3537 lines
189 KiB
Plaintext
3537 lines
189 KiB
Plaintext
******The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Call of the Wild*******
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The Call of the Wild, by Jack London
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February 1995 [Etext #215]
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******The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Call of the Wild*******
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The Call of the Wild
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by Jack London
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Contents
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I Into the Primitive
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II The Law of Club and Fang
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III The Dominant Primordial Beast
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IV Who Has Won to Mastership
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V The Toil of Trace and Tail
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VI For the Love of a Man
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VII The Sounding of the Call
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Chapter I
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Into the Primitive
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"Old longings nomadic leap,
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Chafing at custom's chain;
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Again from its brumal sleep
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Wakens the ferine strain."
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Buck did not read the newspapers, or he would have known that
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trouble was brewing, not alone for himself, but for every tide-
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water dog, strong of muscle and with warm, long hair, from Puget
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Sound to San Diego. Because men, groping in the Arctic darkness,
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had found a yellow metal, and because steamship and transportation
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companies were booming the find, thousands of men were rushing
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into the Northland. These men wanted dogs, and the dogs they
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wanted were heavy dogs, with strong muscles by which to toil, and
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furry coats to protect them from the frost.
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Buck lived at a big house in the sun-kissed Santa Clara Valley.
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Judge Miller's place, it was called. It stood back from the road,
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half hidden among the trees, through which glimpses could be
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caught of the wide cool veranda that ran around its four sides.
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The house was approached by gravelled driveways which wound about
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through wide-spreading lawns and under the interlacing boughs of
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tall poplars. At the rear things were on even a more spacious
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scale than at the front. There were great stables, where a dozen
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grooms and boys held forth, rows of vine-clad servants' cottages,
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an endless and orderly array of outhouses, long grape arbors,
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green pastures, orchards, and berry patches. Then there was the
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pumping plant for the artesian well, and the big cement tank where
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Judge Miller's boys took their morning plunge and kept cool in the
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hot afternoon.
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And over this great demesne Buck ruled. Here he was born, and
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here he had lived the four years of his life. It was true, there
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were other dogs, There could not but be other dogs on so vast a
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place, but they did not count. They came and went, resided in the
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populous kennels, or lived obscurely in the recesses of the house
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after the fashion of Toots, the Japanese pug, or Ysabel, the
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Mexican hairless,--strange creatures that rarely put nose out of
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doors or set foot to ground. On the other hand, there were the fox
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terriers, a score of them at least, who yelped fearful promises at
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Toots and Ysabel looking out of the windows at them and protected
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by a legion of housemaids armed with brooms and mops.
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But Buck was neither house-dog nor kennel-dog. The whole realm
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was his. He plunged into the swimming tank or went hunting with
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the Judge's sons; he escorted Mollie and Alice, the Judge's
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daughters, on long twilight or early morning rambles; on wintry
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nights he lay at the Judge's feet before the roaring library fire;
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he carried the Judge's grandsons on his back, or rolled them in
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the grass, and guarded their footsteps through wild adventures
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down to the fountain in the stable yard, and even beyond, where
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the paddocks were, and the berry patches. Among the terriers he
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stalked imperiously, and Toots and Ysabel he utterly ignored, for
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he was king,--king over all creeping, crawling, flying things of
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Judge Miller's place, humans included.
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His father, Elmo, a huge St. Bernard, had been the Judge's
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inseparable companion, and Buck bid fair to follow in the way of
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his father. He was not so large,--he weighed only one hundred and
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forty pounds,--for his mother, Shep, had been a Scotch shepherd
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dog. Nevertheless, one hundred and forty pounds, to which was
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added the dignity that comes of good living and universal respect,
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enabled him to carry himself in right royal fashion. During the
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four years since his puppyhood he had lived the life of a sated
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aristocrat; he had a fine pride in himself, was even a trifle
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egotistical, as country gentlemen sometimes become because of
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their insular situation. But he had saved himself by not becoming
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a mere pampered house-dog. Hunting and kindred outdoor delights
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had kept down the fat and hardened his muscles; and to him, as to
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the cold-tubbing races, the love of water had been a tonic and a
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health preserver.
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And this was the manner of dog Buck was in the fall of 1897, when
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the Klondike strike dragged men from all the world into the frozen
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North. But Buck did not read the newspapers, and he did not know
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that Manuel, one of the gardener's helpers, was an undesirable
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acquaintance. Manuel had one besetting sin. He loved to play
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Chinese lottery. Also, in his gambling, he had one besetting
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weakness--faith in a system; and this made his damnation certain.
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For to play a system requires money, while the wages of a
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gardener's helper do not lap over the needs of a wife and numerous
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progeny.
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The Judge was at a meeting of the Raisin Growers' Association, and
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the boys were busy organizing an athletic club, on the memorable
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night of Manuel's treachery. No one saw him and Buck go off
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through the orchard on what Buck imagined was merely a stroll.
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And with the exception of a solitary man, no one saw them arrive
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at the little flag station known as College Park. This man talked
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with Manuel, and money chinked between them.
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"You might wrap up the goods before you deliver 'm," the stranger
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said gruffly, and Manuel doubled a piece of stout rope around
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Buck's neck under the collar.
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"Twist it, an' you'll choke 'm plentee," said Manuel, and the
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stranger grunted a ready affirmative.
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Buck had accepted the rope with quiet dignity. To be sure, it was
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an unwonted performance: but he had learned to trust in men he
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knew, and to give them credit for a wisdom that outreached his
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own. But when the ends of the rope were placed in the stranger's
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hands, he growled menacingly. He had merely intimated his
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displeasure, in his pride believing that to intimate was to
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command. But to his surprise the rope tightened around his neck,
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shutting off his breath. In quick rage he sprang at the man, who
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met him halfway, grappled him close by the throat, and with a deft
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twist threw him over on his back. Then the rope tightened
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mercilessly, while Buck struggled in a fury, his tongue lolling
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out of his mouth and his great chest panting futilely. Never in
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all his life had he been so vilely treated, and never in all his
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life had he been so angry. But his strength ebbed, his eyes
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glazed, and he knew nothing when the train was flagged and the two
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men threw him into the baggage car.
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The next he knew, he was dimly aware that his tongue was hurting
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and that he was being jolted along in some kind of a conveyance.
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The hoarse shriek of a locomotive whistling a crossing told him
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where he was. He had travelled too often with the Judge not to
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know the sensation of riding in a baggage car. He opened his
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eyes, and into them came the unbridled anger of a kidnapped king.
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The man sprang for his throat, but Buck was too quick for him.
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His jaws closed on the hand, nor did they relax till his senses
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were choked out of him once more.
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"Yep, has fits," the man said, hiding his mangled hand from the
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baggageman, who had been attracted by the sounds of struggle.
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"I'm takin' 'm up for the boss to 'Frisco. A crack dog-doctor
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there thinks that he can cure 'm."
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Concerning that night's ride, the man spoke most eloquently for
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himself, in a little shed back of a saloon on the San Francisco
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water front.
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"All I get is fifty for it," he grumbled; "an' I wouldn't do it
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over for a thousand, cold cash."
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His hand was wrapped in a bloody handkerchief, and the right
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trouser leg was ripped from knee to ankle.
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"How much did the other mug get?" the saloon-keeper demanded.
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"A hundred," was the reply. "Wouldn't take a sou less, so help
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me."
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"That makes a hundred and fifty," the saloon-keeper calculated;
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"and he's worth it, or I'm a squarehead."
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The kidnapper undid the bloody wrappings and looked at his
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lacerated hand. "If I don't get the hydrophoby--"
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"It'll be because you was born to hang," laughed the saloon-
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keeper. "Here, lend me a hand before you pull your freight," he
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added.
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Dazed, suffering intolerable pain from throat and tongue, with the
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life half throttled out of him, Buck attempted to face his
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tormentors. But he was thrown down and choked repeatedly, till
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they succeeded in filing the heavy brass collar from off his neck.
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Then the rope was removed, and he was flung into a cagelike crate.
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There he lay for the remainder of the weary night, nursing his
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wrath and wounded pride. He could not understand what it all
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meant. What did they want with him, these strange men? Why were
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they keeping him pent up in this narrow crate? He did not know
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why, but he felt oppressed by the vague sense of impending
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calamity. Several times during the night he sprang to his feet
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when the shed door rattled open, expecting to see the Judge, or
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the boys at least. But each time it was the bulging face of the
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saloon-keeper that peered in at him by the sickly light of a
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tallow candle. And each time the joyful bark that trembled in
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Buck's throat was twisted into a savage growl.
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But the saloon-keeper let him alone, and in the morning four men
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entered and picked up the crate. More tormentors, Buck decided,
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for they were evil-looking creatures, ragged and unkempt; and he
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stormed and raged at them through the bars. They only laughed and
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poked sticks at him, which he promptly assailed with his teeth
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till he realized that that was what they wanted. Whereupon he lay
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down sullenly and allowed the crate to be lifted into a wagon.
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Then he, and the crate in which he was imprisoned, began a passage
|
|
through many hands. Clerks in the express office took charge of
|
|
him; he was carted about in another wagon; a truck carried him,
|
|
with an assortment of boxes and parcels, upon a ferry steamer; he
|
|
was trucked off the steamer into a great railway depot, and
|
|
finally he was deposited in an express car.
|
|
|
|
For two days and nights this express car was dragged along at the
|
|
tail of shrieking locomotives; and for two days and nights Buck
|
|
neither ate nor drank. In his anger he had met the first advances
|
|
of the express messengers with growls, and they had retaliated by
|
|
teasing him. When he flung himself against the bars, quivering
|
|
and frothing, they laughed at him and taunted him. They growled
|
|
and barked like detestable dogs, mewed, and flapped their arms and
|
|
crowed. It was all very silly, he knew; but therefore the more
|
|
outrage to his dignity, and his anger waxed and waxed. He did not
|
|
mind the hunger so much, but the lack of water caused him severe
|
|
suffering and fanned his wrath to fever-pitch. For that matter,
|
|
high-strung and finely sensitive, the ill treatment had flung him
|
|
into a fever, which was fed by the inflammation of his parched and
|
|
swollen throat and tongue.
|
|
|
|
He was glad for one thing: the rope was off his neck. That had
|
|
given them an unfair advantage; but now that it was off, he would
|
|
show them. They would never get another rope around his neck.
|
|
Upon that he was resolved. For two days and nights he neither ate
|
|
nor drank, and during those two days and nights of torment, he
|
|
accumulated a fund of wrath that boded ill for whoever first fell
|
|
foul of him. His eyes turned blood-shot, and he was metamorphosed
|
|
into a raging fiend. So changed was he that the Judge himself
|
|
would not have recognized him; and the express messengers breathed
|
|
with relief when they bundled him off the train at Seattle.
|
|
|
|
Four men gingerly carried the crate from the wagon into a small,
|
|
high-walled back yard. A stout man, with a red sweater that
|
|
sagged generously at the neck, came out and signed the book for
|
|
the driver. That was the man, Buck divined, the next tormentor,
|
|
and he hurled himself savagely against the bars. The man smiled
|
|
grimly, and brought a hatchet and a club.
|
|
|
|
"You ain't going to take him out now?" the driver asked.
|
|
|
|
"Sure," the man replied, driving the hatchet into the crate for a
|
|
pry.
|
|
|
|
There was an instantaneous scattering of the four men who had
|
|
carried it in, and from safe perches on top the wall they prepared
|
|
to watch the performance.
|
|
|
|
Buck rushed at the splintering wood, sinking his teeth into it,
|
|
surging and wrestling with it. Wherever the hatchet fell on the
|
|
outside, he was there on the inside, snarling and growling, as
|
|
furiously anxious to get out as the man in the red sweater was
|
|
calmly intent on getting him out.
|
|
|
|
"Now, you red-eyed devil," he said, when he had made an opening
|
|
sufficient for the passage of Buck's body. At the same time he
|
|
dropped the hatchet and shifted the club to his right hand.
|
|
|
|
And Buck was truly a red-eyed devil, as he drew himself together
|
|
for the spring, hair bristling, mouth foaming, a mad glitter in
|
|
his blood-shot eyes. Straight at the man he launched his one
|
|
hundred and forty pounds of fury, surcharged with the pent passion
|
|
of two days and nights. In mid air, just as his jaws were about
|
|
to close on the man, he received a shock that checked his body and
|
|
brought his teeth together with an agonizing clip. He whirled
|
|
over, fetching the ground on his back and side. He had never been
|
|
struck by a club in his life, and did not understand. With a
|
|
snarl that was part bark and more scream he was again on his feet
|
|
and launched into the air. And again the shock came and he was
|
|
brought crushingly to the ground. This time he was aware that it
|
|
was the club, but his madness knew no caution. A dozen times he
|
|
charged, and as often the club broke the charge and smashed him
|
|
down.
|
|
|
|
After a particularly fierce blow, he crawled to his feet, too
|
|
dazed to rush. He staggered limply about, the blood flowing from
|
|
nose and mouth and ears, his beautiful coat sprayed and flecked
|
|
with bloody slaver. Then the man advanced and deliberately dealt
|
|
him a frightful blow on the nose. All the pain he had endured was
|
|
as nothing compared with the exquisite agony of this. With a roar
|
|
that was almost lionlike in its ferocity, he again hurled himself
|
|
at the man. But the man, shifting the club from right to left,
|
|
coolly caught him by the under jaw, at the same time wrenching
|
|
downward and backward. Buck described a complete circle in the
|
|
air, and half of another, then crashed to the ground on his head
|
|
and chest.
|
|
|
|
For the last time he rushed. The man struck the shrewd blow he
|
|
had purposely withheld for so long, and Buck crumpled up and went
|
|
down, knocked utterly senseless.
|
|
|
|
"He's no slouch at dog-breakin', that's wot I say," one of the men
|
|
on the wall cried enthusiastically.
|
|
|
|
"Druther break cayuses any day, and twice on Sundays," was the
|
|
reply of the driver, as he climbed on the wagon and started the
|
|
horses.
|
|
|
|
Buck's senses came back to him, but not his strength. He lay
|
|
where he had fallen, and from there he watched the man in the red
|
|
sweater.
|
|
|
|
" 'Answers to the name of Buck,' " the man soliloquized, quoting
|
|
from the saloon-keeper's letter which had announced the
|
|
consignment of the crate and contents. "Well, Buck, my boy," he
|
|
went on in a genial voice, "we've had our little ruction, and the
|
|
best thing we can do is to let it go at that. You've learned your
|
|
place, and I know mine. Be a good dog and all 'll go well and the
|
|
goose hang high. Be a bad dog, and I'll whale the stuffin' outa
|
|
you. Understand?"
|
|
|
|
As he spoke he fearlessly patted the head he had so mercilessly
|
|
pounded, and though Buck's hair involuntarily bristled at touch of
|
|
the hand, he endured it without protest. When the man brought him
|
|
water he drank eagerly, and later bolted a generous meal of raw
|
|
meat, chunk by chunk, from the man's hand.
|
|
|
|
He was beaten (he knew that); but he was not broken. He saw, once
|
|
for all, that he stood no chance against a man with a club. He
|
|
had learned the lesson, and in all his after life he never forgot
|
|
it. That club was a revelation. It was his introduction to the
|
|
reign of primitive law, and he met the introduction halfway. The
|
|
facts of life took on a fiercer aspect; and while he faced that
|
|
aspect uncowed, he faced it with all the latent cunning of his
|
|
nature aroused. As the days went by, other dogs came, in crates
|
|
and at the ends of ropes, some docilely, and some raging and
|
|
roaring as he had come; and, one and all, he watched them pass
|
|
under the dominion of the man in the red sweater. Again and
|
|
again, as he looked at each brutal performance, the lesson was
|
|
driven home to Buck: a man with a club was a lawgiver, a master to
|
|
be obeyed, though not necessarily conciliated. Of this last Buck
|
|
was never guilty, though he did see beaten dogs that fawned upon
|
|
the man, and wagged their tails, and licked his hand. Also he saw
|
|
one dog, that would neither conciliate nor obey, finally killed in
|
|
the struggle for mastery.
|
|
|
|
Now and again men came, strangers, who talked excitedly,
|
|
wheedlingly, and in all kinds of fashions to the man in the red
|
|
sweater. And at such times that money passed between them the
|
|
strangers took one or more of the dogs away with them. Buck
|
|
wondered where they went, for they never came back; but the fear
|
|
of the future was strong upon him, and he was glad each time when
|
|
he was not selected.
|
|
|
|
Yet his time came, in the end, in the form of a little weazened
|
|
man who spat broken English and many strange and uncouth
|
|
exclamations which Buck could not understand.
|
|
|
|
"Sacredam!" he cried, when his eyes lit upon Buck. "Dat one dam
|
|
bully dog! Eh? How moch?"
|
|
|
|
"Three hundred, and a present at that," was the prompt reply of
|
|
the man in the red sweater. "And seem' it's government money, you
|
|
ain't got no kick coming, eh, Perrault?"
|
|
|
|
Perrault grinned. Considering that the price of dogs had been
|
|
boomed skyward by the unwonted demand, it was not an unfair sum
|
|
for so fine an animal. The Canadian Government would be no loser,
|
|
nor would its despatches travel the slower. Perrault knew dogs,
|
|
and when he looked at Buck he knew that he was one in a thousand--
|
|
"One in ten t'ousand," he commented mentally.
|
|
|
|
Buck saw money pass between them, and was not surprised when
|
|
Curly, a good-natured Newfoundland, and he were led away by the
|
|
little weazened man. That was the last he saw of the man in the
|
|
red sweater, and as Curly and he looked at receding Seattle from
|
|
the deck of the Narwhal, it was the last he saw of the warm
|
|
Southland. Curly and he were taken below by Perrault and turned
|
|
over to a black-faced giant called Francois. Perrault was a
|
|
French-Canadian, and swarthy; but Francois was a French-Canadian
|
|
half-breed, and twice as swarthy. They were a new kind of men to
|
|
Buck (of which he was destined to see many more), and while he
|
|
developed no affection for them, he none the less grew honestly to
|
|
respect them. He speedily learned that Perrault and Francois were
|
|
fair men, calm and impartial in administering justice, and too
|
|
wise in the way of dogs to be fooled by dogs.
|
|
|
|
In the 'tween-decks of the Narwhal, Buck and Curly joined two
|
|
other dogs. One of them was a big, snow-white fellow from
|
|
Spitzbergen who had been brought away by a whaling captain, and
|
|
who had later accompanied a Geological Survey into the Barrens.
|
|
He was friendly, in a treacherous sort of way, smiling into one's
|
|
face the while he meditated some underhand trick, as, for
|
|
instance, when he stole from Buck's food at the first meal. As
|
|
Buck sprang to punish him, the lash of Francois's whip sang
|
|
through the air, reaching the culprit first; and nothing remained
|
|
to Buck but to recover the bone. That was fair of Francois, he
|
|
decided, and the half-breed began his rise in Buck's estimation.
|
|
|
|
The other dog made no advances, nor received any; also, he did not
|
|
attempt to steal from the newcomers. He was a gloomy, morose
|
|
fellow, and he showed Curly plainly that all he desired was to be
|
|
left alone, and further, that there would be trouble if he were
|
|
not left alone. "Dave" he was called, and he ate and slept, or
|
|
yawned between times, and took interest in nothing, not even when
|
|
the Narwhal crossed Queen Charlotte Sound and rolled and pitched
|
|
and bucked like a thing possessed. When Buck and Curly grew
|
|
excited, half wild with fear, he raised his head as though
|
|
annoyed, favored them with an incurious glance, yawned, and went
|
|
to sleep again.
