. Big
Ones’ Friend would think about all that now; he was leading
the band. Of course, he insisted that Wise One was the leader, but
that was foolishness.
Or maybe it wasn’t; maybe it was wisdom so wise that he
thought it was foolishness because he was foolish himself. That was
a thought he had never had before. Maybe he was getting wiser just
by being with Big Ones’ Friend. Big Ones’ Friend
didn’t want to make trouble in the band; that was why he said
Wise One should lead and had given the—the w’eesle—to
show it. His fingers went to his throat to reassure himself that he
really had it.
Then he squirmed comfortably among the dry soft grass and ferns
under the brush shelter Big Ones’ Friend had shown them how
to make, with the warmth and glow of the fire on him, listening to
the wind among the trees and the splashing of the little
moving-water and the sound of the lake behind him. Fire was
wonderful when one learned how to make it and how to keep it safe.
He had been afraid of it; all the People, all the Fuzzies—he must
remember that word—but when one knew about it, it was good. It
frightened all the big animals away. It made warmth when one was
cold. It made meat many-many times better.
But best of all, it made light in the dark. Look, here were
Other She and Carries-Bright-Things and Fruitfinder, beside the
fire, twisting longleaf-tree roots to make . . . to make rope—that
was a Big One word. The People, Fuzzies, had no word for it because
they had never known of it. It was long after dark. Without fire
they would all have been asleep long ago. And Stonebreaker was
working too, making the chopping-stones to put on sticks. It was
strange that nobody had thought of doing that before, or of putting
pointed stones on longer sticks to stab with. That made killing
hatta-zosa—goofers—much easier; Stabber and Lame One had killed
four today, after sun-highest time, noon, and it would have taken
the whole band to kill that many with stones and clubs. Big
Ones’ Friend was sitting with Stonebreaker now, fitting one
of the cutting-stones onto a stick.
This was the fourth night since they had come to this place.
They had slept around a fire at the place where they had first met
Big Ones’ Friend. The next morning Big Ones’ Friend had
given them the Wonderful Food of the Big Ones, all he had, a little
for each of them. He had told them that at Wonderful Place the Big
Ones gave it all the time to all Fuzzies, as much as they wanted.
After that, all of them had wanted to go to Wonderful Place and
make friends with the Big Ones, even Big She. They had wanted to
start at once, but Big Ones’ Friend had said that they should
build a floating-thing, a raft, and go down the river and over to
the other side. He had said that all the time and work they put
into this would be saved, that it would be far-far to go up to
where this river was little enough to cross without a raft.
Big Ones’ Friend had made a little show-like out of sticks
to show the big raft he meant that they should make. He said the
Big Ones often did this, first making something little before
making it big to use. Then they had come to this place, and he had
said it was a good place to make the raft. So they had made camp,
and he had showed them how to make this shelter, and had made a
place for their fire, and dug a long hole for the barba-koo fire.
Then they had begun digging roots and making rope, and Big
Ones’ Friend had built fires at the roots of the trees he had
wanted for the raft, and burned them till they fell. They cut off
the branches with the chopping-stones—axes—he and Stonebreaker made
out of hard-stone they had found up the little stream, but the
trees themselves were too big to cut in that way, so Big
Ones’ Friend made fires to burn them into logs. This was
dangerous; even Big Ones’ Friend was afraid about this. These
fires might get loose and burn everything. That was why he and Big
Ones’ Friend would sit up and watch while the others slept,
and then they would wake Stabber and Big She and Lame One, who were
sleeping now, and after a while they would wake Fruitfinder and
Other She and Carries-Bright-Things, and they would watch till
daylight.
After a while, Fruitfinder and Carries-Bright-Things and Other
She finished the rope they were making and coiled it, and then came
into the shelter and lay down to sleep. Stonebreaker worked on at
the axehead, and Big Ones’ Friend finished putting the one
Stonebreaker had made onto a stick. He took it over to the woodpile
and tried it while Stonebreaker watched. They both laughed at how
good it was. Then he and Stonebreaker came over under the
shelter.
