THE TERROR OF CLAWS AND FANGS.
When Suma, the Jaguar, driven from
the dismal wastes of the pantenal country by the encroaching
floods of the rainy season reached the higher, forested
region skirting the Andean foothills, she entered upon
a wild orgy of terrorism and slaughter.
Her instinct gratified, Suma retired
to the cavity in the cottonwood while the torrential
rains fell with a monotonous roar, and the craneflies
with their lacy, whirring wings formed a curtain in
the entrance to lend sanctity to the inner chamber.
Ordinarily, Suma did not destroy wantonly;
she killed for food only or in self-defense; or, in
resentment of the too familiar advances or the indifference
of some one of the less intelligent creatures that
had not yet learned to respect her power and acknowledge
her sovereignty in the jungle. But, the present
was not an ordinary occasion, for soon Warruk, as
the Indians on the Ichilo River called the Jaguar cub,
was to make his appearance in the big world; and it
was but for his comfort and safety that Suma provided.
After a three days’ retirement
the great cat emerged from the seclusion of her dark
retreat, hungry and ferocious but with a stealth and
caution well calculated to evade any prying eyes that
might attempt to observe her actions from the treetops
and surmise their meaning.
A puff, like smoke, from the entrance
to the cavity announced her coming; but it was only
the madly dancing cloud of craneflies clearing the
passage at her approach.
The rain was falling with a steady
drone from a sky of unbroken, cheerless gray, and
rivulets of water trickled from the drooping vegetation.
Mosses and ferns, revived by the superabundance of
moisture had sprung up on the decaying trunks and
branches of the uprooted trees, pushing their feathery
leaflets through the blanket of creepers and forming
a dense, soggy layer cold and clammy to the touch and
treacherous underfoot. But Suma knew her domicile
well and passed rapidly and surefootedly over the
interlocking tree skeletons and soon reached the level
forest floor.
Straight as an arrow she headed to
the north on some mission well-known to herself, moving
like a shadow and at a rapid pace. Before long
the windfall with the giant cottonwood containing
the precious little Warruk had been left far behind.
Suma knew where the round, red chonta nuts grew and
that they ripened during the season of rains; and that
even now the ground was covered with the tasty morsels.
But this knowledge was of a vague nature only and
interested her but indirectly. What was far more
important was that the peccary herds fed on the chonta
nuts and were sure to be in the neighborhood of their
favorite feeding-grounds.
To stalk and kill one of the ferocious
little animals entailed a great deal of danger to
the inexperienced hunter, but Suma feared them not.
Never, since the time she had miscalculated the distance
of the spring and had succeeded only in slightly wounding
her quarry with the resultant squeal of
terror and the onrush of fully a hundred of the stricken
one’s fellows and the night of uncertainty
spent in the treetop, had they given her any trouble.
But all that is another story as likely as not to
repeat itself in the life of Warruk for it seemed
that trouble with a peccary herd fell to the lot of
every Jaguar and was part of his education.
The clump of chonta trees grew a good
five miles from the windfall. Suma had covered
half the distance when a sharp odor in the air caused
her to stop and, standing like an exquisitely chiselled
statue, with tensed muscles and alert poise, to drink
deeply the scent-laden air. The vision of a peccary
dinner left her instantly and her pink tongue stole
out gently until it touched her moist, black nose
in anticipation of a far more satisfying gorge on
venison.
A moment later the Jaguar resumed
her journey, but in a different direction. She
had swerved at right angles to her former course and
was hot on the trail of the deer.
Like a shadow Suma seemed to flow
over the ground, looking neither to right nor left,
the massive paws falling with the lightness of leaves
dropping from the trees. A frightened agouti scampered
across her path and stopped, frozen with fear, and
a green ribbon-like snake drooping in festoons from
a low-growing branch hastily drew up its coils as the
big cat passed below.
Again Suma paused to sniff the air,
then advanced; but this time in a careless, leisurely
manner. In a moment she came upon the deer standing
in an open little glade among the dark tree trunks.
If the creature was startled by the appearance of
the Jaguar, it gave no indication of the fact.