|
|
|
|
Day and night the ship throbbed to the tireless pulse of the
|
|
propeller, and though one day was very like another, it was
|
|
apparent to Buck that the weather was steadily growing colder. At
|
|
last, one morning, the propeller was quiet, and the Narwhal was
|
|
pervaded with an atmosphere of excitement. He felt it, as did the
|
|
other dogs, and knew that a change was at hand. Francois leashed
|
|
them and brought them on deck. At the first step upon the cold
|
|
surface, Buck's feet sank into a white mushy something very like
|
|
mud. He sprang back with a snort. More of this white stuff was
|
|
falling through the air. He shook himself, but more of it fell
|
|
upon him. He sniffed it curiously, then licked some up on his
|
|
tongue. It bit like fire, and the next instant was gone. This
|
|
puzzled him. He tried it again, with the same result. The
|
|
onlookers laughed uproariously, and he felt ashamed, he knew not
|
|
why, for it was his first snow.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter II
|
|
|
|
The Law of Club and Fang
|
|
|
|
|
|
Buck's first day on the Dyea beach was like a nightmare. Every
|
|
hour was filled with shock and surprise. He had been suddenly
|
|
jerked from the heart of civilization and flung into the heart of
|
|
things primordial. No lazy, sun-kissed life was this, with
|
|
nothing to do but loaf and be bored. Here was neither peace, nor
|
|
rest, nor a moment's safety. All was confusion and action, and
|
|
every moment life and limb were in peril. There was imperative
|
|
need to be constantly alert; for these dogs and men were not town
|
|
dogs and men. They were savages, all of them, who knew no law but
|
|
the law of club and fang.
|
|
|
|
He had never seen dogs fight as these wolfish creatures fought,
|
|
and his first experience taught him an unforgetable lesson. It is
|
|
true, it was a vicarious experience, else he would not have lived
|
|
to profit by it. Curly was the victim. They were camped near the
|
|
log store, where she, in her friendly way, made advances to a
|
|
husky dog the size of a full-grown wolf, though not half so large
|
|
as she. There was no warning, only a leap in like a flash, a
|
|
metallic clip of teeth, a leap out equally swift, and Curly's face
|
|
was ripped open from eye to jaw.
|
|
|
|
It was the wolf manner of fighting, to strike and leap away; but
|
|
there was more to it than this. Thirty or forty huskies ran to
|
|
the spot and surrounded the combatants in an intent and silent
|
|
circle. Buck did not comprehend that silent intentness, nor the
|
|
eager way with which they were licking their chops. Curly rushed
|
|
her antagonist, who struck again and leaped aside. He met her
|
|
next rush with his chest, in a peculiar fashion that tumbled her
|
|
off her feet. She never regained them, This was what the
|
|
onlooking huskies had waited for. They closed in upon her,
|
|
snarling and yelping, and she was buried, screaming with agony,
|
|
beneath the bristling mass of bodies.
|
|
|
|
So sudden was it, and so unexpected, that Buck was taken aback.
|
|
He saw Spitz run out his scarlet tongue in a way he had of
|
|
laughing; and he saw Francois, swinging an axe, spring into the
|
|
mess of dogs. Three men with clubs were helping him to scatter
|
|
them. It did not take long. Two minutes from the time Curly went
|
|
down, the last of her assailants were clubbed off. But she lay
|
|
there limp and lifeless in the bloody, trampled snow, almost
|
|
literally torn to pieces, the swart half-breed standing over her
|
|
and cursing horribly. The scene often came back to Buck to
|
|
trouble him in his sleep. So that was the way. No fair play.
|
|
Once down, that was the end of you. Well, he would see to it that
|
|
he never went down. Spitz ran out his tongue and laughed again,
|
|
and from that moment Buck hated him with a bitter and deathless
|
|
hatred.
|
|
|
|
Before he had recovered from the shock caused by the tragic
|
|
passing of Curly, he received another shock. Francois fastened
|
|
upon him an arrangement of straps and buckles. It was a harness,
|
|
such as he had seen the grooms put on the horses at home. And as
|
|
he had seen horses work, so he was set to work, hauling Francois
|
|
on a sled to the forest that fringed the valley, and returning
|
|
with a load of firewood. Though his dignity was sorely hurt by
|
|
thus being made a draught animal, he was too wise to rebel. He
|
|
buckled down with a will and did his best, though it was all new
|
|
and strange. Francois was stem, demanding instant obedience, and
|
|
by virtue of his whip receiving instant obedience; while Dave, who
|
|
was an experienced wheeler, nipped Buck's hind quarters whenever
|
|
he was in error. Spitz was the leader, likewise experienced, and
|
|
while he could not always get at Buck, he growled sharp reproof
|
|
now and again, or cunningly threw his weight in the traces to jerk
|
|
Buck into the way he should go. Buck learned easily, and under
|
|
the combined tuition of his two mates and Francois made remarkable
|
|
progress. Ere they returned to camp he knew enough to stop at
|
|
"ho," to go ahead at "mush," to swing wide on the bends, and to
|
|
keep clear of the wheeler when the loaded sled shot downhill at
|
|
their heels.
|
|
|
|
"T'ree vair' good dogs," Francois told Perrault. "Dat Buck, heem
|
|
pool lak hell. I tich heem queek as anyt'ing."
|
|
|
|
By afternoon, Perrault, who was in a hurry to be on the trail with
|
|
his despatches, returned with two more dogs. "Billee" and "Joe"
|
|
he called them, two brothers, and true huskies both. Sons of the
|
|
one mother though they were, they were as different as day and
|
|
night. Billee's one fault was his excessive good nature, while
|
|
Joe was the very opposite, sour and introspective, with a
|
|
perpetual snarl and a malignant eye. Buck received them in
|
|
comradely fashion, Dave ignored them, while Spitz proceeded to
|
|
thrash first one and then the other. Billee wagged his tail
|
|
appeasingly, turned to run when he saw that appeasement was of no
|
|
avail, and cried (still appeasingly) when Spitz's sharp teeth
|
|
scored his flank. But no matter how Spitz circled, Joe whirled
|
|
around on his heels to face him, mane bristling, ears laid back,
|
|
lips writhing and snarling, jaws clipping together as fast as he
|
|
could snap, and eyes diabolically gleaming--the incarnation of
|
|
belligerent fear. So terrible was his appearance that Spitz was
|
|
forced to forego disciplining him; but to cover his own
|
|
discomfiture he turned upon the inoffensive and wailing Billee and
|
|
drove him to the confines of the camp.
|
|
|
|
By evening Perrault secured another dog, an old husky, long and
|
|
lean and gaunt, with a battle-scarred face and a single eye which
|
|
flashed a warning of prowess that commanded respect. He was
|
|
called Sol-leks, which means the Angry One. Like Dave, he asked
|
|
nothing, gave nothing, expected nothing; and when he marched
|
|
slowly and deliberately into their midst, even Spitz left him
|
|
alone. He had one peculiarity which Buck was unlucky enough to
|
|
discover. He did not like to be approached on his blind side. Of
|
|
this offence Buck was unwittingly guilty, and the first knowledge
|
|
he had of his indiscretion was when Sol-leks whirled upon him and
|
|
slashed his shoulder to the bone for three inches up and down.
|
|
Forever after Buck avoided his blind side, and to the last of
|
|
their comradeship had no more trouble. His only apparent
|
|
ambition, like Dave's, was to be left alone; though, as Buck was
|
|
afterward to learn, each of them possessed one other and even more
|
|
vital ambition.
|
|
|
|
That night Buck faced the great problem of sleeping. The tent,
|
|
illumined by a candle, glowed warmly in the midst of the white
|
|
plain; and when he, as a matter of course, entered it, both
|
|
Perrault and Francois bombarded him with curses and cooking
|
|
utensils, till he recovered from his consternation and fled
|
|
ignominiously into the outer cold. A chill wind was blowing that
|
|
nipped him sharply and bit with especial venom into his wounded
|
|
shoulder. He lay down on the snow and attempted to sleep, but the
|
|
frost soon drove him shivering to his feet. Miserable and
|
|
disconsolate, he wandered about among the many tents, only to find
|
|
that one place was as cold as another. Here and there savage dogs
|
|
rushed upon him, but he bristled his neck-hair and snarled (for he
|
|
was learning fast), and they let him go his way unmolested.
|
|
|
|
Finally an idea came to him. He would return and see how his own
|
|
team-mates were making out. To his astonishment, they had
|
|
disappeared. Again he wandered about through the great camp,
|
|
looking for them, and again he returned. Were they in the tent?
|
|
No, that could not be, else he would not have been driven out.
|
|
Then where could they possibly be? With drooping tail and
|
|
shivering body, very forlorn indeed, he aimlessly circled the
|
|
tent. Suddenly the snow gave way beneath his fore legs and he
|
|
sank down. Something wriggled under his feet. He sprang back,
|
|
bristling and snarling, fearful of the unseen and unknown. But a
|
|
friendly little yelp reassured him, and he went back to
|
|
investigate. A whiff of warm air ascended to his nostrils, and
|
|
there, curled up under the snow in a snug ball, lay Billee. He
|
|
whined placatingly, squirmed and wriggled to show his good will
|
|
and intentions, and even ventured, as a bribe for peace, to lick
|
|
Buck's face with his warm wet tongue.
|
|
|
|
Another lesson. So that was the way they did it, eh? Buck
|
|
confidently selected a spot, and with much fuss and waste effort
|
|
proceeded to dig a hole for himself. In a trice the heat from his
|
|
body filled the confined space and he was asleep. The day had
|
|
been long and arduous, and he slept soundly and comfortably,
|
|
though he growled and barked and wrestled with bad dreams.
|
|
|
|
Nor did he open his eyes till roused by the noises of the waking
|
|
camp. At first he did not know where he was. It had snowed
|
|
during the night and he was completely buried. The snow walls
|
|
pressed him on every side, and a great surge of fear swept through
|
|
him--the fear of the wild thing for the trap. It was a token that
|
|
he was harking back through his own life to the lives of his
|
|
forebears; for he was a civilized dog, an unduly civilized dog,
|
|
and of his own experience knew no trap and so could not of himself
|
|
fear it. The muscles of his whole body contracted spasmodically
|
|
and instinctively, the hair on his neck and shoulders stood on
|
|
end, and with a ferocious snarl he bounded straight up into the
|
|
blinding day, the snow flying about him in a flashing cloud. Ere
|
|
he landed on his feet, he saw the white camp spread out before him
|
|
and knew where he was and remembered all that had passed from the
|
|
time he went for a stroll with Manuel to the hole he had dug for
|
|
himself the night before.
|
|
|
|
A shout from Francois hailed his appearance. "Wot I say?" the
|
|
dog-driver cried to Perrault. "Dat Buck for sure learn queek as
|
|
anyt'ing."
|
|
|
|
Perrault nodded gravely. As courier for the Canadian Government,
|
|
bearing important despatches, he was anxious to secure the best
|
|
dogs, and he was particularly gladdened by the possession of Buck.
|
|
|
|
Three more huskies were added to the team inside an hour, making a
|
|
total of nine, and before another quarter of an hour had passed
|
|
they were in harness and swinging up the trail toward the Dyea
|
|
Canon. Buck was glad to be gone, and though the work was hard he
|
|
found he did not particularly despise it. He was surprised at the
|
|
eagerness which animated the whole team and which was communicated
|
|
to him; but still more surprising was the change wrought in Dave
|
|
and Sol-leks. They were new dogs, utterly transformed by the
|
|
harness. All passiveness and unconcern had dropped from them.
|
|
They were alert and active, anxious that the work should go well,
|
|
and fiercely irritable with whatever, by delay or confusion,
|
|
retarded that work. The toil of the traces seemed the supreme
|
|
expression of their being, and all that they lived for and the
|
|
only thing in which they took delight.
|
|
|
|
Dave was wheeler or sled dog, pulling in front of him was Buck,
|
|
then came Sol-leks; the rest of the team was strung out ahead,
|
|
single file, to the leader, which position was filled by Spitz.
|
|
|
|
Buck had been purposely placed between Dave and Sol-leks so that
|
|
he might receive instruction. Apt scholar that he was, they were
|
|
equally apt teachers, never allowing him to linger long in error,
|
|
and enforcing their teaching with their sharp teeth. Dave was
|
|
fair and very wise. He never nipped Buck without cause, and he
|
|
never failed to nip him when he stood in need of it. As
|
|
Francois's whip backed him up, Buck found it to be cheaper to mend
|
|
his ways than to retaliate, Once, during a brief halt, when he got
|
|
tangled in the traces and delayed the start, both Dave and Sol-
|
|
leks flew at him and administered a sound trouncing. The
|
|
resulting tangle was even worse, but Buck took good care to keep
|
|
the traces clear thereafter; and ere the day was done, so well had
|
|
he mastered his work, his mates about ceased nagging him.
|
|
Francois's whip snapped less frequently, and Perrault even honored
|
|
Buck by lifting up his feet and carefully examining them.
|
|
|
|
It was a hard day's run, up the Canon, through Sheep Camp, past
|
|
the Scales and the timber line, across glaciers and snowdrifts
|
|
hundreds of feet deep, and over the great Chilcoot Divide, which
|
|
stands between the salt water and the fresh and guards
|
|
forbiddingly the sad and lonely North. They made good time down
|
|
the chain of lakes which fills the craters of extinct volcanoes,
|
|
and late that night pulled into the huge camp at the head of Lake
|
|
Bennett, where thousands of goldseekers were building boats
|
|
against the break-up of the ice in the spring. Buck made his hole
|
|
in the snow and slept the sleep of the exhausted just, but all too
|
|
early was routed out in the cold darkness and harnessed with his
|
|
mates to the sled.
|
|
|
|
That day they made forty miles, the trail being packed; but the
|
|
next day, and for many days to follow, they broke their own trail,
|
|
worked harder, and made poorer time. As a rule, Perrault
|
|
travelled ahead of the team, packing the snow with webbed shoes to
|
|
make it easier for them. Francois, guiding the sled at the gee-
|
|
pole, sometimes exchanged places with him, but not often.
|
|
Perrault was in a hurry, and he prided himself on his knowledge of
|
|
ice, which knowledge was indispensable, for the fall ice was very
|
|
thin, and where there was swift water, there was no ice at all.
|
|
|
|
Day after day, for days unending, Buck toiled in the traces.
|
|
Always, they broke camp in the dark, and the first gray of dawn
|
|
found them hitting the trail with fresh miles reeled off behind
|
|
them. And always they pitched camp after dark, eating their bit
|
|
of fish, and crawling to sleep into the snow. Buck was ravenous.
|
|
The pound and a half of sun-dried salmon, which was his ration for
|
|
each day, seemed to go nowhere. He never had enough, and suffered
|
|
from perpetual hunger pangs. Yet the other dogs, because they
|
|
weighed less and were born to the life, received a pound only of
|
|
the fish and managed to keep in good condition.
|
|
|
|
He swiftly lost the fastidiousness which had characterized his old
|
|
life. A dainty eater, he found that his mates, finishing first,
|
|
robbed him of his unfinished ration. There was no defending it.
|
|
While he was fighting off two or three, it was disappearing down
|
|
the throats of the others. To remedy this, he ate as fast as
|
|
they; and, so greatly did hunger compel him, he was not above
|
|
taking what did not belong to him. He watched and learned. When
|
|
he saw Pike, one of the new dogs, a clever malingerer and thief,
|
|
slyly steal a slice of bacon when Perrault's back was turned, he
|
|
duplicated the performance the following day, getting away with
|
|
the whole chunk. A great uproar was raised, but he was
|
|
unsuspected; while Dub, an awkward blunderer who was always
|
|
getting caught, was punished for Buck's misdeed.
|
|
|
|
This first theft marked Buck as fit to survive in the hostile
|
|
Northland environment. It marked his adaptability, his capacity
|
|
to adjust himself to changing conditions, the lack of which would
|
|
have meant swift and terrible death. It marked, further, the
|
|
decay or going to pieces of his moral nature, a vain thing and a
|
|
handicap in the ruthless struggle for existence. It was all well
|
|
enough in the Southland, under the law of love and fellowship, to
|
|
respect private property and personal feelings; but in the
|
|
Northland, under the law of club and fang, whoso took such things
|
|
into account was a fool, and in so far as he observed them he
|
|
would fail to prosper.
|
|
|
|
Not that Buck reasoned it out. He was fit, that was all, and
|
|
unconsciously he accommodated himself to the new mode of life.
|
|
All his days, no matter what the odds, he had never run from a
|
|
fight. But the club of the man in the red sweater had beaten into
|
|
him a more fundamental and primitive code. Civilized, he could
|
|
have died for a moral consideration, say the defence of Judge
|
|
Miller's riding-whip; but the completeness of his decivilization
|
|
was now evidenced by his ability to flee from the defence of a
|
|
moral consideration and so save his hide. He did not steal for
|
|
joy of it, but because of the clamor of his stomach. He did not
|
|
rob openly, but stole secretly and cunningly, out of respect for
|
|
club and fang. In short, the things he did were done because it
|
|
was easier to do them than not to do them.
|
|
|
|
His development (or retrogression) was rapid. His muscles became
|
|
hard as iron, and he grew callous to all ordinary pain. He
|
|
achieved an internal as well as external economy. He could eat
|
|
anything, no matter how loathsome or indigestible; and, once
|
|
eaten, the juices of his stomach extracted the last least particle
|
|
of nutriment; and his blood carried it to the farthest reaches of
|
|
his body, building it into the toughest and stoutest of tissues.
|
|
Sight and scent became remarkably keen, while his hearing
|
|
developed such acuteness that in his sleep he heard the faintest
|
|
sound and knew whether it heralded peace or peril. He learned to
|
|
bite the ice out with his teeth when it collected between his
|
|
toes; and when he was thirsty and there was a thick scum of ice
|
|
over the water hole, he would break it by rearing and striking it
|
|
with stiff fore legs. His most conspicuous trait was an ability to
|
|
scent the wind and forecast it a night in advance. No matter how
|
|
breathless the air when he dug his nest by tree or bank, the wind
|
|
that later blew inevitably found him to leeward, sheltered and
|
|
snug.
|
|
|
|
And not only did he learn by experience, but instincts long dead
|
|
became alive again. The domesticated generations fell from him.
|
|
In vague ways he remembered back to the youth of the breed, to the
|
|
time the wild dogs ranged in packs through the primeval forest and
|
|
killed their meat as they ran it down. It was no task for him to
|
|
learn to fight with cut and slash and the quick wolf snap. In
|
|
this manner had fought forgotten ancestors. They quickened the
|
|
old life within him, and the old tricks which they had stamped
|
|
into the heredity of the breed were his tricks. They came to him
|
|
without effort or discovery, as though they had been his always.
|
|
And when, on the still cold nights, he pointed his nose at a star
|
|
and howled long and wolflike, it was his ancestors, dead and dust,
|
|
pointing nose at star and howling down through the centuries and
|
|
through him. And his cadences were their cadences, the cadences
|
|
which voiced their woe and what to them was the meaning of the
|
|
stiffness, and the cold, and dark.
|
|
|
|
Thus, as token of what a puppet thing life is, the ancient song
|
|
surged through him and he came into his own again; and he came
|
|
because men had found a yellow metal in the North, and because
|
|
Manuel was a gardener's helper whose wages did not lap over the
|
|
needs of his wife and divers small copies of himself.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter III
|
|
|
|
The Dominant Primordial Beast
|
|
|
|
|
|
The dominant primordial beast was strong in Buck, and under the
|
|
fierce conditions of trail life it grew and grew. Yet it was a
|
|
secret growth. His newborn cunning gave him poise and control.
