Four million eight hundred sixty-four thousand three hundred and
twenty-eight years ago, a small naked person crouched over the
carcass of a partially decomposed zebra. His name meant nothing
to Squint, since he and his kind were unable to name things or
people, or to understand such names. (The name Squint, and the
others which follow, was given according to the common practice
of ethologists, who are watchers of animals in the wild. For
precise identification, they give descriptive names to the
individual animals they are studying.) Squint and his fellows
had a series of sounds which they emitted, depending on the
circumstances, but nothing approaching the complexity of a
language. However, Squint was a man because he walked upright
most of the time, the defining characteristic of Homo.
Squint waved the flies off the right hindquarters of the carcass
while trying to tear a piece loose. The animal had been dead for
two or three days, and it was high. This made it easier to tear
chunks off, and made the meat easier to chew. The smell did not
bother Squint. He was used to two or three day old carcasses,
usually those of animals killed by lions. In fact, he preferred
the taste to that of freshly killed meat, not that he got much of
that.
He worked a fair-sized piece loose, but then had to hunch over
and chew through the gristle. Reaching up with his right hand he
took the piece of meat from his mouth and raised his head to
listen, his face dripping with the juices of decomposition. He
heard the sound of footsteps in the dry leaves under the acacia
tree, and quickly recognized that they were made by small feet,
probably those of a jackal. Tearing another piece of meat from
the strip, he began chewing. The footsteps came closer, and he
stood up, his rock in his hand.
He was about three and a half feet tall, very dark skinned,
almost black. He was covered with body hair......less than a
chimpanzee or a baboon, but more than an elephant or a hippo. As
the footsteps came closer, He clutched the rock tensely, at the
same time turning slightly toward another tree, ready for a quick
retreat. A small narrow nose poked through the brush and he
relaxed. The jackal posed no threat. For a moment he thought of
hurling his stone at it, but then changed his mind. Good
throwing rocks were not easy to find. He had found this one at
the bottom of a wash where it had fallen from an outcrop.
Still holding his piece of meat, Squint climbed to the top of an
old anthill to see farther. It was midday and hot, so not many
animals were grazing, though he did see a few wildebeests and
some impala in the distance. They were feeding quietly and
didn't seem particularly nervous. If there were any big cats or
wild dogs around, they would be sleeping. Not far away was the
largest acacia in sight. He figured lions were probably resting
under it. Several vultures perched in the top of the acacia
where they had gone when Squint had chased them away from the
carcass, but he couldn't see any lions. They must have fed well,
he thought, probably from the carcass. It was unusual for a lion
group to get two animals at once, though it sometimes happened,
most often when the lions found a mother with her young one, as
they had today.
Squint climbed down from the anthill and turned seriously to the
carcass. He had had little to eat for a couple of days......some
wild figs, roots, and seeds, and a couple of lizards, all of
which he had eaten on the spot. So the zebra meat was welcome.
He ate fast to get as much as possible before the others arrived.