It snorted and stamped its forefeet while Suma sat
down on the wet leaves and surveyed her intended victim
in the most unconcerned manner. For a moment
the two stared at one another. Then, without warning,
the brocket turned and darted away.
Suma did not follow. Instead
she arose and began to search the neighborhood, for
the other creature’s actions plainly betrayed
the fact that she had a fawn hidden nearby. Why
exhaust herself in a fruitless chase after the fleeting
mother whose speed was so much greater than her own
and who had dashed away simply to deceive her foe and
in the hope of drawing her from the spot where her
offspring was concealed? The fawn, far more desirable
than its elder, could be had for the mere finding.
But the fawn had already learned one
of the most important lessons of life and this bit
of knowledge had saved him from an untimely end no
fewer than seven times during his ten days on earth.
Now, the fawn was prettily spotted,
and most persons who delve into such matters and try
to reconcile cause and effect, particularly from a
distant point of view, would have said that this coloration
was the means of rendering it, crouching among the
ferns with head and neck flattened to the ground,
invisible to its enemies. But the truth of the
matter was that its color had nothing to do with its
security. During the hours of dusk and darkness
when the predaceous animals came out to hunt, the
fawn might have been red or blue or green so far as
its color was concerned with its safety, for in the
gloom of the jungle all objects not snowy white appeared
black if they could be distinguished at all.
The important thing was that it lay motionless had
been in this identical position for some time, and
so long as it did not move it gave off no scent.
It was for this same reason that the tinamou and quail
and other ground-nesting birds escaped the keen noses
of the foxes, otherwise they would have been exterminated
long ago. The preying animals hunted by scent,
not by sight.
If the brocket mother, after her wild
dash in the hope of luring Suma from the spot had
only stayed away both she and her offspring would have
been safe. But, finding that her ruse had been
unsuccessful she anxiously returned. The Jaguar
sensed her coming and waited; the snort and impatient
stamp that announced her arrival was superfluous for
Suma had seen her approach.
Again the deer tried to lead her enemy
away, trotting off a few paces and turning to look
back with large, questioning eyes. The big cat
merely sat upright and yawned as if bored by the proceedings.
The brocket retraced her steps, but the Jaguar seemed
not to notice and began to wash one of her massive
paws. By this time the deer was thoroughly aroused;
she grunted and stamped her feet and pivoted this
way and that. Suma, while feigning indifference,
eagerly watched each movement and when the brocket,
finally, frantic with apprehension made one of her
quick turns the Jaguar glided forward a few steps and
sprang. Like a flash she catapulted through the
air; there was the gleam of white fangs and when the
jaws crunched together they closed upon the neck of
the unfortunate deer, crushing the vertebra. A
second swift lunge below the shoulder and the long
teeth had penetrated the heart. The deer, with
a startled gasp staggered forward a step and dropped.
Suma eagerly lapped up the red pool forming on the
wet leaves, purring with satisfaction and then fell
upon her victim with a savage relish, for not in days
had she eaten.
Long before the gory feast was completed
the fawn, becoming impatient at its mother’s
non-return, left the clump of arums, green
leaves, wide as an elephant’s ear, not ten yards
away and ambled up unsuspiciously to within a few
feet of the great cat where it stood and gazed with
wide, innocent eyes upon the fearful scene before
it. Suma paid no attention to the little creature,
even when it came a step nearer and bleated plaintively,
for she had enough before her to satisfy her hunger.
And when the Jaguar had eaten her fill she carefully
cleansed her face and paws and started toward the
river to drink before returning to the windfall.
The fawn followed, so she increased her pace, hopelessly
outdistancing the little creature and leaving it to
the mercy of the next marauder that chanced to pass
that way. Without the guidance of its mother
it was a forlorn and pathetic little object left to
drift aimlessly through the rain-soaked forest with
its numerous watchful eyes and alert ears. Somehow,
the other creatures sensed the fawn’s helplessness
and the news soon spread among them. Shadowy forms
appeared where there should have been none. And
the awe-inspiring Suma had scarcely succeeded in shaking
the dainty little sprite off her trail when it met
an untimely end from an unexpected quarter.