|
|
He was too busy adjusting himself to the new life to feel at ease,
|
|
and not only did he not pick fights, but he avoided them whenever
|
|
possible. A certain deliberateness characterized his attitude.
|
|
He was not prone to rashness and precipitate action; and in the
|
|
bitter hatred between him and Spitz he betrayed no impatience,
|
|
shunned all offensive acts.
|
|
|
|
On the other hand, possibly because he divined in Buck a dangerous
|
|
rival, Spitz never lost an opportunity of showing his teeth. He
|
|
even went out of his way to bully Buck, striving constantly to
|
|
start the fight which could end only in the death of one or the
|
|
other. Early in the trip this might have taken place had it not
|
|
been for an unwonted accident. At the end of this day they made a
|
|
bleak and miserable camp on the shore of Lake Le Barge. Driving
|
|
snow, a wind that cut like a white-hot knife, and darkness had
|
|
forced them to grope for a camping place. They could hardly have
|
|
fared worse. At their backs rose a perpendicular wall of rock,
|
|
and Perrault and Francois were compelled to make their fire and
|
|
spread their sleeping robes on the ice of the lake itself. The
|
|
tent they had discarded at Dyea in order to travel light. A few
|
|
sticks of driftwood furnished them with a fire that thawed down
|
|
through the ice and left them to eat supper in the dark.
|
|
|
|
Close in under the sheltering rock Buck made his nest. So snug
|
|
and warm was it, that he was loath to leave it when Francois
|
|
distributed the fish which he had first thawed over the fire. But
|
|
when Buck finished his ration and returned, he found his nest
|
|
occupied. A warning snarl told him that the trespasser was Spitz.
|
|
Till now Buck had avoided trouble with his enemy, but this was too
|
|
much. The beast in him roared. He sprang upon Spitz with a fury
|
|
which surprised them both, and Spitz particularly, for his whole
|
|
experience with Buck had gone to teach him that his rival was an
|
|
unusually timid dog, who managed to hold his own only because of
|
|
his great weight and size.
|
|
|
|
Francois was surprised, too, when they shot out in a tangle from
|
|
the disrupted nest and he divined the cause of the trouble. "A-a-
|
|
ah!" he cried to Buck. "Gif it to heem, by Gar! Gif it to heem,
|
|
the dirty t'eef!"
|
|
|
|
Spitz was equally willing. He was crying with sheer rage and
|
|
eagerness as he circled back and forth for a chance to spring in.
|
|
Buck was no less eager, and no less cautious, as he likewise
|
|
circled back and forth for the advantage. But it was then that
|
|
the unexpected happened, the thing which projected their struggle
|
|
for supremacy far into the future, past many a weary mile of trail
|
|
and toil.
|
|
|
|
An oath from Perrault, the resounding impact of a club upon a bony
|
|
frame, and a shrill yelp of pain, heralded the breaking forth of
|
|
pandemonium. The camp was suddenly discovered to be alive with
|
|
skulking furry forms, - starving huskies, four or five score of
|
|
them, who had scented the camp from some Indian village. They had
|
|
crept in while Buck and Spitz were fighting, and when the two men
|
|
sprang among them with stout clubs they showed their teeth and
|
|
fought back. They were crazed by the smell of the food. Perrault
|
|
found one with head buried in the grub-box. His club landed
|
|
heavily on the gaunt ribs, and the grub-box was capsized on the
|
|
ground. On the instant a score of the famished brutes were
|
|
scrambling for the bread and bacon. The clubs fell upon them
|
|
unheeded. They yelped and howled under the rain of blows, but
|
|
struggled none the less madly till the last crumb had been
|
|
devoured.
|
|
|
|
In the meantime the astonished team-dogs had burst out of their
|
|
nests only to be set upon by the fierce invaders. Never had Buck
|
|
seen such dogs. it seemed as though their bones would burst
|
|
through their skins. They were mere skeletons, draped loosely in
|
|
draggled hides, with blazing eyes and slavered fangs. But the
|
|
hunger-madness made them terrifying, irresistible. There was no
|
|
opposing them. The team-dogs were swept back against the cliff at
|
|
the first onset. Buck was beset by three huskies, and in a trice
|
|
his head and shoulders were ripped and slashed. The din was
|
|
frightful. Billee was crying as usual. Dave and Sol-leks,
|
|
dripping blood from a score of wounds, were fighting bravely side
|
|
by side. Joe was snapping like a demon. Once, his teeth closed
|
|
on the fore leg of a husky, and he crunched down through the bone.
|
|
Pike, the malingerer, leaped upon the crippled animal, breaking
|
|
its neck with a quick flash of teeth and a jerk, Buck got a
|
|
frothing adversary by the throat, and was sprayed with blood when
|
|
his teeth sank through the jugular. The warm taste of it in his
|
|
mouth goaded him to greater fierceness. He flung himself upon
|
|
another, and at the same time felt teeth sink into his own throat.
|
|
It was Spitz, treacherously attacking from the side.
|
|
|
|
Perrault and Francois, having cleaned out their part of the camp,
|
|
hurried to save their sled-dogs. The wild wave of famished beasts
|
|
rolled back before them, and Buck shook himself free. But it was
|
|
only for a moment. The two men were compelled to run back to save
|
|
the grub, upon which the huskies returned to the attack on the
|
|
team. Billee, terrified into bravery, sprang through the savage
|
|
circle and fled away over the ice. Pike and Dub followed on his
|
|
heels, with the rest of the team behind. As Buck drew himself
|
|
together to spring after them, out of the tail of his eye he saw
|
|
Spitz rush upon him with the evident intention of overthrowing
|
|
him. Once off his feet and under that mass of huskies, there was
|
|
no hope for him. But he braced himself to the shock of Spitz's
|
|
charge, then joined the flight out on the lake.
|
|
|
|
Later, the nine team-dogs gathered together and sought shelter in
|
|
the forest. Though unpursued, they were in a sorry plight. There
|
|
was not one who was not wounded in four or five places, while some
|
|
were wounded grievously. Dub was badly injured in a hind leg;
|
|
Dolly, the last husky added to the team at Dyea, had a badly torn
|
|
throat; Joe had lost an eye; while Billee, the good-natured, with
|
|
an ear chewed and rent to ribbons, cried and whimpered throughout
|
|
the night. At daybreak they limped warily back to camp, to find
|
|
the marauders gone and the two men in bad tempers. Fully half
|
|
their grub supply was gone. The huskies had chewed through the
|
|
sled lashings and canvas coverings. In fact, nothing, no matter
|
|
how remotely eatable, had escaped them. They had eaten a pair of
|
|
Perrault's moose-hide moccasins, chunks out of the leather traces,
|
|
and even two feet of lash from the end of Francois's whip. He
|
|
broke from a mournful contemplation of it to look over his wounded
|
|
dogs.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, my frien's," he said softly, "mebbe it mek you mad dog, dose
|
|
many bites. Mebbe all mad dog, sacredam! Wot you t'ink, eh,
|
|
Perrault?"
|
|
|
|
The courier shook his head dubiously. With four hundred miles of
|
|
trail still between him and Dawson, he could ill afford to have
|
|
madness break out among his dogs. Two hours of cursing and
|
|
exertion got the harnesses into shape, and the wound-stiffened
|
|
team was under way, struggling painfully over the hardest part of
|
|
the trail they had yet encountered, and for that matter, the
|
|
hardest between them and Dawson.
|
|
|
|
The Thirty Mile River was wide open. Its wild water defied the
|
|
frost, and it was in the eddies only and in the quiet places that
|
|
the ice held at all. Six days of exhausting toil were required to
|
|
cover those thirty terrible miles. And terrible they were, for
|
|
every foot of them was accomplished at the risk of life to dog and
|
|
man. A dozen times, Perrault, nosing the way broke through the
|
|
ice bridges, being saved by the long pole he carried, which he so
|
|
held that it fell each time across the hole made by his body. But
|
|
a cold snap was on, the thermometer registering fifty below zero,
|
|
and each time he broke through he was compelled for very life to
|
|
build a fire and dry his garments.
|
|
|
|
Nothing daunted him. It was because nothing daunted him that he
|
|
had been chosen for government courier. He took all manner of
|
|
risks, resolutely thrusting his little weazened face into the
|
|
frost and struggling on from dim dawn to dark. He skirted the
|
|
frowning shores on rim ice that bent and crackled under foot and
|
|
upon which they dared not halt. Once, the sled broke through,
|
|
with Dave and Buck, and they were half-frozen and all but drowned
|
|
by the time they were dragged out. The usual fire was necessary
|
|
to save them. They were coated solidly with ice, and the two men
|
|
kept them on the run around the fire, sweating and thawing, so
|
|
close that they were singed by the flames.
|
|
|
|
At another time Spitz went through, dragging the whole team after
|
|
him up to Buck, who strained backward with all his strength, his
|
|
fore paws on the slippery edge and the ice quivering and snapping
|
|
all around. But behind him was Dave, likewise straining backward,
|
|
and behind the sled was Francois, pulling till his tendons
|
|
cracked.
|
|
|
|
Again, the rim ice broke away before and behind, and there was no
|
|
escape except up the cliff. Perrault scaled it by a miracle,
|
|
while Francois prayed for just that miracle; and with every thong
|
|
and sled lashing and the last bit of harness rove into a long
|
|
rope, the dogs were hoisted, one by one, to the cliff crest.
|
|
Francois came up last, after the sled and load. Then came the
|
|
search for a place to descend, which descent was ultimately made
|
|
by the aid of the rope, and night found them back on the river
|
|
with a quarter of a mile to the day's credit.
|
|
|
|
By the time they made the Hootalinqua and good ice, Buck was
|
|
played out. The rest of the dogs were in like condition; but
|
|
Perrault, to make up lost time, pushed them late and early. The
|
|
first day they covered thirty-five miles to the Big Salmon; the
|
|
next day thirty-five more to the Little Salmon; the third day
|
|
forty miles, which brought them well up toward the Five Fingers.
|
|
|
|
Buck's feet were not so compact and hard as the feet of the
|
|
huskies. His had softened during the many generations since the
|
|
day his last wild ancestor was tamed by a cave-dweller or river
|
|
man. AU day long he limped in agony, and camp once made, lay down
|
|
like a dead dog. Hungry as he was, he would not move to receive
|
|
his ration of fish, which Francois had to bring to him. Also, the
|
|
dog-driver rubbed Buck's feet for half an hour each night after
|
|
supper, and sacrificed the tops of his own moccasins to make four
|
|
moccasins for Buck. This was a great relief, and Buck caused even
|
|
the weazened face of Perrault to twist itself into a grin one
|
|
morning, when Francois forgot the moccasins and Buck lay on his
|
|
back, his four feet waving appealingly in the air, and refused to
|
|
budge without them. Later his feet grew hard to the trail, and
|
|
the worn-out foot-gear was thrown away.
|
|
|
|
At the Pelly one morning, as they were harnessing up, Dolly, who
|
|
had never been conspicuous for anything, went suddenly mad. She
|
|
announced her condition by a long, heartbreaking wolf howl that
|
|
sent every dog bristling with fear, then sprang straight for Buck.
|
|
He had never seen a dog go mad, nor did he have any reason to fear
|
|
madness; yet he knew that here was horror, and fled away from it
|
|
in a panic. Straight away he raced, with Dolly, panting and
|
|
frothing, one leap behind; nor could she gain on him, so great was
|
|
his terror, nor could he leave her, so great was her madness. He
|
|
plunged through the wooded breast of the island, flew down to the
|
|
lower end, crossed a back channel filled with rough ice to another
|
|
island, gained a third island, curved back to the main river, and
|
|
in desperation started to cross it. And all the time, though he
|
|
did not took, he could hear her snarling just one leap behind.
|
|
Francois called to him a quarter of a mile away and he doubled
|
|
back, still one leap ahead, gasping painfully for air and putting
|
|
all his faith in that Francois would save him. The dog-driver
|
|
held the axe poised in his hand, and as Buck shot past him the axe
|
|
crashed down upon mad Dolly's head.
|
|
|
|
Buck staggered over against the sled, exhausted, sobbing for
|
|
breath, helpless. This was Spitz's opportunity. He sprang upon
|
|
Buck, and twice his teeth sank into his unresisting foe and ripped
|
|
and tore the flesh to the bone. Then Francois's lash descended,
|
|
and Buck had the satisfaction of watching Spitz receive the worst
|
|
whipping as yet administered to any of the teams.
|
|
|
|
"One devil, dat Spitz," remarked Perrault. "Some dam day heem
|
|
keel dat Buck."
|
|
|
|
"Dat Buck two devils, " was Francois's rejoinder. "All de tam I
|
|
watch dat Buck I know for sure. Lissen: some dam fine day heem
|
|
get mad lak hell an' den heem chew dat Spitz all up an) spit heem
|
|
out on de snow. Sure. I know."
|
|
|
|
From then on it was war between them. Spitz, as lead-dog and
|
|
acknowledged master of the team, felt his supremacy threatened by
|
|
this strange Southland dog. And strange Buck was to him, for of
|
|
the many Southland dogs he had known, not one had shown up
|
|
worthily in camp and on trail. They were all too soft, dying
|
|
under the toil, the frost, and starvation. Buck was the
|
|
exception. He alone endured and prospered, matching the husky in
|
|
strength, savagery, and cunning. Then he was a masterful dog, and
|
|
what made him dangerous was the fact that the club of the man in
|
|
the red sweater had knocked all blind pluck and rashness out of
|
|
his desire for mastery. He was preeminently cunning, and could
|
|
bide his time with a patience that was nothing less than
|
|
primitive.
|
|
|
|
It was inevitable that the clash for leadership should come. Buck
|
|
wanted it. He wanted it because it was his nature, because he had
|
|
been gripped tight by that nameless, incomprehensible pride of the
|
|
trail and trace--that pride which holds dogs in the toil to the
|
|
last gasp, which lures them to die joyfully in the harness, and
|
|
breaks their hearts if they are cut out of the harness. This was
|
|
the pride of Dave as wheel-dog, of Sol-leks as he pulled with all
|
|
his strength; the pride that laid hold of them at break of camp,
|
|
transforming them from sour and sullen brutes into straining,
|
|
eager, ambitious creatures; the pride that spurred them on all day
|
|
and dropped them at pitch of camp at night, letting them fall back
|
|
into gloomy unrest and uncontent. This was the pride that bore up
|
|
Spitz and made him thrash the sled-dogs who blundered and shirked
|
|
in the traces or hid away at harness-up time in the morning.
|
|
Likewise it was this pride that made him fear Buck as a possible
|
|
lead-dog. And this was Buck's pride, too.
|
|
|
|
He openly threatened the other's leadership. He came between him
|
|
and the shirks he should have punished. And he did it
|
|
deliberately. One night there was a heavy snowfall, and in the
|
|
morning Pike, the malingerer, did not appear. He was securely
|
|
hidden in his nest under a foot of snow. Francois called him and
|
|
sought him in vain. Spitz was wild with wrath. He raged through
|
|
the camp, smelling and digging in every likely place, snarling so
|
|
frightfully that Pike heard and shivered in his hiding-place.
|
|
|
|
But when he was at last unearthed, and Spitz flew at him to punish
|
|
him, Buck flew, with equal rage, in between. So unexpected was
|
|
it, and so shrewdly managed, that Spitz was hurled backward and
|
|
off his feet. Pike, who had been trembling abjectly, took heart
|
|
at this open mutiny, and sprang upon his overthrown leader. Buck,
|
|
to whom fair play was a forgotten code, likewise sprang upon
|
|
Spitz. But Francois, chuckling at the incident while unswerving
|
|
in the administration of justice, brought his lash down upon Buck
|
|
with all his might. This failed to drive Buck from his prostrate
|
|
rival, and the butt of the whip was brought into play. Half-
|
|
stunned by the blow, Buck was knocked backward and the lash laid
|
|
upon him again and again, while Spitz soundly punished the many
|
|
times offending Pike.
|
|
|
|
In the days that followed, as Dawson grew closer and closer, Buck
|
|
still continued to interfere between Spitz and the culprits; but
|
|
he did it craftily, when Francois was not around, With the covert
|
|
mutiny of Buck, a general insubordination sprang up and increased.
|
|
Dave and Sol-leks were unaffected, but the rest of the team went
|
|
from bad to worse. Things no longer went right. There was
|
|
continual bickering and jangling. Trouble was always afoot, and
|
|
at the bottom of it was Buck. He kept Francois busy, for the dog-
|
|
driver was in constant apprehension of the life-and-death struggle
|
|
between the two which he knew must take place sooner or later; and
|
|
on more than one night the sounds of quarrelling and strife among
|
|
the other dogs turned him out of his sleeping robe, fearful that
|
|
Buck and Spitz were at it.
|
|
|
|
But the opportunity did not present itself, and they pulled into
|
|
Dawson one dreary afternoon with the great fight still to come.
|
|
Here were many men, and countless dogs, and Buck found them all at
|
|
work. It seemed the ordained order of things that dogs should
|
|
work. All day they swung up and down the main street in long
|
|
teams, and in the night their jingling bells still went by. They
|
|
hauled cabin logs and firewood, freighted up to the mines, and did
|
|
all manner of work that horses did in the Santa Clara Valley.
|
|
Here and there Buck met Southland dogs, but in the main they were
|
|
the wild wolf husky breed. Every night, regularly, at nine, at
|
|
twelve, at three, they lifted a nocturnal song, a weird and eerie
|
|
chant, in which it was Buck's delight to join.
|
|
|
|
With the aurora borealis flaming coldly overhead, or the stars
|
|
leaping in the frost dance, and the land numb and frozen under its
|
|
pall of snow, this song of the huskies might have been the
|
|
defiance of life, only it was pitched in minor key, with long-
|
|
drawn wailings and half-sobs, and was more the pleading of life,
|
|
the articulate travail of existence. It was an old song, old as
|
|
the breed itself--one of the first songs of the younger world in a
|
|
day when songs were sad. It was invested with the woe of
|
|
unnumbered generations, this plaint by which Buck was so strangely
|
|
stirred. When he moaned and sobbed, it was with the pain of
|
|
living that was of old the pain of his wild fathers, and the fear
|
|
and mystery of the cold and dark that was to them fear and
|
|
mystery. And that he should be stirred by it marked the
|
|
completeness with which he harked back through the ages of fire
|
|
and roof to the raw beginnings of life in the howling ages.
|
|
|
|
Seven days from the time they pulled into Dawson, they dropped
|
|
down the steep bank by the Barracks to the Yukon Trail, and pulled
|
|
for Dyea and Salt Water. Perrault was carrying despatches if
|
|
anything more urgent than those he had brought in; also, the
|
|
travel pride had gripped him, and he purposed to make the record
|
|
trip of the year. Several things favored him in this. The week's
|
|
rest had recuperated the dogs and put them in thorough trim. The
|
|
trail they had broken into the country was packed hard by later
|
|
journeyers. And further, the police had arranged in two or three
|
|
places deposits of grub for dog and man, and he was travelling
|
|
light.
|
|
|
|
They made Sixty Mile, which is a fifty-mile run, on the first day;
|
|
and the second day saw them booming up the Yukon well on their way
|
|
to Pelly. But such splendid running was achieved not without
|
|
great trouble and vexation on the part of Francois. The insidious
|
|
revolt led by Buck had destroyed the solidarity of the team. It
|
|
no longer was as one dog leaping in the traces. The encouragement
|
|
Buck gave the rebels led them into all kinds of petty
|
|
misdemeanors. No more was Spitz a leader greatly to be feared.