“Show shining-stone,” Stonebreaker begged.
Big Ones’ Friend took it out of his shoulder bag and
rubbed it for a while between his hands. Then the three of them
leaned together, out of the light of the fire, to look at it. None
of them had ever seen a thing like that, but Big Ones’ Friend
said they were known among Big Ones, and one of his friends, Pappy
Vic, dug many of them out of rock. He had found this one while he
was breaking a piece of hard black rock he had found up the little
stream. It was inside the rock, a stone the shape of a
zarabunny’s kidney. It looked just like any other stone until
it was rubbed; then it shone like a hot coal in the fire. But it
was not hot. This was a not-understand thing; even Big Ones’
Friend did not know how it could be.
“Pappy Jack used to dig for these stones,” Big
Ones’ Friend said. “Then all the other Big Ones found
out about the Fuzzies, and they said Pappy Jack should do nothing
but take care of the Fuzzies and teach them.”
“Tell more about Pappy Jack. Is he Wise One for all the
Big Ones?”
“No. That is Pappy Ben,” Big Ones’ Friend
said. “He is Wise One for Gov’men’. And Pappy Vic
is Wise One for Comp’ny; that is another Big One thing, like
Gov’men’. Pappy Jack is Wise One for all Fuzzies. All
Big Ones listen to Pappy Jack about Fuzzies.”
He talked for a long while about Pappy Jack and about Pappy Vic
and Pappy Ben and Pappy Gerd and Mummy Woof and Pappy George and
the blue-clothes Big Ones, and about Wonderful Place and Big House
Place. It was all wonderful, but hard to understand. There were not
enough Fuzzy words to tell about everything, which was why Big
Ones’ Friend said they must all learn as many Big One words
as they could. They must also learn to make talk from the back of
the mouth, so that the Big Ones could hear them. They were
practicing that now.
After a while, Stonebreaker became sleepy and lay down. Big
Ones’ Friend got out his pipe and tobacco and they smoked,
taking puffs in turn. One of the night-time sky-lights—moons was
the Big Ones’ word—came up. The Big Ones had names for both
of them. This one was called Zerk-Zees. The other, which was not in
the sky now, was called Dry-As. The Big Ones knew all about them;
they were very big and very far away, and they went to them in
flying things. Big Ones’ Friend said he had been on
Zerk-Zees, which looked so small, himself. This was hard to
believe, but Big Ones’ Friend said so.
“You really say for so? You not just make not-so
talk?”
Big Ones’ Friend was surprised that he should ask a thing
like that. “Nobody make not-so talk,” he said.
“I make not-so talk once.” Wise One glad that he
could tell something Big Ones’ Friend did not know about.
“Once I say to others that I see hesh-nazza, damnthing, and
was no damnthing—”
Then he told how he had wanted to go to find the Big One Place,
and the others had wanted to stay where they were.
“So, I tell them I see big damnthing; damnthing chase me.
They all frightened. Was no damnthing, but they not know. They all
leave place, make run fast up mountain to get away from damnthing.
But was no damnthing at all. We go down other side of mountain, not
go back.”
Big Ones’ Friend looked at him in wonder. For all his
wisdom, he would not have thought of that. Then he laughed.
“You ‘wise one’,” he said. “I not
think to do that. But is true I was on Zerk-Zees. Big One take me
there to hide when other Big Ones make trouble, once.”
He told about Zerk-Zees, but it was hard. He didn’t know
the words to tell about it. After a while, they both lay down and
went to sleep.
IT SEEMED LIKE only a moment, and then Other She was shaking
him, crying:
“Wake up, Wise One! Fire burn everything! Big
fire!”