A family of great owls had been following
the jungle tragedy from the black trees, with large,
glowing eyes. And when the proper moment arrived
they swooped down with noiseless wings like spirits
from a shadow world. Monsters of fury they were,
stabbing and rending with needle-sharp claws and hooked
beaks that clattered; tearing at eye and throat and
flank until the poor fawn succumbed to the terrific
attack. Then they fretted and quarrelled among
themselves, grunting and bowing, and striking at one
another with arched wings as they hopped around their
victim. The commotion attracted a pack of five
short-tailed, dog-like creatures which rushed upon
the scene and drove the owls back to their sphere
in the tree tops, while they cleaned up the remains.
When Suma again emerged from her lair,
two nights later, she started in a different direction.
Never did she return to a kill the second time or
hunt on two successive occasions in the same region.
Unless she remained to ward off the
hungry advances of a host of other creatures there
would never be enough of her victims left to come back
for; and even if there had been, one short day’s
time in the hot, steaming jungle atmosphere sufficed
to cause the flesh to decay. Suma had ideas of
her own about spending the days away from her proper
rendezvous; and as for carrion, she never failed to
give it a wide berth.
As to her hunting instincts, there
were several reasons why a region should be shunned
after one of its denizens had been slain. A nightly
raid in the same place might cause the creatures living
in it either to become so wary that soon it would
be impossible to secure any of them at all; or, they
would be exterminated which was even worse. No!
Suma obeyed well the impulse that guided her actions.
By visiting a new district on each quest of food the
game was not too greatly disturbed and its numbers
or existence was not imperilled.
Nor was this instinct confined to
the Jaguar alone. The other flesh-eating animals
also heeded it. And the wild tribes that inhabited
the wilderness knew from bitter experience that it
was best to conserve their food supply and that to
waste today was to want tomorrow. It was only
when men who professed some degree of civilization
appeared on the scene that the wild things found existence
impossible; and the more advanced the men the greater
the slaughter. They showed an insatiable lust
for killing under one pretext or another;
but always they killed, with guns and rifles and from
a safe distance.
On her second food-hunt since the
arrival of Warruk, the cub, Suma essayed to visit
the margin of the swollen, raging river where the fat
capybaras lived in the dense cane brakes. The
great creatures, like hundred-pound guinea pigs, were
rancid eating, it is true, but this was in a measure
counterbalanced by the fact that to capture them required
no excessive effort. Both by day and by night
they were very much in evidence gnawing tirelessly
at the tough canes and when the stems were finally
severed they squatted complacently and munched the
broad, ribbon-like leaves. One wondered when,
if ever, they slept; and why, in the midst of such
an abundance of food their appetites seemed never
satisfied. Upon the first sign of danger they
stopped eating only long enough to give vent to their
resentment of the disturbance in a few guttural grunts;
but once the spectre of disaster was swooping down
upon them they made hurriedly for the water and dived
with a loud splash. They were good swimmers,
with only the head showing above the surface sending
out a trail of V-shaped ripples that shimmered and
sparkled if the sun shone, and on moonlit nights.
Often, however, they swam under water to some nearby
island reed-bed or to the security of a burrow beneath
the overhanging bank.
The rain had stopped for one of those
rare and all too brief intervals that broke the monotony
of the sullen roar and the misery caused by a perpetually
drenched skin when the Jaguar approached the fringe
of tall, waving canes. Broad runways opened into
the maze of stalks where the capybaras had gnawed
their way through the dense growth and then hastily
had turned back to start a new one just
as a woodpecker chiseling a hole through a wall and
dismayed at seeing daylight ahead, leaves the laboriously
excavated tunnel and quickly starts another.
The forest beyond the canes was an
unknown world of lurking dangers. But the capybaras
simply found it impossible to loose themselves from
it. Always, at the most unexpected moment they
came suddenly upon it looming before them like a sinister,
black monster.