|
|
The old awe departed, and they grew equal to challenging his
|
|
authority. Pike robbed him of half a fish one night, and gulped
|
|
it down under the protection of Buck. Another night Dub and Joe
|
|
fought Spitz and made him forego the punishment they deserved.
|
|
And even Billee, the good-natured, was less good-natured, and
|
|
whined not half so placatingly as in former days. Buck never came
|
|
near Spitz without snarling and bristling menacingly. In fact,
|
|
his conduct approached that of a bully, and he was given to
|
|
swaggering up and down before Spitz's very nose.
|
|
|
|
The breaking down of discipline likewise affected the dogs in
|
|
their relations with one another. They quarrelled and bickered
|
|
more than ever among themselves, till at times the camp was a
|
|
howling bedlam. Dave and Sol-leks alone were unaltered, though
|
|
they were made irritable by the unending squabbling. Francois
|
|
swore strange barbarous oaths, and stamped the snow in futile
|
|
rage, and tore his hair. His lash was always singing among the
|
|
dogs, but it was of small avail. Directly his back was turned they
|
|
were at it again. He backed up Spitz with his whip, while Buck
|
|
backed up the remainder of the team. Francois knew he was behind
|
|
all the trouble, and Buck knew he knew; but Buck was too clever
|
|
ever again to be caught red-handed. He worked faithfully in the
|
|
harness, for the toil had become a delight to him; yet it was a
|
|
greater delight slyly to precipitate a fight amongst his mates and
|
|
tangle the traces.
|
|
|
|
At the mouth of the Tahkeena, one night after supper, Dub turned
|
|
up a snowshoe rabbit, blundered it, and missed. In a second the
|
|
whole team was in full cry. A hundred yards away was a camp of
|
|
the Northwest Police, with fifty dogs, huskies all, who joined the
|
|
chase. The rabbit sped down the river, turned off into a small
|
|
creek, up the frozen bed of which it held steadily. It ran
|
|
lightly on the surface of the snow, while the dogs ploughed
|
|
through by main strength. Buck led the pack, sixty strong, around
|
|
bend after bend, but he could not gain. He lay down low to the
|
|
race, whining eagerly, his splendid body flashing forward, leap by
|
|
leap, in the wan white moonlight. And leap by leap, like some
|
|
pale frost wraith, the snowshoe rabbit flashed on ahead.
|
|
|
|
All that stirring of old instincts which at stated periods drives
|
|
men out from the sounding cities to forest and plain to kill
|
|
things by chemically propelled leaden pellets, the blood lust, the
|
|
joy to kill--all this was Buck's, only it was infinitely more
|
|
intimate. He was ranging at the head of the pack, running the
|
|
wild thing down, the living meat, to kill with his own teeth and
|
|
wash his muzzle to the eyes in warm blood.
|
|
|
|
There is an ecstasy that marks the summit of life, and beyond
|
|
which life cannot rise. And such is the paradox of living, this
|
|
ecstasy comes when one is most alive, and it comes as a complete
|
|
forgetfulness that one is alive. This ecstasy, this forgetfulness
|
|
of living, comes to the artist, caught up and out of himself in a
|
|
sheet of flame; it comes to the soldier, war-mad on a stricken
|
|
field and refusing quarter; and it came to Buck, leading the pack,
|
|
sounding the old wolf-cry, straining after the food that was alive
|
|
and that fled swiftly before him through the moonlight. He was
|
|
sounding the deeps of his nature, and of the parts of his nature
|
|
that were deeper than he, going back into the womb of Time. He
|
|
was mastered by the sheer surging of life, the tidal wave of
|
|
being, the perfect joy of each separate muscle, joint, and sinew
|
|
in that it was everything that was not death, that it was aglow
|
|
and rampant, expressing itself in movement, flying exultantly
|
|
under the stars and over the face of dead matter that did not
|
|
move.
|
|
|
|
But Spitz, cold and calculating even in his supreme moods, left
|
|
the pack and cut across a narrow neck of land where the creek made
|
|
a long bend around. Buck did not know of this, and as he rounded
|
|
the bend, the frost wraith of a rabbit still flitting before him,
|
|
he saw another and larger frost wraith leap from the overhanging
|
|
bank into the immediate path of the rabbit. It was Spitz. The
|
|
rabbit could not turn, and as the white teeth broke its back in
|
|
mid air it shrieked as loudly as a stricken man may shriek. At
|
|
sound of this, the cry of Life plunging down from Life's apex in
|
|
the grip of Death, the fall pack at Buck's heels raised a hell's
|
|
chorus of delight.
|
|
|
|
Buck did not cry out. He did not check himself, but drove in upon
|
|
Spitz, shoulder to shoulder, so hard that he missed the throat.
|
|
They rolled over and over in the powdery snow. Spitz gained his
|
|
feet almost as though he had not been overthrown, slashing Buck
|
|
down the shoulder and leaping clear. Twice his teeth clipped
|
|
together, like the steel jaws of a trap, as he backed away for
|
|
better footing, with lean and lifting lips that writhed and
|
|
snarled.
|
|
|
|
In a flash Buck knew it. The time had come. It was to the death.
|
|
As they circled about, snarling, ears laid back, keenly watchful
|
|
for the advantage, the scene came to Buck with a sense of
|
|
familiarity. He seemed to remember it all,--the white woods, and
|
|
earth, and moonlight, and the thrill of battle. Over the
|
|
whiteness and silence brooded a ghostly calm. There was not the
|
|
faintest whisper of air--nothing moved, not a leaf quivered, the
|
|
visible breaths of the dogs rising slowly and lingering in the
|
|
frosty air. They had made short work of the snowshoe rabbit,
|
|
these dogs that were ill-tamed wolves; and they were now drawn up
|
|
in an expectant circle. They, too, were silent, their eyes only
|
|
gleaming and their breaths drifting slowly upward. To Buck it was
|
|
nothing new or strange, this scene of old time. It was as though
|
|
it had always been, the wonted way of things.
|
|
|
|
Spitz was a practised fighter. From Spitzbergen through the
|
|
Arctic, and across Canada and the Barrens, he had held his own
|
|
with all manner of dogs and achieved to mastery over them. Bitter
|
|
rage was his, but never blind rage. In passion to rend and
|
|
destroy, he never forgot that his enemy was in like passion to
|
|
rend and destroy. He never rushed till he was prepared to receive
|
|
a rush; never attacked till he had first defended that attack.
|
|
|
|
In vain Buck strove to sink his teeth in the neck of the big white
|
|
dog. Wherever his fangs struck for the softer flesh, they were
|
|
countered by the fangs of Spitz. Fang clashed fang, and lips were
|
|
cut and bleeding, but Buck could not penetrate his enemy's guard.
|
|
Then he warmed up and enveloped Spitz in a whirlwind of rushes.
|
|
Time and time again he tried for the snow-white throat, where life
|
|
bubbled near to the surface, and each time and every time Spitz
|
|
slashed him and got away. Then Buck took to rushing, as though for
|
|
the throat, when, suddenly drawing back his head and curving in
|
|
from the side, he would drive his shoulder at the shoulder of
|
|
Spitz, as a ram by which to overthrow him. But instead, Buck's
|
|
shoulder was slashed down each time as Spitz leaped lightly away.
|
|
|
|
Spitz was untouched, while Buck was streaming with blood and
|
|
panting hard. The fight was growing desperate. And all the while
|
|
the silent and wolfish circle waited to finish off whichever dog
|
|
went down. As Buck grew winded, Spitz took to rushing, and he
|
|
kept him staggering for footing. Once Buck went over, and the
|
|
whole circle of sixty dogs started up; but he recovered himself,
|
|
almost in mid air, and the circle sank down again and waited.
|
|
|
|
But Buck possessed a quality that made for greatness--
|
|
imagination. He fought by instinct, but he could fight by head as
|
|
well. He rushed, as though attempting the old shoulder trick, but
|
|
at the last instant swept low to the snow and in. His teeth
|
|
closed on Spitz's left fore leg. There was a crunch of breaking
|
|
bone, and the white dog faced him on three legs. Thrice he tried
|
|
to knock him over, then repeated the trick and broke the right
|
|
fore leg. Despite the pain and helplessness, Spitz struggled
|
|
madly to keep up. He saw the silent circle, with gleaming eyes,
|
|
lolling tongues, and silvery breaths drifting upward, closing in
|
|
upon him as he had seen similar circles close in upon beaten
|
|
antagonists in the past. Only this time he was the one who was
|
|
beaten.
|
|
|
|
There was no hope for him. Buck was inexorable. Mercy was a
|
|
thing reserved for gender climes. He manoeuvred for the final
|
|
rush. The circle had tightened till he could feel the breaths of
|
|
the huskies on his flanks. He could see them, beyond Spitz and to
|
|
either side, half crouching for the spring, their eyes fixed upon
|
|
him. A pause seemed to fall. Every animal was motionless as
|
|
though turned to stone. Only Spitz quivered and bristled as he
|
|
staggered back and forth, snarling with horrible menace, as though
|
|
to frighten off impending death. Then Buck sprang in and out; but
|
|
while he was in, shoulder had at last squarely met shoulder. The
|
|
dark circle became a dot on the moon-flooded snow as Spitz
|
|
disappeared from view. Buck stood and looked on, the successful
|
|
champion, the dominant primordial beast who had made his kill and
|
|
found it good.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter IV
|
|
|
|
Who Has Won to Mastership
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Eh? Wot I say? I spik true w'en I say dat Buck two devils."
|
|
This was Francois's speech next morning when he discovered Spitz
|
|
missing and Buck covered with wounds. He drew him to the fire and
|
|
by its light pointed them out.
|
|
|
|
"Dat Spitz fight lak hell," said Perrault, as he surveyed the
|
|
gaping rips and cuts.
|
|
|
|
"An' dat Buck fight lak two hells," was Francois's answer. "An'
|
|
now we make good time. No more Spitz, no more trouble, sure."
|
|
|
|
While Perrault packed the camp outfit and loaded the sled, the
|
|
dog-driver proceeded to harness the dogs. Buck trotted up to the
|
|
place Spitz would have occupied as leader; but Francois, not
|
|
noticing him, brought Sol-leks to the coveted position. In his
|
|
judgment, Sol-leks was the best lead-dog left. Buck sprang upon
|
|
Sol-leks in a fury, driving him back and standing in his place.
|
|
|
|
"Eh? eh?" Francois cried, slapping his thighs gleefully. "Look at
|
|
dat Buck. Heem keel dat Spitz, heem t'ink to take de job."
|
|
|
|
"Go 'way, Chook!" he cried, but Buck refused to budge.
|
|
|
|
He took Buck by the scruff of the neck, and though the dog growled
|
|
threateningly, dragged him to one side and replaced Sol-leks. The
|
|
old dog did not like it, and showed plainly that he was afraid of
|
|
Buck. Francois was obdurate, but when he turned his back Buck
|
|
again displaced Sol-leks, who was not at all unwilling to go.
|
|
|
|
Francois was angry. "Now, by Gar, I feex you!" he cried, coming
|
|
back with a heavy club in his hand.
|
|
|
|
Buck remembered the man in the red sweater, and retreated slowly;
|
|
nor did he attempt to charge in when Sol-leks was once more
|
|
brought forward. But he circled just beyond the range of the
|
|
club, snarling with bitterness and rage; and while he circled he
|
|
watched the club so as to dodge it if thrown by Francois, for he
|
|
was become wise in the way of clubs. The driver went about his
|
|
work, and he called to Buck when he was ready to put him in his
|
|
old place in front of Dave. Buck retreated two or three steps.
|
|
Francois followed him up, whereupon he again retreated. After
|
|
some time of this, Francois threw down the club, thinking that
|
|
Buck feared a thrashing. But Buck was in open revolt. He wanted,
|
|
not to escape a clubbing, but to have the leadership. It was his
|
|
by right. He had earned it, and he would not be content with
|
|
less.
|
|
|
|
Perrault took a hand. Between them they ran him about for the
|
|
better part of an hour. They threw clubs at him. He dodged.
|
|
They cursed him, and his fathers and mothers before him, and all
|
|
his seed to come after him down to the remotest generation, and
|
|
every hair on his body and drop of blood in his veins; and he
|
|
answered curse with snarl and kept out of their reach. He did not
|
|
try to run away, but retreated around and around the camp,
|
|
advertising plainly that when his desire was met, he would come in
|
|
and be good.
|
|
|
|
Francois sat down and scratched his head. Perrault looked at his
|
|
watch and swore. Time was flying, and they should have been on
|
|
the trail an hour gone. Francois scratched his head again. He
|
|
shook it and grinned sheepishly at the courier, who shrugged his
|
|
shoulders in sign that they were beaten. Then Francois went up to
|
|
where Sol-leks stood and called to Buck. Buck laughed, as dogs
|
|
laugh, yet kept his distance. Francois unfastened Sol-leks's
|
|
traces and put him back in his old place. The team stood
|
|
harnessed to the sled in an unbroken line, ready for the trail.
|
|
There was no place for Buck save at the front. Once more Francois
|
|
called, and once more Buck laughed and kept away.
|
|
|
|
"T'row down de club," Perrault commanded.
|
|
|
|
Francois complied, whereupon Buck trotted in, laughing
|
|
triumphantly, and swung around into position at the head of the
|
|
team. His traces were fastened, the sled broken out, and with
|
|
both men running they dashed out on to the river trail.
|
|
|
|
Highly as the dog-driver had forevalued Buck, with his two devils,
|
|
he found, while the day was yet young, that he had undervalued.
|
|
At a bound Buck took up the duties of leadership; and where
|
|
judgment was required, and quick thinking and quick acting, he
|
|
showed himself the superior even of Spitz, of whom Francois had
|
|
never seen an equal.
|
|
|
|
But it was in giving the law and making his mates live up to it,
|
|
that Buck excelled. Dave and Sol-leks did not mind the change in
|
|
leadership. It was none of their business. Their business was to
|
|
toil, and toil mightily, in the traces. So long as that were not
|
|
interfered with, they did not care what happened. Billee, the
|
|
good-natured, could lead for all they cared, so long as he kept
|
|
order. The rest of the team, however, had grown unruly during the
|
|
last days of Spitz, and their surprise was great now that Buck
|
|
proceeded to lick them into shape.
|
|
|
|
Pike, who pulled at Buck's heels, and who never put an ounce more
|
|
of his weight against the breast-band than he was compelled to do,
|
|
was swiftly and repeatedly shaken for loafing; and ere the first
|
|
day was done he was pulling more than ever before in his life.
|
|
The first night in camp, Joe, the sour one, was punished roundly--
|
|
a thing that Spitz had never succeeded in doing. Buck simply
|
|
smothered him by virtue of superior weight, and cut him up till he
|
|
ceased snapping and began to whine for mercy.
|
|
|
|
The general tone of the team picked up immediately. It recovered
|
|
its old-time solidarity, and once more the dogs leaped as one dog
|
|
in the traces. At the Rink Rapids two native huskies, Teek and
|
|
Koona, were added; and the celerity with which Buck broke them in
|
|
took away Francois's breath.
|
|
|
|
"Nevaire such a dog as dat Buck!" he cried. "No, nevaire! Heem
|
|
worth one t'ousan' dollair, by Gar! Eh? Wot you say, Perrault?"
|
|
|
|
And Perrault nodded. He was ahead of the record then, and gaining
|
|
day by day. The trail was in excellent condition, well packed and
|
|
hard, and there was no new-fallen snow with which to contend. It
|
|
was not too cold. The temperature dropped to fifty below zero and
|
|
remained there the whole trip. The men rode and ran by turn, and
|
|
the dogs were kept on the jump, with but infrequent stoppages.
|
|
|
|
The Thirty Mile River was comparatively coated with ice, and they
|
|
covered in one day going out what had taken them ten days coming
|
|
in. In one run they made a sixty-mile dash from the foot of Lake
|
|
Le Barge to the White Horse Rapids. Across Marsh, Tagish, and
|
|
Bennett (seventy miles of lakes), they flew so fast that the man
|
|
whose turn it was to run towed behind the sled at the end of a
|
|
rope. And on the last night of the second week they topped White
|
|
Pass and dropped down the sea slope with the lights of Skaguay and
|
|
of the shipping at their feet.
|
|
|
|
It was a record run. Each day for fourteen days they had averaged
|
|
forty miles. For three days Perrault and Francois threw chests up
|
|
and down the main street of Skaguay and were deluged with
|
|
invitations to drink, while the team was the constant centre of a
|
|
worshipful crowd of dog-busters and mushers. Then three or four
|
|
western bad men aspired to clean out the town, were riddled like
|
|
pepper-boxes for their pains, and public interest turned to other
|
|
idols. Next came official orders. Francois called Buck to him,
|
|
threw his arms around him, wept over him. And that was the last
|
|
of Francois and Perrault. Like other men, they passed out of
|
|
Buck's life for good.
|
|
|
|
A Scotch half-breed took charge of him and his mates, and in
|
|
company with a dozen other dog-teams he started back over the
|
|
weary trail to Dawson. It was no light running now, nor record
|
|
time, but heavy toil each day, with a heavy load behind; for this
|
|
was the mail train, carrying word from the world to the men who
|
|
sought gold under the shadow of the Pole.
|
|
|
|
Buck did not like it, but he bore up well to the work, taking
|
|
pride in it after the manner of Dave and Sol-leks, and seeing that
|
|
his mates, whether they prided in it or not, did their fair share.
|
|
It was a monotonous life, operating with machine-like regularity.
|
|
One day was very like another. At a certain time each morning the
|
|
cooks turned out, fires were built, and breakfast was eaten.
|
|
Then, while some broke camp, others harnessed the dogs, and they
|
|
were under way an hour or so before the darkness fell which gave
|
|
warning of dawn. At night, camp was made. Some pitched the
|
|
flies, others cut firewood and pine boughs for the beds, and still
|
|
others carried water or ice for the cooks. Also, the dogs were
|
|
fed. To them, this was the one feature of the day, though it was
|
|
good to loaf around, after the fish was eaten, for an hour or so
|
|
with the other dogs, of which there were fivescore and odd. There
|
|
were fierce fighters among them, but three battles with the
|
|
fiercest brought Buck to mastery, so that when he bristled and
|
|
showed his teeth they got out of his way.
|
|
|
|
Best of all, perhaps, he loved to lie near the fire, hind legs
|
|
crouched under him, fore legs stretched out in front, head raised,
|
|
and eyes blinking dreamily at the flames. Sometimes he thought of
|
|
Judge Miller's big house in the sun-kissed Santa Clara Valley, and
|
|
of the cement swimming-tank, and Ysabel, the Mexican hairless, and
|
|
Toots, the Japanese pug; but oftener he remembered the man in the
|
|
red sweater, the death of Curly, the great fight with Spitz, and
|
|
the good things he had eaten or would like to eat. He was not
|
|
homesick. The Sunland was very dim and distant, and such memories
|
|
had no power over him. Far more potent were the memories of his
|
|
heredity that gave things he had never seen before a seeming
|
|
familiarity; the instincts (which were but the memories of his
|
|
ancestors become habits) which had lapsed in later days, and still
|
|
later, in him, quickened and become alive again.