He kicked Big Ones’ Friend, who was beside him, and sat
up. It was so. Everything was brighter than if both moons were
biggest and shining together, and there was a loud noise of
crackling and roaring. It was coming from where they had been
burning the trees into logs. The fire was burning dry things on the
ground, and even small bushes had caught fire. Fruitfinder and
Carries-Bright-Things had branches and were trying to beat it out,
but it was too big and in too many places. Then he remembered the
whistle, and blew it as hard as he could. By this time, Big
Ones’ Friend was awake and kicking Stabber and saying funny
Big One words that Wise One didn’t know, and then everybody
was awake and all shouting at the same time.
Stabber caught up his spear and started to run at the fire with
it. Big Ones’ Friend caught him by the arm.
“Not kill fire with spear,” he said. “Kill
fire by take dry things away from it. Stop, everybody! Not do
anything; make think what to do first.”
By this time, Carries-Bright-Things and Fruitfinder came back;
Fruitfinder was slapping Carries-Bright-Things with his hands to
put out where her fur had caught fire, and Carries-Bright-Things
was saying, “Fire too big; not able to kill.”
Big Ones’ Friend was yelling for everyone to be quiet. He
picked up his axe and went forward a little, then came back.
“Not put out, too big,” he said. “We go where
fire not burn. Fire always burn way wind blow. Fire not burn on
water. We go into water, try to get behind fire. Then we
safe.”
“But we go away, fire burn up nice sleeping-place. Burn up
rope. We work hard make rope,” somebody was arguing.
“You want fire burn up you?” Wise One asked.
“Then, not make talk. Do what Big Ones’ Friend
say.” He blew the whistle again, and they were all quiet.
“Now what we do?” he asked Big Ones’ Friend.
“Take spears, take axes,” Big Ones’ Friend
said. He was feeling at his shoulder bag to make sure he had
everything and that it was closed tightly. “Go out in water
as far as can. Wait till fire here burn everything up. Then come
out where fire not burn, be safe.”
Carries-Bright-Things had gotten the three sticks with the
kata-jes. She caught Big Ones’ Friend by the arm.
“You put in bag, keep safe,” she was saying.
“Not lose.”
She twisted them off the sticks, and Big Ones’ Friend put
them in his bag. Then he got a long piece of rope and tied one end
about his waist.
“Everybody, wrap around waist,” he said. “We
go in water. Somebody fall in deep place, pull him out.”
Nobody had realized that that could be done. Rope was to tie
logs together; nobody had thought of using it for anything else. He
was called Wise One, and he hadn’t even thought of that. By
this time, the fire was very big. It had caught a tree that had
died from being chewed by goofers and all the branches of it were
burning, and another tree next to it had caught fire. All the dry
things on the ground were burning along the lake and back away from
it, but nothing was burning in the direction from which the wind
came toward the fire.
They roped themselves together, everybody carrying a spear and
an axe, and went out into the water, until finally it was almost up
to their necks. Then they stood still, looking back by the fire. By
that time, it had reached the sleeping-place and it had caught
fire. The ferns and dry grass blazed up, the brush caught fire,
and, as they watched, the pole burned through and everything fell.
Some of the band wailed in grief. That had been a good
sleeping-place, the best sleeping-place they had ever made. Big
Ones’ Friend was saying:
“Bloody-hell sunnabish! All good rope, all goofer skins,
all logs, all burn up. Now have to do again.”
They waited a long time in the water. It grew hot even where
they were. They had to take deep breaths and draw their heads down
under the water for as long as they could and then raise them to
breathe again. The air was hot and full of smoke, and bits of
burning things fell among them. Whole trees were burning now.
Different kinds of trees burned in different ways. Longleaf trees
caught fire quickly, and then the leaves all burned and the fire
went out, and then the branches would catch fire in places. But the
blue roundleaf trees would not catch at first, but then they would
catch all over and great flames would shoot high.
Finally, the fire close to them grew less, though the big trees
were all burning. It had burned far away in the direction the wind
blew. Big Ones’ Friend said that the ground would be hot
where the fire had been, and burn their feet, so they waded along
where the water was shallow to where the small moving-water came
into the lake. The fire had started to burn along this, but not
across it, so they crossed over and started up on the other side.