Suma boldly entered one of the numerous
openings for she knew it was not there she would come
upon her intended victims. She was only taking
an easy route to the main path that ran parallel to
the river but upon nearing this she immediately left
the beaten trail and glided into the growth at one
side. There she lay in wait fully concealed by
the darkness, and the stems and leaves.
In addition to the wide runway trodden
by the feet of countless generations of the great
rodents there were other evidences of their recent
presence and the atmosphere was laden with their scent.
Suma sniffed the heavy air greedily and her eyes glowed
as she shifted her gaze up and down the thoroughfare
for a first glimpse of an unsuspecting victim to come
her way. There was but a minute to wait.
A black, rounded hulk appeared, moving with the silence
of a shadow; on the near side were two smaller forms,
young, moving along stealthily at the side of their
mother. The Jaguar’s mind was made up instantly;
when the trio came within range she would pounce upon
the cubs, for they were tender and without the layers
of rancid fat of the older animal. But while her
eyes shone with the fire of anticipation and her tail
lashed ever so slightly an unforeseen thing happened.
Evidently a difference of opinion over some matter
or other arose between the two smaller creatures, for
they stopped suddenly and began fighting, rolling over
and over amidst squeals and groans, feet waving in
the air, and teeth champing, more in bluff than in
menace. Their elder, impatient at the disgraceful
conduct of her offspring turned and chided them with
a stamp of her forefoot and a low grunt.
The commotion startled a cane rat
which was stealing down the path so that it bolted
for the nearest cover with a loud patter of feet, heading
straight for the Jaguar, of whose presence it was unaware.
Suma saw it just in time to raise a massive paw in
order to avoid contact with the lowly creature, but
when she lowered the great foot it was directly upon
the rodent’s tail for it had stopped as soon
as it had reached the protection of the canes.
Of course this calamity was infinitely worse than
the noise that had first frightened it and the rat
promptly began to squeak with a lustiness that was
surprising, the shrill voice carrying a distance of
many yards. The capybaras immediately stopped
fighting and all three wheeled to see the cause of
the disturbance. Their eyes caught the glint
of Suma’s burning orbs and with a cry of alarm
they dashed into the brakes. The Jaguar followed
like a streak but their lead had been too great and
in a moment three distinct splashes in quick succession
announced the fact that they had dived to safety in
the river. From up and down the line of riverbank
came the resounding plump, plump of other heavy
bodies. The danger signal had not gone unheeded
and with a growl of rage and disgust Suma turned to
slink away from the scene of her disappointment.
Further hunting in that region was useless. Not
for days would the capybaras trust themselves more
than a few steps from the security of the waterside.
So, with a second deep rumble of chagrin the mighty
cat skirted the outside of the cane-brake and was
compelled to satisfy her hunger on a couple of agoutis.
Sometimes the Jaguar hunted each night;
more often it was every second night. It depended
entirely upon the size of her kill. And all the
time not required in procuring food was spent within
the cavity in the cottonwood fondling and guarding
the precious Warruk.
Three weeks had passed. The cub
had grown at a surprising rate and was beginning to
observe his immediate surroundings, though still unsteady
and exceedingly awkward. The first thing he saw
was his mother and he was sure she was the most beautiful
thing in the world which was exactly the
way he should have felt. He snuggled close to
her warm body, looked adoringly into her face, and
purred, while she, proud and happy in his possession,
smoothed his soft, velvety fur with her tongue while
a deep rumble of satisfaction came from her throat.
It was shortly after this that the
thing happened that caused Suma to reverse her course
of procedure so far as hunting was concerned, and
came near bringing dire consequences.
She was returning to her abode rather
earlier than usual, having succeeded in cutting off
a straggler from the peccary herd and killing it before
its cries could bring the other numerous members of
the band to its rescue. Spurred on by some subtle
sense of intuition she had eaten hurriedly and then
made for her home where the cub had been left curled
upon the rotting chips and leaves, sound asleep.
As she bounded lightly over the first
prostrate tree-trunks of the windfall, an infrequent
but not unfamiliar odor assailed her nostrils.