|
|
|
|
Sometimes as he crouched there, blinking dreamily at the flames,
|
|
it seemed that the flames were of another fire, and that as he
|
|
crouched by this other fire he saw another and different man from
|
|
the half-breed cook before him. This other man was shorter of leg
|
|
and longer of arm, with muscles that were stringy and knotty
|
|
rather than rounded and swelling. The hair of this man was long
|
|
and matted, and his head slanted back under it from the eyes. He
|
|
uttered strange sounds, and seemed very much afraid of the
|
|
darkness, into which he peered continually, clutching in his hand,
|
|
which hung midway between knee and foot, a stick with a heavy
|
|
stone made fast to the end. He was all but naked, a ragged and
|
|
fire-scorched skin hanging part way down his back, but on his body
|
|
there was much hair. In some places, across the chest and
|
|
shoulders and down the outside of the arms and thighs, it was
|
|
matted into almost a thick fur. He did not stand erect, but with
|
|
trunk inclined forward from the hips, on legs that bent at the
|
|
knees. About his body there was a peculiar springiness, or
|
|
resiliency, almost catlike, and a quick alertness as of one who
|
|
lived in perpetual fear of things seen and unseen.
|
|
|
|
At other times this hairy man squatted by the fire with head
|
|
between his legs and slept. On such occasions his elbows were on
|
|
his knees, his hands clasped above his head as though to shed rain
|
|
by the hairy arms. And beyond that fire, in the circling
|
|
darkness, Buck could see many gleaming coals, two by two, always
|
|
two by two, which he knew to be the eyes of great beasts of prey.
|
|
And he could hear the crashing of their bodies through the
|
|
undergrowth, and the noises they made in the night. And dreaming
|
|
there by the Yukon bank, with lazy eyes blinking at the fire,
|
|
these sounds and sights of another world would make the hair to
|
|
rise along his back and stand on end across his shoulders and up
|
|
his neck, till he whimpered low and suppressedly, or growled
|
|
softly, and the half-breed cook shouted at him, "Hey, you Buck,
|
|
wake up!" Whereupon the other world would vanish and the real
|
|
world come into his eyes, and he would get up and yawn and stretch
|
|
as though he had been asleep.
|
|
|
|
It was a hard trip, with the mail behind them, and the heavy work
|
|
wore them down. They were short of weight and in poor condition
|
|
when they made Dawson, and should have had a ten days' or a week's
|
|
rest at least. But in two days' time they dropped down the Yukon
|
|
bank from the Barracks, loaded with letters for the outside. The
|
|
dogs were tired, the drivers grumbling, and to make matters worse,
|
|
it snowed every day. This meant a soft trail, greater friction on
|
|
the runners, and heavier pulling for the dogs; yet the drivers
|
|
were fair through it all, and did their best for the animals.
|
|
|
|
Each night the dogs were attended to first. They ate before the
|
|
drivers ate, and no man sought his sleeping-robe till he had seen
|
|
to the feet of the dogs he drove. Still, their strength went
|
|
down. Since the beginning of the winter they had travelled
|
|
eighteen hundred miles, dragging sleds the whole weary distance;
|
|
and eighteen hundred miles will tell upon life of the toughest.
|
|
Buck stood it, keeping his mates up to their work and maintaining
|
|
discipline, though he, too, was very tired. Billee cried and
|
|
whimpered regularly in his sleep each night. Joe was sourer than
|
|
ever, and Sol-leks was unapproachable, blind side or other side.
|
|
|
|
But it was Dave who suffered most of all. Something had gone
|
|
wrong with him. He became more morose and irritable, and when
|
|
camp was pitched at once made his nest, where his driver fed him.
|
|
Once out of the harness and down, he did not get on his feet again
|
|
till harness-up time in the morning. Sometimes, in the traces,
|
|
when jerked by a sudden stoppage of the sled, or by straining to
|
|
start it, he would cry out with pain. The driver examined him,
|
|
but could find nothing. All the drivers became interested in his
|
|
case. They talked it over at meal-time, and over their last pipes
|
|
before going to bed, and one night they held a consultation. He
|
|
was brought from his nest to the fire and was pressed and prodded
|
|
till he cried out many times. Something was wrong inside, but
|
|
they could locate no broken bones, could not make it out.
|
|
|
|
By the time Cassiar Bar was reached, he was so weak that he was
|
|
falling repeatedly in the traces. The Scotch half-breed called a
|
|
halt and took him out of the team, making the next dog, Sol-leks,
|
|
fast to the sled. His intention was to rest Dave, letting him run
|
|
free behind the sled. Sick as he was, Dave resented being taken
|
|
out, grunting and growling while the traces were unfastened, and
|
|
whimpering broken-heartedly when he saw Sol-leks in the position
|
|
he had held and served so long. For the pride of trace and trail
|
|
was his, and, sick unto death, he could not bear that another dog
|
|
should do his work.
|
|
|
|
When the sled started, he floundered in the soft snow alongside
|
|
the beaten trail, attacking Sol-leks with his teeth, rushing
|
|
against him and trying to thrust him off into the soft snow on the
|
|
other side, striving to leap inside his traces and get between him
|
|
and the sled, and A the while whining and yelping and crying with
|
|
grief and pain. The half-breed tried to drive him away with the
|
|
whip; but he paid no heed to the stinging lash, and the man had
|
|
not the heart to strike harder. Dave refused to run quietly on the
|
|
trail behind the sled, where the going was easy, but continued to
|
|
flounder alongside in the soft snow, where the going was most
|
|
difficult, till exhausted. Then he fell, and lay where he fell,
|
|
howling lugubriously as the long train of sleds churned by.
|
|
|
|
With the last remnant of his strength he managed to stagger along
|
|
behind till the train made another stop, when he floundered past
|
|
the sleds to his own, where he stood alongside Sol-leks. His
|
|
driver lingered a moment to get a light for his pipe from the man
|
|
behind. Then he returned and started his dogs. They swung out on
|
|
the trail with remarkable lack of exertion, turned their heads
|
|
uneasily, and stopped in surprise. The driver was surprised, too;
|
|
the sled had not moved. He called his comrades to witness the
|
|
sight. Dave had bitten through both of Sol-leks's traces, and was
|
|
standing directly in front of the sled in his proper place.
|
|
|
|
He pleaded with his eyes to remain there. The driver was
|
|
perplexed. His comrades talked of how a dog could break its heart
|
|
through being denied the work that killed it, and recalled
|
|
instances they had known, where dogs, too old for the toil, or
|
|
injured, had died because they were cut out of the traces. Also,
|
|
they held it a mercy, since Dave was to die anyway, that he should
|
|
die in the traces, heart-easy and content. So he was harnessed in
|
|
again, and proudly he pulled as of old, though more than once he
|
|
cried out involuntarily from the bite of his inward hurt. Several
|
|
times he fell down and was dragged in the traces, and once the
|
|
sled ran upon him so that he limped thereafter in one of his hind
|
|
legs.
|
|
|
|
But he held out till camp was reached, when his driver made a
|
|
place for him by the fire. Morning found him too weak to travel.
|
|
At harness-up time he tried to crawl to his driver. By convulsive
|
|
efforts he got on his feet, staggered, and fell. Then he wormed
|
|
his way forward slowly toward where the harnesses were being put
|
|
on his mates. He would advance his fore legs and drag up his body
|
|
with a sort of hitching movement, when he would advance his fore
|
|
legs and hitch ahead again for a few more inches. His strength
|
|
left him, and the last his mates saw of him he lay gasping in the
|
|
snow and yearning toward them. But they could hear him mournfully
|
|
howling till they passed out of sight behind a belt of river
|
|
timber.
|
|
|
|
Here the train was halted. The Scotch half-breed slowly retraced
|
|
his steps to the camp they had left. The men ceased talking. A
|
|
revolver-shot rang out. The man came back hurriedly. The whips
|
|
snapped, the bells tinkled merrily, the sleds churned along the
|
|
trail; but Buck knew, and every dog knew, what had taken place
|
|
behind the belt of river trees.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter V
|
|
|
|
The Toil of Trace and Trail
|
|
|
|
|
|
Thirty days from the time it left Dawson, the Salt Water Mail,
|
|
with Buck and his mates at the fore, arrived at Skaguay. They
|
|
were in a wretched state, worn out and worn down. Buck's one
|
|
hundred and forty pounds had dwindled to one hundred and fifteen.
|
|
The rest of his mates, though lighter dogs, had relatively lost
|
|
more weight than he. Pike, the malingerer, who, in his lifetime
|
|
of deceit, had often successfully feigned a hurt leg, was now
|
|
limping in earnest. Sol-leks was limping, and Dub was suffering
|
|
from a wrenched shoulder-blade.
|
|
|
|
They were all terribly footsore. No spring or rebound was left in
|
|
them. Their feet fell heavily on the trail, jarring their bodies
|
|
and doubting the fatigue of a day's travel. There was nothing the
|
|
matter with them except that they were dead tired. It was not the
|
|
dead-tiredness that comes through brief and excessive effort, from
|
|
which recovery is a matter of hours; but it was the dead-tiredness
|
|
that comes through the slow and prolonged strength drainage of
|
|
months of toil. There was no power of recuperation left, no
|
|
reserve strength to call upon. It had been all used, the last
|
|
least bit of it. Every muscle, every fibre, every cell, was
|
|
tired, dead tired. And there was reason for it. In less than
|
|
five months they had travelled twenty-five hundred miles, during
|
|
the last eighteen hundred of which they had had but five days'
|
|
rest. When they arrived at Skaguay they were apparently on their
|
|
last legs. They could barely keep the traces taut, and on the
|
|
down grades just managed to keep out of the way of the sled.
|
|
|
|
"Mush on, poor sore feets," the driver encouraged them as they
|
|
tottered down the main street of Skaguay. "Dis is de las'. Den we
|
|
get one long res'. Eh? For sure. One bully long res'."
|
|
|
|
The drivers confidently expected a long stopover. Themselves,
|
|
they had covered twelve hundred miles with two days' rest, and in
|
|
the nature of reason and common justice they deserved an interval
|
|
of loafing. But so many were the men who had rushed into the
|
|
Klondike, and so many were the sweethearts, wives, and kin that
|
|
had not rushed in, that the congested mail was taking on Alpine
|
|
proportions; also, there were official orders. Fresh batches of
|
|
Hudson Bay dogs were to take the places of those worthless for the
|
|
trail. The worthless ones were to be got rid of, and, since dogs
|
|
count for little against dollars, they were to be sold.
|
|
|
|
Three days passed, by which time Buck and his mates found how
|
|
really tired and weak they were. Then, on the morning of the
|
|
fourth day, two men from the States came along and bought them,
|
|
harness and all, for a song. The men addressed each other as
|
|
"Hal" and "Charles." Charles was a middle-aged, lightish-colored
|
|
man, with weak and watery eyes and a mustache that twisted
|
|
fiercely and vigorously up, giving the lie to the limply drooping
|
|
lip it concealed. Hal was a youngster of nineteen or twenty, with
|
|
a big Colt's revolver and a hunting-knife strapped about him on a
|
|
belt that fairly bristled with cartridges. This belt was the most
|
|
salient thing about him. It advertised his callowness--a
|
|
callowness sheer and unutterable. Both men were manifestly out of
|
|
place, and why such as they should adventure the North is part of
|
|
the mystery of things that passes understanding.
|
|
|
|
Buck heard the chaffering, saw the money pass between the man and
|
|
the Government agent, and knew that the Scotch half-breed and the
|
|
mail-train drivers were passing out of his life on the heels of
|
|
Perrault and Francois and the others who had gone before. When
|
|
driven with his mates to the new owners' camp, Buck saw a slipshod
|
|
and slovenly affair, tent half stretched, dishes unwashed,
|
|
everything in disorder; also, he saw a woman. "Mercedes" the men
|
|
called her. She was Charles's wife and Hal's sister--a nice
|
|
family party.
|
|
|
|
Buck watched them apprehensively as they proceeded to take down
|
|
the tent and load the sled. There was a great deal of effort
|
|
about their manner, but no businesslike method. The tent was
|
|
rolled into an awkward bundle three times as large as it should
|
|
have been. The tin dishes were packed away unwashed. Mercedes
|
|
continually fluttered in the way of her men and kept up an
|
|
unbroken chattering of remonstrance and advice. When they put a
|
|
clothes-sack on the front of the sled, she suggested it should go
|
|
on the back; and when they had put it on the back, and covered it
|
|
over with a couple of other bundles, she discovered overlooked
|
|
articles which could abide nowhere else but in that very sack, and
|
|
they unloaded again.
|
|
|
|
Three men from a neighboring tent came out and looked on, grinning
|
|
and winking at one another.
|
|
|
|
"You've got a right smart load as it is," said one of them; "and
|
|
it's not me should tell you your business, but I wouldn't tote
|
|
that tent along if I was you."
|
|
|
|
"Undreamed of!" cried Mercedes, throwing up her hands in dainty
|
|
dismay. "However in the world could I manage without a tent?"
|
|
|
|
"It's springtime, and you won't get any more cold weather," the
|
|
man replied.
|
|
|
|
She shook her head decidedly, and Charles and Hal put the last
|
|
odds and ends on top the mountainous load.
|
|
|
|
"Think it'll ride?" one of the men asked.
|
|
|
|
"Why shouldn't it?" Charles demanded rather shortly.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, that's all right, that's all right," the man hastened meekly
|
|
to say. "I was just a-wonderin', that is all. It seemed a mite
|
|
top-heavy."
|
|
|
|
Charles turned his back and drew the lashings down as well as he
|
|
could, which was not in the least well.
|
|
|
|
"An' of course the dogs can hike along all day with that
|
|
contraption behind them," affirmed a second of the men.
|
|
|
|
"Certainly," said Hal, with freezing politeness, taking hold of
|
|
the gee-pole with one hand and swinging his whip from the other.
|
|
"Mush!" he shouted. "Mush on there!"
|
|
|
|
The dogs sprang against the breast-bands, strained hard for a few
|
|
moments, then relaxed. They were unable to move the sled.
|
|
|
|
"The lazy brutes, I'll show them," he cried, preparing to lash out
|
|
at them with the whip.
|
|
|
|
But Mercedes interfered, crying, "Oh, Hal, you mustn't," as she
|
|
caught hold of the whip and wrenched it from him. "The poor dears!
|
|
Now you must promise you won't be harsh with them for the rest of
|
|
the trip, or I won't go a step."
|
|
|
|
"Precious lot you know about dogs," her brother sneered; "and I
|
|
wish you'd leave me alone. They're lazy, I tell you, and you've
|
|
got to whip them to get anything out of them. That's their way.
|
|
You ask any one. Ask one of those men."
|
|
|
|
Mercedes looked at them imploringly, untold repugnance at sight of
|
|
pain written in her pretty face.
|
|
|
|
"They're weak as water, if you want to know," came the reply from
|
|
one of the men. "Plum tuckered out, that's what's the matter.
|
|
They need a rest."
|
|
|
|
"Rest be blanked," said Hal, with his beardless lips; and Mercedes
|
|
said, "Oh!" in pain and sorrow at the oath.
|
|
|
|
But she was a clannish creature, and rushed at once to the defence
|
|
of her brother. "Never mind that man," she said pointedly.
|
|
"You're driving our dogs, and you do what you think best with
|
|
them."
|
|
|
|
Again Hal's whip fell upon the dogs. They threw themselves
|
|
against the breast-bands, dug their feet into the packed snow, got
|
|
down low to it, and put forth all their strength. The sled held as
|
|
though it were an anchor. After two efforts, they stood still,
|
|
panting. The whip was whistling savagely, when once more Mercedes
|
|
interfered. She dropped on her knees before Buck, with tears in
|
|
her eyes, and put her arms around his neck.
|
|
|
|
"You poor, poor dears," she cried sympathetically, "why don't you
|
|
pull hard?--then you wouldn't be whipped." Buck did not like her,
|
|
but he was feeling too miserable to resist her, taking it as part
|
|
of the day's miserable work.
|
|
|
|
One of the onlookers, who had been clenching his teeth to suppress
|
|
hot speech, now spoke up:--
|
|
|
|
"It's not that I care a whoop what becomes of you, but for the
|
|
dogs' sakes I just want to tell you, you can help them a mighty
|
|
lot by breaking out that sled. The runners are froze fast. Throw
|
|
your weight against the gee-pole, right and left, and break it
|
|
out."
|
|
|
|
A third time the attempt was made, but this time, following the
|
|
advice, Hal broke out the runners which had been frozen to the
|
|
snow. The overloaded and unwieldy sled forged ahead, Buck and his
|
|
mates struggling frantically under the rain of blows. A hundred
|
|
yards ahead the path turned and sloped steeply into the main
|
|
street. It would have required an experienced man to keep the
|
|
top-heavy sled upright, and Hal was not such a man. As they swung
|
|
on the turn the sled went over, spilling half its load through the
|
|
loose lashings. The dogs never stopped. The lightened sled
|
|
bounded on its side behind them. They were angry because of the
|
|
ill treatment they had received and the unjust load. Buck was
|
|
raging. He broke into a run, the team following his lead. Hal
|
|
cried "Whoa! whoa!" but they gave no heed. He tripped and was
|
|
pulled off his feet. The capsized sled ground over him, and the
|
|
dogs dashed on up the street, adding to the gayety of Skaguay as
|
|
they scattered the remainder of the outfit along its chief
|
|
thoroughfare.
|
|
|
|
Kind-hearted citizens caught the dogs and gathered up the
|
|
scattered belongings. Also, they gave advice. Half the load and
|
|
twice the dogs, if they ever expected to reach Dawson, was what
|
|
was said. Hal and his sister and brother-in-law listened
|
|
unwillingly, pitched tent, and overhauled the outfit. Canned goods
|
|
were turned out that made men laugh, for canned goods on the Long
|
|
Trail is a thing to dream about. "Blankets for a hotel" quoth one
|
|
of the men who laughed and helped. "Half as many is too much; get
|
|
rid of them. Throw away that tent, and all those dishes,--who's
|
|
going to wash them, anyway? Good Lord, do you think you're
|
|
travelling on a Pullman?"
|
|
|
|
And so it went, the inexorable elimination of the superfluous.
|
|
Mercedes cried when her clothes-bags were dumped on the ground and
|
|
article after article was thrown out. She cried in general, and
|
|
she cried in particular over each discarded thing. She clasped
|
|
hands about knees, rocking back and forth broken-heartedly. She
|
|
averred she would not go an inch, not for a dozen Charleses. She
|
|
appealed to everybody and to everything, finally wiping her eyes
|
|
and proceeding to cast out even articles of apparel that were
|
|
imperative necessaries. And in her zeal, when she had finished
|
|
with her own, she attacked the belongings of her men and went
|
|
through them like a tornado.
|
|
|
|
This accomplished, the outfit, though cut in half, was still a
|
|
formidable bulk. Charles and Hal went out in the evening and
|
|
bought six Outside dogs. These, added to the six of the original
|
|
team, and Teek and Koona, the huskies obtained at the Rink Rapids
|
|
on the record trip, brought the team up to fourteen. But the
|
|
Outside dogs, though practically broken in since their landing,
|
|
did not amount to much. Three were short-haired pointers, one was
|
|
a Newfoundland, and the other two were mongrels of indeterminate
|
|
breed. They did not seem to know anything, these newcomers. Buck
|
|
and his comrades looked upon them with disgust, and though he
|
|
speedily taught them their places and what not to do, he could not
|
|
teach them what to do. They did not take kindly to trace and
|
|
trail. With the exception of the two mongrels, they were
|
|
bewildered and spirit-broken by the strange savage environment in
|
|
which they found themselves and by the ill treatment they had
|
|
received. The two mongrels were without spirit at all; bones were
|
|
the only things breakable about them.
|
|
|
|
With the newcomers hopeless and forlorn, and the old team worn out
|
|
by twenty-five hundred miles of continuous trail, the outlook was
|
|
anything but bright. The two men, however, were quite cheerful.