Big Ones’ Friend untied the rope from around his waist, and
they wrapped it around the staff of a spear; Big She and Lame One
carried it.
Animals were in the woods, all frightened by the fire. They came
close enough to a takku, a zarabuck, to kill it with their spears.
But why should they? They would only have to carry the meat with
them, and it might be that they would have to run fast to get away
from the fire. The little stream turned and came from the direction
the fire was burning. Then they came to a place where there was
fire on their side too. Everybody was frightened because Big
Ones’ Friend had said that fire would not cross a
moving-water, but he could see how this had happened: the wind had
carried little burning-things over it, and started new fires.
“We go away from here,” Big Ones’ Friend said.
“Soon be fire all around. Go away through woods; keep wind in
face.”
Everybody began to run. The brush was thick. After a while, Wise
One saw Lame One running alone with his spear and axe, and then he
saw Big She with only an axe. Big Ones’ Friend would be angry
with them; they had thrown away the spear on which the rope was
wrapped. The brush became more thick, and now there were also long
vines. These vines would be good to tie logs together for a raft.
He would try to remember them when they came to build a new raft.
He was going to speak of it to Big Ones’ Friend, but when
they stopped to catch their breaths, Big Ones’ Friend was
saying the funny mean-nothing Big One words. Maybe he was
frightened. This was a bad place to be, with the fire so near.
At first the moon, Zerk-Zees, which was more than half round,
was on their left as they ran, and a little in front. After a
while, he saw that it was almost directly in front of them, though
it was only a little higher. He spoke of this to Big Ones’
Friend and also to Stabber. They stopped, and Big Ones’
Friend got out his point-north thing, and made a light with his
firemaker. Then he said more Big One words.
“Wind change. Maybe change more, maybe bring fire to us.
Come, make run fast.”
They floundered on through the brush and among the vines and
trees. After a while they came to a big moving-water, not as big as
the one that made wide lake-places, but still big. They could not
cross. There was argument about what to do. The fire was up the
river, but if they went down they would come to where it came into
the lake, and that would be a bad place to get out of. He looked in
the direction of the fire and was glad that he could not see yellow
flames, though all the sky was bright pink. The wind still blew
toward the fire, so they decided to go down the river.
The brush became less thick, and here were tall longleaf trees.
There were animals all about, moving in the woods, frightened by
the fire. Then, ahead they saw the light of Zerk-Zees shining on
the lake.
“Not go that way,” somebody—Wise One thought it was
Stonebreaker—said.
“Not go across moving-water either,” Big She said.
“Too deep.”
“Make raft,” Big Ones’ Friend said.
“Little raft. Get big sticks, tie together with rope, put
things on. Some get on raft, some swim. Who has rope?”
Nobody had the rope. Lame One and Big She had thrown it away to
run faster. Big Ones’ Friend said one of the mean-nothing
words, then thought for a moment. “We go along lake, that
way.” He pointed east, where the thin edge of Dry-As was just
above the horizon. “Go back to place fire start. Maybe all
dead, ground cool. Then we be safe.”
Fruitfinder said he was hungry. Now that it was said, everybody
else was hungry too. They found a goofer, so frightened that
Stabber just walked up to it and speared it. Big Ones’ Friend
took out his knife, skinned it, and cut it up. They did not make a
fire to cook it. Nobody, not even Big Ones’ Friend, wanted to
make fire here, and they did not want to wait while it cooked. They
all ate it raw.
While they were eating he smelled smoke, but thought it was an
old smell in his fur. Then Carries-Bright-Things said she smelled
smoke, and so did Stonebreaker. They stopped eating and looked
about. The fire was much brighter, and they could see yellow flames
among the red pink glow over the trees.
Big Ones’ Friend said, “Jeeze-krise go-hell bloody
damn! Wind change again. Fire that way, wind come from fire, bring
fire here!”