It was a disagreeable smell, not unlike that of cabbage
or potatoes in the first stages of decay. The
first tinge of it lashed her into frenzy so that she
sprang forward in great leaps risking the breaking
of her legs in the jam of branches and tangled creepers.
Her only thought was of her little one. Had she
arrived in time to save him from a horrible fate,
or should she find the lair empty?
Near the entrance to the cavity she
stopped with a terrible growl. The sinewy body
of a great snake a bushmaster, was
gliding rapidly into the opening; in fact, half its
scale-covered length had already disappeared from
view. This was an advantage to the Jaguar for
the head with its death-dealing fangs, being in the
cavity, was rendered harmless unless the serpent had
heard her coming and had doubled back with the lightning
speed of which it was capable. But, so fixed was
its attention upon the still sleeping cub that it
had heard nothing until the growl apprised it of the
presence of danger; and then it was too late.
The great paw fell upon the back of the reptile with
a crash, shattering the bones and crushing the flesh
into a pulp. Out of the cavity darted the arrow-shaped
head, hissing and lunging frantically and blindly in
all directions, while the latter half of the body
writhed impotently and twisted itself into knots;
but the snake could not move from the spot.
Suma drew back to a safe distance
and waited, and before long the contortions of the
great serpent became less violent; then they stopped
altogether, but the triangular head raised above the
mass of coils was turned toward the crouching Jaguar
while the greenish eyes glared at her with a demoniacal
hate. Suma knew her enemy well; to move suddenly
was to invite the deadly stroke. So she began
creeping, so slowly and so evenly that it was impossible
to detect the slightest motion. Inch by inch
she advanced but not for an instant did her eyes leave
those of the snake. The latter took no note of
this strategy or else seemed spell-bound by the blazing
eyes of its adversary. Nearer and nearer she
came, even more slowly than before, with tense muscles
ready to carry her far to one side should the snake
suddenly awake to its peril and strike. At last
but a scant yard separated them.
The reptile’s black, thread-like
tongue began to play in and out of its mouth with
great rapidity. Apparently it was so confused
or dazed that it could not see clearly and was feeling
for the antagonist that was so near. The decisive
moment had arrived. A massive forefoot bristling
with claws an inch long streaked through the air and
fell on the serpent’s head with a thud, followed
by another, equally crushing; long, white teeth set
in wide-open jaws flashed for an instant ere they met
to sever the mutilated head from the quivering body.
In a moment the snake had been clawed and mauled into
a mass of pulp, and leaving it where it lay Suma hastened
to the side of the now wide awake Warruk. She
pushed him over gently with her nose, licked his face
and sides, grunted with satisfaction and then curled
up beside him.
When daylight came there was the swish
of wings through the air followed by the sound of
heavy bodies alighting. A trio of vultures had
appeared on the scene, guided unfailingly by some
mysterious sense known only to themselves. They
hopped and flapped awkwardly over the rough surface
of the windfall to where the dead snake lay and began
to tear at the flesh. As they ate they quarrelled
noisily among themselves croaking and sighing with
hoarse voices and striking at one another with wings
and beaks.
The Jaguar watched their antics with
little interest and made no attempt to disturb them.
When they had gorged themselves on the loathsome repast
they tore off long strips of flesh and carrying them
in their hooked beaks flew to the lower branches of
the nearest trees.
After her encounter with the bushmaster,
Suma spent as little time as possible away from her
abode. Knowing that the deadly snake hunted by
night only, the Jaguar changed her former habit and
went in search of food during the daylight hours,
spending the hours of darkness at home, on guard against
any similar intruder.
Warruk grew at a surprising rate;
for, being alone the nourishment ordinarily sufficient
for two, occasionally even three, was all diverted
to his use. Before many weeks had passed he began
to show interest in various things that attracted
his attention. After spending many hours in admiration
of his mother’s beautiful coat, tawny with rosettes
of black dots and with longer and softer white fur
underneath, he wondered at the length of her claws,
the whiteness of her fangs and the great size of her it
tired him to walk completely around her as she lay
sprawled out on the floor.