|
|
And they were proud, too. They were doing the thing in style, with
|
|
fourteen dogs. They had seen other sleds depart over the Pass for
|
|
Dawson, or come in from Dawson, but never had they seen a sled
|
|
with so many as fourteen dogs. In the nature of Arctic travel
|
|
there was a reason why fourteen dogs should not drag one sled, and
|
|
that was that one sled could not carry the food for fourteen dogs.
|
|
But Charles and Hal did not know this. They had worked the trip
|
|
out with a pencil, so much to a dog, so many dogs, so many days,
|
|
Q.E.D. Mercedes looked over their shoulders and nodded
|
|
comprehensively, it was all so very simple.
|
|
|
|
Late next morning Buck led the long team up the street. There was
|
|
nothing lively about it, no snap or go in him and his fellows.
|
|
They were starting dead weary. Four times he had covered the
|
|
distance between Salt Water and Dawson, and the knowledge that,
|
|
jaded and tired, he was facing the same trail once more, made him
|
|
bitter. His heart was not in the work, nor was the heart of any
|
|
dog. The Outsides were timid and frightened, the Insides without
|
|
confidence in their masters.
|
|
|
|
Buck felt vaguely that there was no depending upon these two men
|
|
and the woman. They did not know how to do anything, and as the
|
|
days went by it became apparent that they could not learn. They
|
|
were slack in all things, without order or discipline. It took
|
|
them half the night to pitch a slovenly camp, and half the morning
|
|
to break that camp and get the sled loaded in fashion so slovenly
|
|
that for the rest of the day they were occupied in stopping and
|
|
rearranging the load. Some days they did not make ten miles. On
|
|
other days they were unable to get started at all. And on no day
|
|
did they succeed in making more than half the distance used by the
|
|
men as a basis in their dog-food computation.
|
|
|
|
It was inevitable that they should go short on dog-food. But they
|
|
hastened it by overfeeding, bringing the day nearer when
|
|
underfeeding would commence. The Outside dogs, whose digestions
|
|
had not been trained by chronic famine to make the most of little,
|
|
had voracious appetites. And when, in addition to this, the worn-
|
|
out huskies pulled weakly, Hal decided that the orthodox ration
|
|
was too small. He doubled it. And to cap it all, when Mercedes,
|
|
with tears in her pretty eyes and a quaver in her throat, could
|
|
not cajole him into giving the dogs still more, she stole from the
|
|
fish-sacks and fed them slyly. But it was not food that Buck and
|
|
the huskies needed, but rest. And though they were making poor
|
|
time, the heavy load they dragged sapped their strength severely.
|
|
|
|
Then came the underfeeding. Hal awoke one day to the fact that
|
|
his dog-food was half gone and the distance only quarter covered;
|
|
further, that for love or money no additional dog-food was to be
|
|
obtained. So he cut down even the orthodox ration and tried to
|
|
increase the day's travel. His sister and brother-in-law seconded
|
|
him; but they were frustrated by their heavy outfit and their own
|
|
incompetence. It was a simple matter to give the dogs less food;
|
|
but it was impossible to make the dogs travel faster, while their
|
|
own inability to get under way earlier in the morning prevented
|
|
them from travelling longer hours. Not only did they not know how
|
|
to work dogs, but they did not know how to work themselves.
|
|
|
|
The first to go was Dub. Poor blundering thief that he was,
|
|
always getting caught and punished, he had none the less been a
|
|
faithful worker. His wrenched shoulder-blade, untreated and
|
|
unrested, went from bad to worse, till finally Hal shot him with
|
|
the big Colt's revolver. It is a saying of the country that an
|
|
Outside dog starves to death on the ration of the husky, so the
|
|
six Outside dogs under Buck could do no less than die on half the
|
|
ration of the husky. The Newfoundland went first, followed by the
|
|
three short-haired pointers, the two mongrels hanging more
|
|
grittily on to life, but going in the end.
|
|
|
|
By this time all the amenities and gentlenesses of the Southland
|
|
had fallen away from the three people. Shorn of its glamour and
|
|
romance, Arctic travel became to them a reality too harsh for
|
|
their manhood and womanhood. Mercedes ceased weeping over the
|
|
dogs, being too occupied with weeping over herself and with
|
|
quarrelling with her husband and brother. To quarrel was the one
|
|
thing they were never too weary to do. Their irritability arose
|
|
out of their misery, increased with it, doubled upon it,
|
|
outdistanced it. The wonderful patience of the trail which comes
|
|
to men who toil hard and suffer sore, and remain sweet of speech
|
|
and kindly, did not come to these two men and the woman. They had
|
|
no inkling of such a patience. They were stiff and in pain; their
|
|
muscles ached, their bones ached, their very hearts ached; and
|
|
because of this they became sharp of speech, and hard words were
|
|
first on their lips in the morning and last at night.
|
|
|
|
Charles and Hal wrangled whenever Mercedes gave them a chance. It
|
|
was the cherished belief of each that he did more than his share
|
|
of the work, and neither forbore to speak this belief at every
|
|
opportunity. Sometimes Mercedes sided with her husband, sometimes
|
|
with her brother. The result was a beautiful and unending family
|
|
quarrel. Starting from a dispute as to which should chop a few
|
|
sticks for the fire (a dispute which concerned only Charles and
|
|
Hal), presently would be lugged in the rest of the family,
|
|
fathers, mothers, uncles, cousins, people thousands of miles away,
|
|
and some of them dead. That Hal's views on art, or the sort of
|
|
society plays his mother's brother wrote, should have anything to
|
|
do with the chopping of a few sticks of firewood, passes
|
|
comprehension; nevertheless the quarrel was as likely to tend in
|
|
that direction as in the direction of Charles's political
|
|
prejudices. And that Charles's sister's tale-bearing tongue should
|
|
be relevant to the building of a Yukon fire, was apparent only to
|
|
Mercedes, who disburdened herself of copious opinions upon that
|
|
topic, and incidentally upon a few other traits unpleasantly
|
|
peculiar to her husband's family. In the meantime the fire
|
|
remained unbuilt, the camp half pitched, and the dogs unfed.
|
|
|
|
Mercedes nursed a special grievance--the grievance of sex. She was
|
|
pretty and soft, and had been chivalrously treated all her days.
|
|
But the present treatment by her husband and brother was
|
|
everything save chivalrous. It was her custom to be helpless.
|
|
They complained. Upon which impeachment of what to her was her
|
|
most essential sex-prerogative, she made their lives unendurable.
|
|
She no longer considered the dogs, and because she was sore and
|
|
tired, she persisted in riding on the sled. She was pretty and
|
|
soft, but she weighed one hundred and twenty pounds--a lusty last
|
|
straw to the load dragged by the weak and starving animals. She
|
|
rode for days, till they fell in the traces and the sled stood
|
|
still. Charles and Hal begged her to get off and walk, pleaded
|
|
with her, entreated, the while she wept and importuned Heaven with
|
|
a recital of their brutality.
|
|
|
|
On one occasion they took her off the sled by main strength. They
|
|
never did it again. She let her legs go limp like a spoiled
|
|
child, and sat down on the trail. They went on their way, but she
|
|
did not move. After they had travelled three miles they unloaded
|
|
the sled, came back for her, and by main strength put her on the
|
|
sled again.
|
|
|
|
In the excess of their own misery they were callous to the
|
|
suffering of their animals. Hal's theory, which he practised on
|
|
others, was that one must get hardened. He had started out
|
|
preaching it to his sister and brother-in-law. Failing there, he
|
|
hammered it into the dogs with a club. At the Five Fingers the
|
|
dog-food gave out, and a toothless old squaw offered to trade them
|
|
a few pounds of frozen horse-hide for the Colt's revolver that
|
|
kept the big hunting-knife company at Hal's hip. A poor substitute
|
|
for food was this hide, just as it had been stripped from the
|
|
starved horses of the cattlemen six months back. In its frozen
|
|
state it was more like strips of galvanized iron, and when a dog
|
|
wrestled it into his stomach it thawed into thin and innutritious
|
|
leathery strings and into a mass of short hair, irritating and
|
|
indigestible.
|
|
|
|
And through it all Buck staggered along at the head of the team as
|
|
in a nightmare. He pulled when he could; when he could no longer
|
|
pull, he fell down and remained down till blows from whip or club
|
|
drove him to his feet again. All the stiffness and gloss had gone
|
|
out of his beautiful furry coat. The hair hung down, limp and
|
|
draggled, or matted with dried blood where Hal's club had bruised
|
|
him. His muscles had wasted away to knotty strings, and the flesh
|
|
pads had disappeared, so that each rib and every bone in his frame
|
|
were outlined cleanly through the loose hide that was wrinkled in
|
|
folds of emptiness. It was heartbreaking, only Buck's heart was
|
|
unbreakable. The man in the red sweater had proved that.
|
|
|
|
As it was with Buck, so was it with his mates. They were
|
|
perambulating skeletons. There were seven all together, including
|
|
him. In their very great misery they had become insensible to the
|
|
bite of the lash or the bruise of the club. The pain of the
|
|
beating was dull and distant, just as the things their eyes saw
|
|
and their ears heard seemed dull and distant. They were not half
|
|
living, or quarter living. They were simply so many bags of bones
|
|
in which sparks of life fluttered faintly. When a halt was made,
|
|
they dropped down in the traces like dead dogs, and the spark
|
|
dimmed and paled and seemed to go out. And when the club or whip
|
|
fell upon them, the spark fluttered feebly up, and they tottered
|
|
to their feet and staggered on.
|
|
|
|
There came a day when Billee, the good-natured, fell and could not
|
|
rise. Hal had traded off his revolver, so he took the axe and
|
|
knocked Billee on the head as he lay in the traces, then cut the
|
|
carcass out of the harness and dragged it to one side. Buck saw,
|
|
and his mates saw, and they knew that this thing was very close to
|
|
them. On the next day Koona went, and but five of them remained:
|
|
Joe, too far gone to be malignant; Pike, crippled and limping,
|
|
only half conscious and not conscious enough longer to malinger;
|
|
Sol-leks, the one-eyed, still faithful to the toil of trace and
|
|
trail, and mournful in that he had so little strength with which
|
|
to pull; Teek, who had not travelled so far that winter and who
|
|
was now beaten more than the others because he was fresher; and
|
|
Buck, still at the head of the team, but no longer enforcing
|
|
discipline or striving to enforce it, blind with weakness half the
|
|
time and keeping the trail by the loom of it and by the dim feel
|
|
of his feet.
|
|
|
|
It was beautiful spring weather, but neither dogs nor humans were
|
|
aware of it. Each day the sun rose earlier and set later. It was
|
|
dawn by three in the morning, and twilight lingered till nine at
|
|
night. The whole long day was a blaze of sunshine. The ghostly
|
|
winter silence had given way to the great spring murmur of
|
|
awakening life. This murmur arose from all the land, fraught with
|
|
the joy of living. It came from the things that lived and moved
|
|
again, things which had been as dead and which had not moved
|
|
during the long months of frost. The sap was rising in the pines.
|
|
The willows and aspens were bursting out in young buds. Shrubs
|
|
and vines were putting on fresh garbs of green. Crickets sang in
|
|
the nights, and in the days all manner of creeping, crawling
|
|
things rustled forth into the sun. Partridges and woodpeckers
|
|
were booming and knocking in the forest. Squirrels were
|
|
chattering, birds singing, and overhead honked the wild-fowl
|
|
driving up from the south in cunning wedges that split the air.
|
|
|
|
From every hill slope came the trickle of running water, the music
|
|
of unseen fountains. AU things were thawing, bending, snapping.
|
|
The Yukon was straining to break loose the ice that bound it down.
|
|
It ate away from beneath; the sun ate from above. Air-holes
|
|
formed, fissures sprang and spread apart, while thin sections of
|
|
ice fell through bodily into the river. And amid all this
|
|
bursting, rending, throbbing of awakening life, under the blazing
|
|
sun and through the soft-sighing breezes, like wayfarers to death,
|
|
staggered the two men, the woman, and the huskies.
|
|
|
|
With the dogs falling, Mercedes weeping and riding, Hal swearing
|
|
innocuously, and Charles's eyes wistfully watering, they staggered
|
|
into John Thornton's camp at the mouth of White River. When they
|
|
halted, the dogs dropped down as though they had all been struck
|
|
dead. Mercedes dried her eyes and looked at John Thornton.
|
|
Charles sat down on a log to rest. He sat down very slowly and
|
|
painstakingly what of his great stiffness. Hal did the talking.
|
|
John Thornton was whittling the last touches on an axe-handle he
|
|
had made from a stick of birch. He whittled and listened, gave
|
|
monosyllabic replies, and, when it was asked, terse advice.
|
|
He knew the breed, and he gave his advice in the certainty that it
|
|
would not be followed.
|
|
|
|
"They told us up above that the bottom was dropping out of the
|
|
trail and that the best thing for us to do was to lay over," Hal
|
|
said in response to Thornton's warning to take no more chances on
|
|
the rotten ice. "They told us we couldn't make White River, and
|
|
here we are." This last with a sneering ring of triumph in it.
|
|
|
|
"And they told you true," John Thornton answered. "The bottom's
|
|
likely to drop out at any moment. Only fools, with the blind luck
|
|
of fools, could have made it. I tell you straight, I wouldn't
|
|
risk my carcass on that ice for all the gold in Alaska."
|
|
|
|
"That's because you're not a fool, I suppose," said Hal. "All the
|
|
same, we'll go on to Dawson." He uncoiled his whip. "Get up there,
|
|
Buck! Hi! Get up there! Mush on!"
|
|
|
|
Thornton went on whittling. It was idle, he knew, to get between
|
|
a fool and his folly; while two or three fools more or less would
|
|
not alter the scheme of things.
|
|
|
|
But the team did not get up at the command. It had long since
|
|
passed into the stage where blows were required to rouse it. The
|
|
whip flashed out, here and there, on its merciless errands. John
|
|
Thornton compressed his lips. Sol-leks was the first to crawl to
|
|
his feet. Teek followed. Joe came next, yelping with pain. Pike
|
|
made painful efforts. Twice he fell over, when half up, and on
|
|
the third attempt managed to rise. Buck made no effort. He lay
|
|
quietly where he had fallen. The lash bit into him again and
|
|
again, but he neither whined nor struggled. Several times
|
|
Thornton started, as though to speak, but changed his mind. A
|
|
moisture came into his eyes, and, as the whipping continued, he
|
|
arose and walked irresolutely up and down.
|
|
|
|
This was the first time Buck had failed, in itself a sufficient
|
|
reason to drive Hal into a rage. He exchanged the whip for the
|
|
customary club. Buck refused to move under the rain of heavier
|
|
blows which now fell upon him. Like his mates, he barely able to
|
|
get up, but, unlike them, he had made up his mind not to get up.
|
|
He had a vague feeling of impending doom. This had been strong
|
|
upon him when he pulled in to the bank, and it had not departed
|
|
from him. What of the thin and rotten ice he had felt under his
|
|
feet all day, it seemed that he sensed disaster close at hand, out
|
|
there ahead on the ice where his master was trying to drive him.
|
|
He refused to stir. So greatly had he suffered, and so far gone
|
|
was he, that the blows did not hurt much. And as they continued
|
|
to fall upon him, the spark of life within flickered and went
|
|
down. It was nearly out. He felt strangely numb. As though from
|
|
a great distance, he was aware that he was being beaten. The last
|
|
sensations of pain left him. He no longer felt anything, though
|
|
very faintly he could hear the impact of the club upon his body.
|
|
But it was no longer his body, it seemed so far away.
|
|
|
|
And then, suddenly, without warning, uttering a cry that was
|
|
inarticulate and more like the cry of an animal, John Thornton
|
|
sprang upon the man who wielded the club. Hal was hurled
|
|
backward, as though struck by a failing tree. Mercedes screamed.
|
|
Charles looked on wistfully, wiped his watery eyes, but did not
|
|
get up because of his stiffness.
|
|
|
|
John Thornton stood over Buck, struggling to control himself, too
|
|
convulsed with rage to speak.
|
|
|
|
"If you strike that dog again, I'll kill you," he at last managed
|
|
to say in a choking voice.
|
|
|
|
"It's my dog," Hal replied, wiping the blood from his mouth as he
|
|
came back. "Get out of my way, or I'll fix you. I'm going to
|
|
Dawson."
|
|
|
|
Thornton stood between him and Buck, and evinced no intention of
|
|
getting out of the way. Hal drew his long hunting-knife.
|
|
Mercedes screamed. cried, laughed, and manifested the chaotic
|
|
abandonment of hysteria. Thornton rapped Hal's knuckles with the
|
|
axe-handle, knocking the knife to the ground. He rapped his
|
|
knuckles again as he tried to pick it up. Then he stooped, picked
|
|
it up himself, and with two strokes cut Buck's traces.
|
|
|
|
Hal had no fight left in him. Besides, his hands were full with
|
|
his sister, or his arms, rather; while Buck was too near dead to
|
|
be of further use in hauling the sled. A few minutes later they
|
|
pulled out from the bank and down the river. Buck heard them go
|
|
and raised his head to see, Pike was leading, Sol-leks was at the
|
|
wheel, and between were Joe and Teek. They were limping and
|
|
staggering. Mercedes was riding the loaded sled. Hal guided at
|
|
the gee-pole, and Charles stumbled along in the rear.
|
|
|
|
As Buck watched them, Thornton knelt beside him and with rough,
|
|
kindly hands searched for broken bones. By the time his search
|
|
had disclosed nothing more than many bruises and a state of
|
|
terrible starvation, the sled was a quarter of a mile away. Dog
|
|
and man watched it crawling along over the ice. Suddenly, they
|
|
saw its back end drop down, as into a rut, and the gee-pole, with
|
|
Hal clinging to it, jerk into the air. Mercedes's scream came to
|
|
their ears. They saw Charles turn and make one step to run back,
|
|
and then a whole section of ice give way and dogs and humans
|
|
disappear. A yawning hole was all that was to be seen. The
|
|
bottom had dropped out of the trail.
|
|
|
|
John Thornton and Buck looked at each other.
|
|
|
|
"You poor devil," said John Thornton, and Buck licked his hand.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter VI
|
|
|
|
For the Love of a Man
|
|
|
|
|
|
When John Thornton froze his feet in the previous December his
|
|
partners had made him comfortable and left him to get well, going
|
|
on themselves up the river to get out a raft of saw-logs for
|
|
Dawson. He was still limping slightly at the time he rescued
|
|
Buck, but with the continued warm weather even the slight limp
|
|
left him. And here, lying by the river bank through the long
|
|
spring days, watching the running water, listening lazily to the
|
|
songs of birds and the hum of nature, Buck slowly won back his
|
|
strength.
|
|
|
|
A rest comes very good after one has travelled three thousand
|
|
miles, and it must be confessed that Buck waxed lazy as his wounds
|
|
healed, his muscles swelled out, and the flesh came back to cover
|
|
his bones. For that matter, they were all loafing,--Buck, John
|
|
Thornton, and Skeet and Nig,--waiting for the raft to come that
|
|
was to carry them down to Dawson. Skeet was a little Irish setter
|
|
who early made friends with Buck, who, in a dying condition, was
|
|
unable to resent her first advances. She had the doctor trait
|
|
which some dogs possess; and as a mother cat washes her kittens,
|
|
so she washed and cleansed Buck's wounds. Regularly, each morning
|
|
after he had finished his breakfast, she performed her self-
|
|
appointed task, till he came to look for her ministrations as much
|
|
as he did for Thornton's. Nig, equally friendly, though less
|
|
demonstrative, was a huge black dog, half bloodhound and half
|
|
deerhound, with eyes that laughed and a boundless good nature.
