The Second Scene
The feet of many generations of thirsty animals had formed a narrow
path in the soft sediments of the stream bank. On slightly higher ground,
scattered groves of oaks dotted and landscape. A 10-foot-long around sloth had
finished a meal of oak leaves and was walking awkwardly toward the terrace path
on its way to the stream for a drink. As it walked, its great bulk moved off
center from side to side, as if it were looking for enemies to the right and
left. The sloth walked in this painful-looking way because the bone structure of
its front feed forced this animal to walk on the knuckles. Frequently the sloth
would pause and, with obvious effort accompanied by a grunt, straighten its
heavy bulk to a sitting position. It would remain in this position for some
time.
Above the deepest section of the path, a big male sabercat crouched, ears
down, nostrils rapidly expanding and contracting, stubby tail unmoving. Three
mice, two ground squirrels, and one cottontail rabbit had not been enough to
ease to its hunger in the past two days. Earlier that morning the sabercat had
barely missed a peccary eating acorns under an oak. It would have been
successful, but at the wrong moment a dead limb fell from the tree, and the
peccary immediately dashed off. The cat had stalked and waited for that mean for
hours.
Now the ground sloth was sitting directly beneath the sabercat. As the
wind carried the heavy sloth’s smell to the cat, the cat pounced and ingested
its meal.
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