There was also the tender care she
gave him and her solicitude for his welfare to be
taken into consideration. She was forever caressing
him with her nose and washing his face with her tongue.
The picture within the cavity in the great cottonwood
was a pleasant one to contemplate. Suma the mother
was a creature different from Suma the hunter moving
shadow-like through the forest intent on slaughter.
The hunting instinct asserted itself
early in Warruk’s life, and quite unexpectedly.
On one of his excursions around the outstretched form
of his mother he suddenly became conscious of a black
fluff of something that was jumping nervously from
side to side. Crouching low, he watched intently,
prompted at first by curiosity. Back and forth
the object moved, lightly and without sound.
An irresistible impulse came over the cub; he ran
forward a few steps, stopped, then sprang and the mysterious
thing was pinned firmly to the ground by his paws while
his sharp little teeth dug into it furiously.
Suma jumped to her feet with a grunt
of surprise, quickly turned and gave him a gentle
cuff that however bowled him over, and when he regained
his feet, very much perturbed and startled, he arched
up his back and hissed, not knowing what else to do.
It was the first time he had noticed Suma’s
long, graceful tail, which was never quiet except
when she slept; but after that he had many a happy
game of tag with the tip of it even if there was the
certainty of punishment ahead in the event that his
play became too strenuous. While his mother was
a firm believer in discipline she was never too severe;
and often, after the chastisement she hastened to
caress him so that he quickly forgot the occurrence.
Warruk’s real education began
when his mother started to bring some of her victims
to the lair. For this purpose she always chose
the smaller animals which she ordinarily should not
have bothered to kill for her own use. Mice,
spiny rats, forest quail and an occasional squirrel
were taken to the cavity at various times and carelessly
deposited by the side of the cub. Cautious at
first of making too intimate advances toward these
unfamiliar objects he began soon to look forward to
the return of his mother, knowing well that she would
not come empty-handed. He pounced upon the lifeless
forms clawing, biting and shaking them until the fur
or feathers flew, amid growls and snarls that were
but the forerunners of the ferocious nature which
would assert itself when latent character was fully
developed. Suma always watched the proceedings
with a complacent expression, fully satisfied with
the progress of her offspring.
Although using every strategy to conceal
her secret from the other inhabitants of the forest,
particularly while in the vicinity of the windfall,
the actions of the Jaguar had not escaped the sharp
eyes of a band of female howling monkeys that frequented
the wall of trees on one side. They were alone,
that is, the males had been driven to distant parts
until the mothers could bring forth their young and
rear them to the point where they were no longer in
danger of death at the hands and teeth of their jealous
fathers.
Among the members of the troop, numbering
four, was Myla, sad and forlorn of face and housing
a broken heart within her bosom, for she had lost
her baby. It happened early one afternoon when
the four had ascended to the top of a tall tree to
dry their bedraggled fur during one of those rare
intervals when the clouds broke and the sun showed
his brassy face for a brief time. Such an opportunity
was not to be neglected. Happy and grateful they
were, the four monkey mothers, sitting on the dome
of green leaves, each with her little one in her lap
while her long fingers delved among its rather sparse
fur. Then, like a bolt out of a blue sky it fell.
A shadow plunged down from the heavens with a rush
that was almost a roar; wide-spreading feet with long,
curved talons shot out of the hurtling black mass,
and Myla’s lap was empty. She leaped high
into the air after the marauder with a frantic scream
of anguish only to fall back heavily upon the boughs
clutching a black feather in her hand. The eagle
had made good its escape and flapped away above the
green sea of treetops with a cry of triumph.
Myla was mad with grief for hours
after that and the other three joined their voices
to her barks and wails of sorrow as they moved restlessly
among the branches in constant dread of another visit
from their aerial foe. But when at last this
external show of emotion had subsided the bereaved
mother looked with envious eyes at the offspring of
her more fortunate sisters. The latter, however,
were not slow to divine the thoughts that filled her
mind. When she approached them, apparently with
the most innocent of motives they charged savagely
and drove her off. All her plotting availed her
nothing.