|
|
|
|
To Buck's surprise these dogs manifested no jealousy toward him.
|
|
They seemed to share the kindliness and largeness of John
|
|
Thornton. As Buck grew stronger they enticed him into all sorts
|
|
of ridiculous games, in which Thornton himself could not forbear
|
|
to join; and in this fashion Buck romped through his convalescence
|
|
and into a new existence. Love, genuine passionate love, was his
|
|
for the first time. This he had never experienced at Judge
|
|
Miller's down in the sun-kissed Santa Clara Valley. With the
|
|
Judge's sons, hunting and tramping, it had been a working
|
|
partnership; with the Judge's grandsons, a sort of pompous
|
|
guardianship; and with the Judge himself, a stately and dignified
|
|
friendship. But love that was feverish and burning, that was
|
|
adoration, that was madness, it had taken John Thornton to arouse.
|
|
|
|
This man had saved his life, which was something; but, further, he
|
|
was the ideal master. Other men saw to the welfare of their dogs
|
|
from a sense of duty and business expediency; he saw to the
|
|
welfare of his as if they were his own children, because he could
|
|
not help it. And he saw further. He never forgot a kindly
|
|
greeting or a cheering word, and to sit down for a long talk with
|
|
them ("gas" he called it) was as much his delight as theirs. He
|
|
had a way of taking Buck's head roughly between his hands, and
|
|
resting his own head upon Buck's, of shaking him back and forth,
|
|
the while calling him ill names that to Buck were love names.
|
|
Buck knew no greater joy than that rough embrace and the sound of
|
|
murmured oaths, and at each jerk back and forth it seemed that his
|
|
heart would be shaken out of his body so great was its ecstasy.
|
|
And when, released, he sprang to his feet, his mouth laughing, his
|
|
eyes eloquent, his throat vibrant with unuttered sound, and in
|
|
that fashion remained without movement, John Thornton would
|
|
reverently exclaim, "God! you can all but speak!"
|
|
|
|
Buck had a trick of love expression that was akin to hurt. He
|
|
would often seize Thornton's hand in his mouth and close so
|
|
fiercely that the flesh bore the impress of his teeth for some
|
|
time afterward. And as Buck understood the oaths to be love
|
|
words, so the man understood this feigned bite for a caress.
|
|
|
|
For the most part, however, Buck's love was expressed in
|
|
adoration. While he went wild with happiness when Thornton
|
|
touched him or spoke to him, he did not seek these tokens. Unlike
|
|
Skeet, who was wont to shove her nose under Thornton's hand and
|
|
nudge and nudge till petted, or Nig, who would stalk up and rest
|
|
his great head on Thornton's knee, Buck was content to adore at a
|
|
distance. He would lie by the hour, eager, alert, at Thornton's
|
|
feet, looking up into his face, dwelling upon it, studying it,
|
|
following with keenest interest each fleeting expression, every
|
|
movement or change of feature. Or, as chance might have it, he
|
|
would lie farther away, to the side or rear, watching the outlines
|
|
of the man and the occasional movements of his body. And often,
|
|
such was the communion in which they lived, the strength of Buck's
|
|
gaze would draw John Thornton's head around, and he would return
|
|
the gaze, without speech, his heart shining out of his eyes as
|
|
Buck's heart shone out.
|
|
|
|
For a long time after his rescue, Buck did not like Thornton to
|
|
get out of his sight. From the moment he left the tent to when he
|
|
entered it again, Buck would follow at his heels. His transient
|
|
masters since he had come into the Northland had bred in him a
|
|
fear that no master could be permanent. He was afraid that
|
|
Thornton would pass out of his life as Perrault and Francois and
|
|
the Scotch half-breed had passed out. Even in the night, in his
|
|
dreams, he was haunted by this fear. At such times he would shake
|
|
off sleep and creep through the chill to the flap of the tent,
|
|
where he would stand and listen to the sound of his master's
|
|
breathing.
|
|
|
|
But in spite of this great love he bore John Thornton, which
|
|
seemed to bespeak the soft civilizing influence, the strain of the
|
|
primitive, which the Northland had aroused in him, remained alive
|
|
and active. Faithfulness and devotion, things born of fire and
|
|
roof, were his; yet he retained his wildness and wiliness. He was
|
|
a thing of the wild, come in from the wild to sit by John
|
|
Thornton's fire, rather than a dog of the soft Southland stamped
|
|
with the marks of generations of civilization. Because of his
|
|
very great love, he could not steal from this man, but from any
|
|
other man, in any other camp, he did not hesitate an instant;
|
|
while the cunning with which he stole enabled him to escape
|
|
detection.
|
|
|
|
His face and body were scored by the teeth of many dogs, and he
|
|
fought as fiercely as ever and more shrewdly. Skeet and Nig were
|
|
too good-natured for quarrelling,--besides, they belonged to John
|
|
Thornton; but the strange dog, no matter what the breed or valor,
|
|
swiftly acknowledged Buck's supremacy or found himself struggling
|
|
for life with a terrible antagonist. And Buck was merciless. He
|
|
had learned well the law of club and fang, and he never forewent
|
|
an advantage or drew back from a foe he had started on the way to
|
|
Death. He had lessoned from Spitz, and from the chief fighting
|
|
dogs of the police and mail, and knew there was no middle course.
|
|
He must master or be mastered; while to show mercy was a weakness.
|
|
Mercy did not exist in the primordial life. It was misunderstood
|
|
for fear, and such misunderstandings made for death. Kill or be
|
|
killed, eat or be eaten, was the law; and this mandate, down out
|
|
of the depths of Time, he obeyed.
|
|
|
|
He was older than the days he had seen and the breaths he had
|
|
drawn. He linked the past with the present, and the eternity
|
|
behind him throbbed through him in a mighty rhythm to which he
|
|
swayed as the tides and seasons swayed. He sat by John Thornton's
|
|
fire, a broad-breasted dog, white-fanged and long-furred; but
|
|
behind him were the shades of all manner of dogs, half-wolves and
|
|
wild wolves, urgent and prompting, tasting the savor of the meat
|
|
he ate, thirsting for the water he drank, scenting the wind with
|
|
him, listening with him and telling him the sounds made by the
|
|
wild life in the forest, dictating his moods, directing his
|
|
actions, lying down to sleep with him when he lay down, and
|
|
dreaming with him and beyond him and becoming themselves the stuff
|
|
of his dreams.
|
|
|
|
So peremptorily did these shades beckon him, that each day mankind
|
|
and the claims of mankind slipped farther from him. Deep in the
|
|
forest a call was sounding, and as often as he heard this call,
|
|
mysteriously thrilling and luring, he felt compelled to turn his
|
|
back upon the fire and the beaten earth around it, and to plunge
|
|
into the forest, and on and on, he knew not where or why; nor did
|
|
he wonder where or why, the call sounding imperiously, deep in the
|
|
forest. But as often as he gained the soft unbroken earth and the
|
|
green shade, the love for John Thornton drew him back to the fire
|
|
again.
|
|
|
|
Thornton alone held him. The rest of mankind was as nothing.
|
|
Chance travellers might praise or pet him; but he was cold under
|
|
it all, and from a too demonstrative man he would get up and walk
|
|
away. When Thornton's partners, Hans and Pete, arrived on the
|
|
long-expected raft, Buck refused to notice them till he learned
|
|
they were close to Thornton; after that he tolerated them in a
|
|
passive sort of way, accepting favors from them as though he
|
|
favored them by accepting. They were of the same large type as
|
|
Thornton, living close to the earth, thinking simply and seeing
|
|
clearly; and ere they swung the raft into the big eddy by the saw-
|
|
mill at Dawson, they understood Buck and his ways, and did not
|
|
insist upon an intimacy such as obtained with Skeet and Nig.
|
|
|
|
For Thornton, however, his love seemed to grow and grow. He,
|
|
alone among men, could put a pack upon Buck's back in the summer
|
|
travelling. Nothing was too great for Buck to do, when Thornton
|
|
commanded. One day (they had grub-staked themselves from the
|
|
proceeds of the raft and left Dawson for the head-waters of the
|
|
Tanana) the men and dogs were sitting on the crest of a cliff
|
|
which fell away, straight down, to naked bed-rock three hundred
|
|
feet below. John Thornton was sitting near the edge, Buck at his
|
|
shoulder. A thoughtless whim seized Thornton, and he drew the
|
|
attention of Hans and Pete to the experiment he had in mind.
|
|
"Jump, Buck!" he commanded, sweeping his arm out and over the
|
|
chasm. The next instant he was grappling with Buck on the extreme
|
|
edge, while Hans and Pete were dragging them back into safety.
|
|
|
|
"It's uncanny," Pete said, after it was over and they had caught
|
|
their speech.
|
|
|
|
Thornton shook his head. "No, it is splendid, and it is terrible,
|
|
too. Do you know, it sometimes makes me afraid."
|
|
|
|
"I'm not hankering to be the man that lays hands on you while he's
|
|
around," Pete announced conclusively, nodding his head toward
|
|
Buck.
|
|
|
|
"Py Jingo!" was Hans's contribution. "Not mineself either."
|
|
|
|
It was at Circle City, ere the year was out, that Pete's
|
|
apprehensions were realized. "Black" Burton, a man evil-tempered
|
|
and malicious, had been picking a quarrel with a tenderfoot at the
|
|
bar, when Thornton stepped good-naturedly between. Buck, as was
|
|
his custom, was lying in a corner, head on paws, watching his
|
|
master's every action. Burton struck out, without warning,
|
|
straight from the shoulder. Thornton was sent spinning, and saved
|
|
himself from falling only by clutching the rail of the bar.
|
|
|
|
Those who were looking on heard what was neither bark nor yelp,
|
|
but a something which is best described as a roar, and they saw
|
|
Buck's body rise up in the air as he left the floor for Burton's
|
|
throat. The man saved his life by instinctively throwing out his
|
|
arm, but was hurled backward to the floor with Buck on top of him.
|
|
Buck loosed his teeth from the flesh of the arm and drove in again
|
|
for the throat. This time the man succeeded only in partly
|
|
blocking, and his throat was torn open. Then the crowd was upon
|
|
Buck, and he was driven off; but while a surgeon checked the
|
|
bleeding, he prowled up and down, growling furiously, attempting
|
|
to rush in, and being forced back by an array of hostile clubs. A
|
|
"miners' meeting," called on the spot, decided that the dog had
|
|
sufficient provocation, and Buck was discharged. But his
|
|
reputation was made, and from that day his name spread through
|
|
every camp in Alaska.
|
|
|
|
Later on, in the fall of the year, he saved John Thornton's life
|
|
in quite another fashion. The three partners were lining a long
|
|
and narrow poling-boat down a bad stretch of rapids on the Forty-
|
|
Mile Creek. Hans and Pete moved along the bank, snubbing with a
|
|
thin Manila rope from tree to tree, while Thornton remained in the
|
|
boat, helping its descent by means of a pole, and shouting
|
|
directions to the shore. Buck, on the bank, worried and anxious,
|
|
kept abreast of the boat, his eyes never off his master.
|
|
|
|
At a particularly bad spot, where a ledge of barely submerged
|
|
rocks jutted out into the river, Hans cast off the rope, and,
|
|
while Thornton poled the boat out into the stream, ran down the
|
|
bank with the end in his hand to snub the boat when it had cleared
|
|
the ledge. This it did, and was flying down-stream in a current
|
|
as swift as a mill-race, when Hans checked it with the rope and
|
|
checked too suddenly. The boat flirted over and snubbed in to the
|
|
bank bottom up, while Thornton, flung sheer out of it, was carried
|
|
down-stream toward the worst part of the rapids, a stretch of wild
|
|
water in which no swimmer could live.
|
|
|
|
Buck had sprung in on the instant; and at the end of three hundred
|
|
yards, amid a mad swirl of water, he overhauled Thornton. When he
|
|
felt him grasp his tail, Buck headed for the bank, swimming with
|
|
all his splendid strength. But the progress shoreward was slow;
|
|
the progress down-stream amazingly rapid. From below came the
|
|
fatal roaring where the wild current went wilder and was rent in
|
|
shreds and spray by the rocks which thrust through like the teeth
|
|
of an enormous comb. The suck of the water as it took the
|
|
beginning of the last steep pitch was frightful, and Thornton knew
|
|
that the shore was impossible. He scraped furiously over a rock,
|
|
bruised across a second, and struck a third with crushing force.
|
|
He clutched its slippery top with both hands, releasing Buck, and
|
|
above the roar of the churning water shouted: "Go, Buck! Go!"
|
|
|
|
Buck could not hold his own, and swept on down-stream, struggling
|
|
desperately, but unable to win back. When he heard Thornton's
|
|
command repeated, he partly reared out of the water, throwing his
|
|
head high, as though for a last look, then turned obediently
|
|
toward the bank. He swam powerfully and was dragged ashore by
|
|
Pete and Hans at the very point where swimming ceased to be
|
|
possible and destruction began.
|
|
|
|
They knew that the time a man could cling to a slippery rock in
|
|
the face of that driving current was a matter of minutes, and they
|
|
ran as fast as they could up the bank to a point far above where
|
|
Thornton was hanging on. They attached the line with which they
|
|
had been snubbing the boat to Buck's neck and shoulders, being
|
|
careful that it should neither strangle him nor impede his
|
|
swimming, and launched him into the stream. He struck out boldly,
|
|
but not straight enough into the stream. He discovered the
|
|
mistake too late, when Thornton was abreast of him and a bare
|
|
half-dozen strokes away while he was being carried helplessly
|
|
past.
|
|
|
|
Hans promptly snubbed with the rope, as though Buck were a boat.
|
|
The rope thus tightening on him in the sweep of the current, he
|
|
was jerked under the surface, and under the surface he remained
|
|
till his body struck against the bank and he was hauled out. He
|
|
was half drowned, and Hans and Pete threw themselves upon him,
|
|
pounding the breath into him and the water out of him. He
|
|
staggered to his feet and fell down. The faint sound of
|
|
Thornton's voice came to them, and though they could not make out
|
|
the words of it, they knew that he was in his extremity. His
|
|
master's voice acted on Buck like an electric shock, He sprang to
|
|
his feet and ran up the bank ahead of the men to the point of his
|
|
previous departure.
|
|
|
|
Again the rope was attached and he was launched, and again he
|
|
struck out, but this time straight into the stream. He had
|
|
miscalculated once, but he would not be guilty of it a second
|
|
time. Hans paid out the rope, permitting no slack, while Pete
|
|
kept it clear of coils. Buck held on till he was on a line
|
|
straight above Thornton; then he turned, and with the speed of an
|
|
express train headed down upon him. Thornton saw him coming, and,
|
|
as Buck struck him like a battering ram, with the whole force of
|
|
the current behind him, he reached up and closed with both arms
|
|
around the shaggy neck. Hans snubbed the rope around the tree,
|
|
and Buck and Thornton were jerked under the water. Strangling,
|
|
suffocating, sometimes one uppermost and sometimes the other,
|
|
dragging over the jagged bottom, smashing against rocks and snags,
|
|
they veered in to the bank.
|
|
|
|
Thornton came to, belly downward and being violently propelled
|
|
back and forth across a drift log by Hans and Pete. His first
|
|
glance was for Buck, over whose limp and apparently lifeless body
|
|
Nig was setting up a howl, while Skeet was licking the wet face
|
|
and closed eyes. Thornton was himself bruised and battered, and
|
|
he went carefully over Buck's body, when he had been brought
|
|
around, finding three broken ribs.
|
|
|
|
"That settles it," he announced. "We camp right here." And camp
|
|
they did, till Buck's ribs knitted and he was able to travel.
|
|
|
|
That winter, at Dawson, Buck performed another exploit, not so
|
|
heroic, perhaps, but one that put his name many notches higher on
|
|
the totem-pole of Alaskan fame. This exploit was particularly
|
|
gratifying to the three men; for they stood in need of the outfit
|
|
which it furnished, and were enabled to make a long-desired trip
|
|
into the virgin East, where miners had not yet appeared. It was
|
|
brought about by a conversation in the Eldorado Saloon, in which
|
|
men waxed boastful of their favorite dogs. Buck, because of his
|
|
record, was the target for these men, and Thornton was driven
|
|
stoutly to defend him. At the end of half an hour one man stated
|
|
that his dog could start a sled with five hundred pounds and walk
|
|
off with it; a second bragged six hundred for his dog; and a
|
|
third, seven hundred.
|
|
|
|
"Pooh! pooh!" said John Thornton; "Buck can start a thousand
|
|
pounds."
|
|
|
|
"And break it out? and walk off with it for a hundred yards?"
|
|
demanded Matthewson, a Bonanza King, he of the seven hundred
|
|
vaunt.
|
|
|
|
"And break it out, and walk off with it for a hundred yards," John
|
|
Thornton said coolly.
|
|
|
|
"Well," Matthewson said, slowly and deliberately, so that all
|
|
could hear, "I've got a thousand dollars that says he can't. And
|
|
there it is." So saying, he slammed a sack of gold dust of the
|
|
size of a bologna sausage down upon the bar.
|
|
|
|
Nobody spoke. Thornton's bluff, if bluff it was, had been called.
|
|
He could feel a flush of warm blood creeping up his face. His
|
|
tongue had tricked him. He did not know whether Buck could start
|
|
a thousand pounds. Half a ton! The enormousness of it appalled
|
|
him. He had great faith in Buck's strength and had often thought
|
|
him capable of starting such a load; but never, as now, had he
|
|
faced the possibility of it, the eyes of a dozen men fixed upon
|
|
him, silent and waiting. Further, he had no thousand dollars; nor
|
|
had Hans or Pete.
|
|
|
|
"I've got a sled standing outside now, with twenty fiftypound
|
|
sacks of flour on it," Matthewson went on with brutal directness;
|
|
"so don't let that hinder you."
|
|
|
|
Thornton did not reply. He did not know what to say. He glanced
|
|
from face to face in the absent way of a man who has lost the
|
|
power of thought and is seeking somewhere to find the thing that
|
|
will start it going again. The face of Jim O'Brien, a Mastodon
|
|
King and old-time comrade, caught his eyes. It was as a cue to
|
|
him, seeming to rouse him to do what he would never have dreamed
|
|
of doing.
|
|
|
|
"Can you lend me a thousand?" he asked, almost in a whisper.
|
|
|
|
"Sure," answered O'Brien, thumping down a plethoric sack by the
|
|
side of Matthewson's. "Though it's little faith I'm having, John,
|
|
that the beast can do the trick."
|
|
|
|
The Eldorado emptied its occupants into the street to see the
|
|
test. The tables were deserted, and the dealers and gamekeepers
|
|
came forth to see the outcome of the wager and to lay odds.
|
|
Several hundred men, furred and mittened, banked around the sled
|
|
within easy distance. Matthewson's sled, loaded with a thousand
|
|
pounds of flour, had been standing for a couple of hours, and in
|
|
the intense cold (it was sixty below zero) the runners had frozen
|
|
fast to the hard-packed snow. Men offered odds of two to one that
|
|
Buck could not budge the sled. A quibble arose concerning the
|
|
phrase "break out." O'Brien contended it was Thornton's privilege
|
|
to knock the runners loose, leaving Buck to "break it out" from a
|
|
dead standstill. Matthewson insisted that the phrase included
|
|
breaking the runners from the frozen grip of the snow. A majority
|
|
of the men who had witnessed the making of the bet decided in his
|
|
favor, whereat the odds went up to three to one against Buck.