And now, Myla had observed the big,
spotted cat stealthily making her way over the windfall
with food in her mouth. Not once, but many times
had she clandestinely peered from her concealed position
among the dense foliage; and each time the Jaguar
had entered the same cavity in the great tree-trunk.
That could mean but one thing; she too had a baby.
A fierce hope sprang up in Myla’s
empty heart and rapidly grew into an obsession; but
soon she realized with a sinking sensation how futile
were her desires. She was no match for the Jaguar;
indeed, the mere sight of the fearsome beast made
her tremble. Never could she muster the courage
to descend from her lofty perch while such a creature
roamed the earth below.
In spite of these sound conclusions,
an indescribable fascination held her prisoner in
its grasp. So day after day she spied longingly
and furtively upon the comings and goings of the big
cat.
As for Suma, unsuspicious of the existence
of the pair of burning eyes that followed her movements,
the days were brimming over with contentment.
Warruk was growing by the hour, or
at least so it seemed, and increasing in sprightliness
each day. He even insisted on following her to
the entrance of the cavity when she departed and met
her there when she returned. The fear that he
might some day disobey her injunction and sally forth
alone in her absence did not once occur to her.
She trusted him to obey, even if he was different
in one respect from her other children, and for this
difference he was doubly precious to her. For,
the first beams of daylight falling upon his glossy
fur revealed the fact that he was black.
Instead of being a miniature replica of his mother
with her lovely markings he shone with a satiny lustre
the tone of jet. A rarity indeed was Warruk,
and because of his color, destined to grow into the
largest and most ferocious of his species. Had
the Indians on the Ichilo River known of the birth
of the black cub they would have beaten their breasts
and wailed, “Simla Wallah-Caru,”
meaning “a Black Phantom has come to haunt us;”
and they would have placed offerings of roots and
nuts, and calabashes of milk from the milk-palm in
the forest to soothe and placate the temper of the
shadowy one.
Warruk, all oblivious of the fact
that he was in any way different from the usual, spent
his waking hours in play. Many were the victims
Suma brought him on which to exercise his developing
powers, but so far they were of scant interest to
him as food.
As the days passed the cub’s
curiosity concerning the opening that led into the
world increased and as he looked in wonder at the splash
of light coming through the doorway he determined
to learn more about it. He started toward the
enchanting radiance with cautious steps, but ere he
had gone far his mother halted him with deep rumblings
in her throat, well calculated to inspire him with
awe. Never must he venture to the border of that
outer world without her guidance, she repeated.
Death, or a thousand mishaps almost as bad awaited
him there from the trees, the earth and even from
subterranean places of concealment.
Warruk took the warning seriously
and retreated with high-arched back, but he liked
to sit upright and watch the mysterious shaft of light
and to wonder.
Suma had gone for more playthings
for her little one, as was her custom. And, as
she disappeared through the opening the cub sat for
a long time pondering and fighting to keep back the
curiosity that was consuming him. As he looked
a dark rounded form like a ball of some fluffy material
blown by the wind rolled across the patch of light
near the doorway. He glided toward it noiselessly,
filled with the spirit of adventure. Then he
stopped, crouching with tense muscles while his little
eyes shone with a new light. Again the strange
object came into view on the return trip, and with
an agile leap Warruk had pounced on top of it.
It wriggled under his feet, and squeaked dolefully
and for a moment he was at a loss as to what to do
next. Then he cautiously raised one forefoot,
bent his head and sniffed at the soft, warm thing and
remembered that it was exactly like the rats his mother
had brought him, only smaller; but they were always
limp and silent while this one struggled and made
queer little noises! He raised his other paw for
a good look at the creature, his heart pounding wildly
with excitement. And the mouse, feeling the pressure
relaxing gave one quick wrench and was free.
Warruk bounded after it but it slipped nimbly into
a crevice in the rotten wood and was gone. Exasperated
at being outwitted he clawed and bit furiously at
the minute opening into which his captive had escaped,
spitting and growling the while. His exertions
only tired him so at last he was compelled to stop
to rest.
It seemed however, that this was destined
to be Warruk’s unlucky day. Scarcely had
he thrown himself down upon the litter of soft chips
than another black, rounded form hove into view, precisely
where the first had been; but it was of larger size.
This time there would be no mincing of matters.
He was determined that the new prize should not escape
him. With a savage little snarl he rushed at
the newcomer and struck it with all the might at his
command.
A howl of pain escaped him as he tried
to lift his paw quite as quickly as it had descended
but the awful thing clung to it and it was only after
a number of vigorous shakes that he succeeded in dislodging
it. In his lack of experience he had planted
his paw directly upon a giant rhinoceros beetle with
bristling, thorn-like “antlers” one of
which had penetrated the skin between the pads.
The pain was intense so he held up the injured member
and wailed for his mother; he was in trouble and wanted
her badly.
Fortunately, Suma at that very moment
was stealing across the windfall and at the sound
of her offspring’s cries of distress she darted
forward with frantic speed and rushed into the cavity
so hurriedly she upset him. Warruk scrambled
to his feet and followed her to the farther end of
the hollow where she licked his foot until the pain
left. At the same time she chided him for his
disobedience and again tried to impress upon him the
peril of venturing too near the outer world while she
was away. And childlike, Warruk remembered the
lesson for a period of exactly one day.
Again Suma was away, working havoc
among the smaller wildfolk. Time hung heavy and
the light of the world beyond his horizon exerted a
stronger fascination than ever. It attracted
the cub like a magnet and before he knew it he was
standing before the opening. His eyes opened wide
at the strange scene in front of him. Inside
the cavity there was only darkness, or gloom at best.
Outside were light and heaps and walls of green things
that moved as if alive. Everything was dazzling
and brilliant; even the sun had burst through the
angry clouds to bid him welcome.
Warruk wanted to go out among the
waving, dripping leaves that sparkled as the sunlight
caught the drops of crystal water hanging in fringes
from their edges, and to drink in the fresh, moist
air; but he dared not venture out. All he had
the courage to do was to stare in awe and wonder.
Something moved at his feet, startling
him so that he withdrew quickly into the shelter of
his safe retreat; but upon observing it for a while
he concluded that it must be nothing more than some
new kind of mouse or similar creature. It was
dark and danced back and forth in a dainty manner
as if inviting pursuit. The cub retraced his steps
and reached for it gingerly with one paw but it evaded
him and fled lightly to one side. Again he reached
and again there was nothing in which to fasten his
sharp, little claws. Then he became more eager
than ever to capture the elusive something. He
struck at it, ran after it and jumped on top of it
but it always escaped him; for the puzzling thing was
only the shadow cast by a bunch of trumpet-flower
dangling high overhead.
The antics of Warruk had not escaped
the watchful eye of Myla, the bereft monkey.
And in her eagerness to see the better she descended
to the lower branches and leaned far out over the
ridge of the windfall. How the actions of the
cub reminded her of those of her own little one!
And how she longed to clasp the small form in her arms!
To feel it near her breast and to stroke its silky
fur. The mother-love was strong in Myla and her
loss still caused her untold agony.
As she watched, with yearning heart,
she suddenly became aware of the appearance of Suma
on the far edge of the upheaved barrier and with a
sob she realized that in a moment her joy would be
ended. The little creature would disappear into
the dark cavity with its mother; perhaps she should
never see it again.
An impulse that smothered all fear,
all caution swept over her with an urge that defied
resistance; and dropping to the tangle of forest wreckage
she bounded to the cub’s side, seized him and
clasping him in one arm sped back to the trees.
Suma had seen it all; but in spite
of every effort had been unable to reach the thief
before she swung gracefully into the branches and made
for the denser growth of the interior. Mad with
hate and fury she raced along the ground roaring and
whining in turn while Myla bounded through the leafy
canopy high overhead; and in chorus with the cries
of anguish from below, and the triumphant chatter
of the monkey, came the screams of Warruk terror-striken
and helpless, rushing headlong to certain doom.