|
|
|
|
There were no takers. Not a man believed him capable of the feat.
|
|
Thornton had been hurried into the wager, heavy with doubt; and
|
|
now that he looked at the sled itself, the concrete fact, with the
|
|
regular team of ten dogs curled up in the snow before it, the more
|
|
impossible the task appeared. Matthewson waxed jubilant.
|
|
|
|
"Three to one!" he proclaimed. "I'll lay you another thousand at
|
|
that figure, Thornton. What d'ye say?"
|
|
|
|
Thornton's doubt was strong in his face, but his fighting spirit
|
|
was aroused--the fighting spirit that soars above odds, fails to
|
|
recognize the impossible, and is deaf to all save the clamor for
|
|
battle. He called Hans and Pete to him. Their sacks were slim,
|
|
and with his own the three partners could rake together only two
|
|
hundred dollars. In the ebb of their fortunes, this sum was their
|
|
total capital; yet they laid it unhesitatingly against
|
|
Matthewson's six hundred.
|
|
|
|
The team of ten dogs was unhitched, and Buck, with his own
|
|
harness, was put into the sled. He had caught the contagion of
|
|
the excitement, and he felt that in some way he must do a great
|
|
thing for John Thornton. Murmurs of admiration at his splendid
|
|
appearance went up. He was in perfect condition, without an ounce
|
|
of superfluous flesh, and the one hundred and fifty pounds that he
|
|
weighed were so many pounds of grit and virility. His furry coat
|
|
shone with the sheen of silk. Down the neck and across the
|
|
shoulders, his mane, in repose as it was, half bristled and seemed
|
|
to lift with every movement, as though excess of vigor made each
|
|
particular hair alive and active. The great breast and heavy fore
|
|
legs were no more than in proportion with the rest of the body,
|
|
where the muscles showed in tight rolls underneath the skin. Men
|
|
felt these muscles and proclaimed them hard as iron, and the odds
|
|
went down to two to one.
|
|
|
|
"Gad, sir! Gad, sir!" stuttered a member of the latest dynasty, a
|
|
king of the Skookum Benches. "I offer you eight hundred for him,
|
|
sir, before the test, sir; eight hundred just as he stands."
|
|
|
|
Thornton shook his head and stepped to Buck's side.
|
|
|
|
"You must stand off from him," Matthewson protested. "Free play
|
|
and plenty of room."
|
|
|
|
The crowd fell silent; only could be heard the voices of the
|
|
gamblers vainly offering two to one. Everybody acknowledged Buck
|
|
a magnificent animal, but twenty fifty-pound sacks of flour bulked
|
|
too large in their eyes for them to loosen their pouch-strings.
|
|
|
|
Thornton knelt down by Buck's side. He took his head in his two
|
|
hands and rested cheek on cheek. He did not playfully shake him,
|
|
as was his wont, or murmur soft love curses; but he whispered in
|
|
his ear. "As you love me, Buck. As you love me," was what he
|
|
whispered. Buck whined with suppressed eagerness.
|
|
|
|
The crowd was watching curiously. The affair was growing
|
|
mysterious. It seemed like a conjuration. As Thornton got to his
|
|
feet, Buck seized his mittened hand between his jaws, pressing in
|
|
with his teeth and releasing slowly, half-reluctantly. It was the
|
|
answer, in terms, not of speech, but of love. Thornton stepped
|
|
well back.
|
|
|
|
"Now, Buck," he said.
|
|
|
|
Buck tightened the traces, then slacked them for a matter of
|
|
several inches. It was the way he had learned.
|
|
|
|
"Gee!" Thornton's voice rang out, sharp in the tense silence.
|
|
|
|
Buck swung to the right, ending the movement in a plunge that took
|
|
up the slack and with a sudden jerk arrested his one hundred and
|
|
fifty pounds. The load quivered, and from under the runners arose
|
|
a crisp crackling.
|
|
|
|
"Haw!" Thornton commanded.
|
|
|
|
Buck duplicated the manoeuvre, this time to the left. The
|
|
crackling turned into a snapping, the sled pivoting and the
|
|
runners slipping and grating several inches to the side. The sled
|
|
was broken out. Men were holding their breaths, intensely
|
|
unconscious of the fact.
|
|
|
|
"Now, MUSH!"
|
|
|
|
Thornton's command cracked out like a pistol-shot. Buck threw
|
|
himself forward, tightening the traces with a jarring lunge. His
|
|
whole body was gathered compactly together in the tremendous
|
|
effort, the muscles writhing and knotting like live things under
|
|
the silky fur. His great chest was low to the ground, his head
|
|
forward and down, while his feet were flying like mad, the claws
|
|
scarring the hard-packed snow in parallel grooves. The sled
|
|
swayed and trembled, half-started forward. One of his feet
|
|
slipped, and one man groaned aloud. Then the sled lurched ahead in
|
|
what appeared a rapid succession of jerks, though it never really
|
|
came to a dead stop again ...half an inch...an inch . . . two
|
|
inches. . . The jerks perceptibly diminished; as the sled gained
|
|
momentum, he caught them up, till it was moving steadily along.
|
|
|
|
Men gasped and began to breathe again, unaware that for a moment
|
|
they had ceased to breathe. Thornton was running behind,
|
|
encouraging Buck with short, cheery words. The distance had been
|
|
measured off, and as he neared the pile of firewood which marked
|
|
the end of the hundred yards, a cheer began to grow and grow,
|
|
which burst into a roar as he passed the firewood and halted at
|
|
command. Every man was tearing himself loose, even Matthewson.
|
|
Hats and mittens were flying in the air. Men were shaking hands,
|
|
it did not matter with whom, and bubbling over in a general
|
|
incoherent babel.
|
|
|
|
But Thornton fell on his knees beside Buck. Head was against
|
|
head, and he was shaking him back and forth. Those who hurried up
|
|
heard him cursing Buck, and he cursed him long and fervently, and
|
|
softly and lovingly.
|
|
|
|
"Gad, sir! Gad, sir!" spluttered the Skookum Bench king. "I'll
|
|
give you a thousand for him, sir, a thousand, sir--twelve hundred,
|
|
sir."
|
|
|
|
Thornton rose to his feet. His eyes were wet. The tears were
|
|
streaming frankly down his cheeks. "Sir," he said to the Skookum
|
|
Bench king, "no, sir. You can go to hell, sir. It's the best I
|
|
can do for you, sir."
|
|
|
|
Buck seized Thornton's hand in his teeth. Thornton shook him back
|
|
and forth. As though animated by a common impulse, the onlookers
|
|
drew back to a respectful distance; nor were they again indiscreet
|
|
enough to interrupt.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Chapter VII
|
|
|
|
The Sounding of the Call
|
|
|
|
|
|
When Buck earned sixteen hundred dollars in five minutes for John
|
|
Thornton, he made it possible for his master to pay off certain
|
|
debts and to journey with his partners into the East after a
|
|
fabled lost mine, the history of which was as old as the history
|
|
of the country. Many men had sought it; few had found it; and
|
|
more than a few there were who had never returned from the quest.
|
|
This lost mine was steeped in tragedy and shrouded in mystery. No
|
|
one knew of the first man. The oldest tradition stopped before it
|
|
got back to him. From the beginning there had been an ancient and
|
|
ramshackle cabin. Dying men had sworn to it, and to the mine the
|
|
site of which it marked, clinching their testimony with nuggets
|
|
that were unlike any known grade of gold in the Northland.
|
|
|
|
But no living man had looted this treasure house, and the dead
|
|
were dead; wherefore John Thornton and Pete and Hans, with Buck
|
|
and half a dozen other dogs, faced into the East on an unknown
|
|
trail to achieve where men and dogs as good as themselves had
|
|
failed. They sledded seventy miles up the Yukon, swung to the
|
|
left into the Stewart River, passed the Mayo and the McQuestion,
|
|
and held on until the Stewart itself became a streamlet, threading
|
|
the upstanding peaks which marked the backbone of the continent.
|
|
|
|
John Thornton asked little of man or nature. He was unafraid of
|
|
the wild. With a handful of salt and a rifle he could plunge into
|
|
the wilderness and fare wherever he pleased and as long as he
|
|
pleased. Being in no haste, Indian fashion, he hunted his dinner
|
|
in the course of the day's travel; and if he failed to find it,
|
|
like the Indian, he kept on travelling, secure in the knowledge
|
|
that sooner or later he would come to it. So, on this great
|
|
journey into the East, straight meat was the bill of fare,
|
|
ammunition and tools principally made up the load on the sled, and
|
|
the time-card was drawn upon the limitless future.
|
|
|
|
To Buck it was boundless delight, this hunting, fishing, and
|
|
indefinite wandering through strange places. For weeks at a time
|
|
they would hold on steadily, day after day; and for weeks upon end
|
|
they would camp, here and there, the dogs loafing and the men
|
|
burning holes through frozen muck and gravel and washing countless
|
|
pans of dirt by the heat of the fire. Sometimes they went hungry,
|
|
sometimes they feasted riotously, all according to the abundance
|
|
of game and the fortune of hunting. Summer arrived, and dogs and
|
|
men packed on their backs, rafted across blue mountain lakes, and
|
|
descended or ascended unknown rivers in slender boats whipsawed
|
|
from the standing forest.
|
|
|
|
The months came and went, and back and forth they twisted through
|
|
the uncharted vastness, where no men were and yet where men had
|
|
been if the Lost Cabin were true. They went across divides in
|
|
summer blizzards, shivered under the midnight sun on naked
|
|
mountains between the timber line and the eternal snows, dropped
|
|
into summer valleys amid swarming gnats and flies, and in the
|
|
shadows of glaciers picked strawberries and flowers as ripe and
|
|
fair as any the Southland could boast. In the fall of the year
|
|
they penetrated a weird lake country, sad and silent, where wild-
|
|
fowl had been, but where then there was no life nor sign of life--
|
|
only the blowing of chill winds, the forming of ice in sheltered
|
|
places, and the melancholy rippling of waves on lonely beaches.
|
|
|
|
And through another winter they wandered on the obliterated trails
|
|
of men who had gone before. Once, they came upon a path blazed
|
|
through the forest, an ancient path, and the Lost Cabin seemed
|
|
very near. But the path began nowhere and ended nowhere, and it
|
|
remained mystery, as the man who made it and the reason he made it
|
|
remained mystery. Another time they chanced upon the time-graven
|
|
wreckage of a hunting lodge, and amid the shreds of rotted
|
|
blankets John Thornton found a long-barrelled flint-lock. He knew
|
|
it for a Hudson Bay Company gun of the young days in the
|
|
Northwest, when such a gun was worth its height in beaver skins
|
|
packed flat, And that was all--no hint as to the man who in an
|
|
early day had reared the lodge and left the gun among the
|
|
blankets.
|
|
|
|
Spring came on once more, and at the end of all their wandering
|
|
they found, not the Lost Cabin, but a shallow placer in a broad
|
|
valley where the gold showed like yellow butter across the bottom
|
|
of the washing-pan. They sought no farther. Each day they worked
|
|
earned them thousands of dollars in clean dust and nuggets, and
|
|
they worked every day. The gold was sacked in moose-hide bags,
|
|
fifty pounds to the bag, and piled like so much firewood outside
|
|
the spruce-bough lodge. Like giants they toiled, days flashing on
|
|
the heels of days like dreams as they heaped the treasure up.
|
|
|
|
There was nothing for the dogs to do, save the hauling in of meat
|
|
now and again that Thornton killed, and Buck spent long hours
|
|
musing by the fire. The vision of the short-legged hairy man came
|
|
to him more frequently, now that there was little work to be done;
|
|
and often, blinking by the fire, Buck wandered with him in that
|
|
other world which he remembered.
|
|
|
|
The salient thing of this other world seemed fear. When he
|
|
watched the hairy man sleeping by the fire, head between his knees
|
|
and hands clasped above, Buck saw that he slept restlessly, with
|
|
many starts and awakenings, at which times he would peer fearfully
|
|
into the darkness and fling more wood upon the fire. Did they
|
|
walk by the beach of a sea, where the hairy man gathered shell-
|
|
fish and ate them as he gathered, it was with eyes that roved
|
|
everywhere for hidden danger and with legs prepared to run like
|
|
the wind at its first appearance. Through the forest they crept
|
|
noiselessly, Buck at the hairy man's heels; and they were alert
|
|
and vigilant, the pair of them, ears twitching and moving and
|
|
nostrils quivering, for the man heard and smelled as keenly as
|
|
Buck. The hairy man could spring up into the trees and travel
|
|
ahead as fast as on the ground, swinging by the arms from limb to
|
|
limb, sometimes a dozen feet apart, letting go and catching, never
|
|
falling, never missing his grip. In fact, he seemed as much at
|
|
home among the trees as on the ground; and Buck had memories of
|
|
nights of vigil spent beneath trees wherein the hairy man roosted,
|
|
holding on tightly as he slept.
|
|
|
|
And closely akin to the visions of the hairy man was the call
|
|
still sounding in the depths of the forest. It filled him with a
|
|
great unrest and strange desires. It caused him to feel a vague,
|
|
sweet gladness, and he was aware of wild yearnings and stirrings
|
|
for he knew not what. Sometimes he pursued the call into the
|
|
forest, looking for it as though it were a tangible thing, barking
|
|
softly or defiantly, as the mood might dictate. He would thrust
|
|
his nose into the cool wood moss, or into the black soil where
|
|
long grasses grew, and snort with joy at the fat earth smells; or
|
|
he would crouch for hours, as if in concealment, behind fungus-
|
|
covered trunks of fallen trees, wide-eyed and wide-eared to all
|
|
that moved and sounded about him. It might be, lying thus, that
|
|
he hoped to surprise this call he could not understand. But he
|
|
did not know why he did these various things. He was impelled to
|
|
do them, and did not reason about them at all.
|
|
|
|
Irresistible impulses seized him. He would be lying in camp,
|
|
dozing lazily in the heat of the day, when suddenly his head would
|
|
lift and his ears cock up, intent and listening, and he would
|
|
spring to his feet and dash away, and on and on, for hours,
|
|
through the forest aisles and across the open spaces where the
|
|
niggerheads bunched. He loved to run down dry watercourses, and
|
|
to creep and spy upon the bird life in the woods. For a day at a
|
|
time he would lie in the underbrush where he could watch the
|
|
partridges drumming and strutting up and down. But especially he
|
|
loved to run in the dim twilight of the summer midnights,
|
|
listening to the subdued and sleepy murmurs of the forest, reading
|
|
signs and sounds as man may read a book, and seeking for the
|
|
mysterious something that called--called, waking or sleeping, at
|
|
all times, for him to come.
|
|
|
|
One night he sprang from sleep with a start, eager-eyed, nostrils
|
|
quivering and scenting, his mane bristling in recurrent waves.
|
|
From the forest came the call (or one note of it, for the call was
|
|
many noted), distinct and definite as never before,--a long-drawn
|
|
howl, like, yet unlike, any noise made by husky dog. And he knew
|
|
it, in the old familiar way, as a sound heard before. He sprang
|
|
through the sleeping camp and in swift silence dashed through the
|
|
woods. As he drew closer to the cry he went more slowly, with
|
|
caution in every movement, till he came to an open place among the
|
|
trees, and looking out saw, erect on haunches, with nose pointed
|
|
to the sky, a long, lean, timber wolf.
|
|
|
|
He had made no noise, yet it ceased from its howling and tried to
|
|
sense his presence. Buck stalked into the open, half crouching,
|
|
body gathered compactly together, tail straight and stiff, feet
|
|
falling with unwonted care. Every movement advertised commingled
|
|
threatening and overture of friendliness. It was the menacing
|
|
truce that marks the meeting of wild beasts that prey. But the
|
|
wolf fled at sight of him. He followed, with wild leapings, in a
|
|
frenzy to overtake. He ran him into a blind channel, in the bed
|
|
of the creek where a timber jam barred the way. The wolf whirled
|
|
about, pivoting on his hind legs after the fashion of Joe and of
|
|
all cornered husky dogs, snarling and bristling, clipping his
|
|
teeth together in a continuous and rapid succession of snaps.
|
|
|
|
Buck did not attack, but circled him about and hedged him in with
|
|
friendly advances. The wolf was suspicious and afraid; for Buck
|
|
made three of him in weight, while his head barely reached Buck's
|
|
shoulder. Watching his chance, he darted away, and the chase was
|
|
resumed. Time and again he was cornered, and the thing repeated,
|
|
though he was in poor condition, or Buck could not so easily have
|
|
overtaken him. He would run till Buck's head was even with his
|
|
flank, when he would whirl around at bay, only to dash away again
|
|
at the first opportunity.
|
|
|
|
But in the end Buck's pertinacity was rewarded; for the wolf,
|
|
finding that no harm was intended, finally sniffed noses with him.
|
|
Then they became friendly, and played about in the nervous, half-
|
|
coy way with which fierce beasts belie their fierceness. After
|
|
some time of this the wolf started off at an easy lope in a manner
|
|
that plainly showed he was going somewhere. He made it clear to
|
|
Buck that he was to come, and they ran side by side through the
|
|
sombre twilight, straight up the creek bed, into the gorge from
|
|
which it issued, and across the bleak divide where it took its
|
|
rise.
|
|
|
|
On the opposite slope of the watershed they came down into a level
|
|
country where were great stretches of forest and many streams, and
|
|
through these great stretches they ran steadily, hour after hour,
|
|
the sun rising higher and the day growing warmer. Buck was wildly
|
|
glad. He knew he was at last answering the call, running by the
|
|
side of his wood brother toward the place from where the call
|
|
surely came. Old memories were coming upon him fast, and he was
|
|
stirring to them as of old he stirred to the realities of which
|
|
they were the shadows. He had done this thing before, somewhere
|
|
in that other and dimly remembered world, and he was doing it
|
|
again, now, running free in the open, the unpacked earth
|
|
underfoot, the wide sky overhead.
|
|
|
|
They stopped by a running stream to drink, and, stopping, Buck
|
|
remembered John Thornton. He sat down. The wolf started on
|
|
toward the place from where the call surely came, then returned to
|
|
him, sniffing noses and making actions as though to encourage him.
|
|
But Buck turned about and started slowly on the back track. For
|
|
the better part of an hour the wild brother ran by his side,
|
|
whining softly. Then he sat down, pointed his nose upward, and
|
|
howled. It was a mournful howl, and as Buck held steadily on his
|
|
way he heard it grow faint and fainter until it was lost in the
|
|
distance.
|
|
|
|
John Thornton was eating dinner when Buck dashed into camp and
|
|
sprang upon him in a frenzy of affection, overturning him,
|
|
scrambling upon him, licking his face, biting his hand--"playing
|
|
the general tom-fool," as John Thornton characterized it, the
|
|
while he shook Buck back and forth and cursed him lovingly.
|
|
|
|
For two days and nights Buck never left camp, never let Thornton
|
|
out of his sight. He followed him about at his work, watched him
|
|
while he ate, saw him into his blankets at night and out of them
|
|
in the morning. But after two days the call in the forest began
|
|
to sound more imperiously than ever. Buck's restlessness came back
|
|
on him, and he was haunted by recollections of the wild brother,
|
|
and of the smiling land beyond the divide and the run side by side
|
|
through the wide forest stretches. Once again he took to
|
|
wandering in the woods, but the wild brother came no more; and
|
|
though he listened through long vigils, the mournful howl was
|
|
never raised.
|
|
|
|
He began to sleep out at night, staying away from camp for days at
|
|
a time; and once he crossed the divide at the head of the creek
|
|
and went down into the land of timber and streams. There he
|
|
wandered for a week, seeking vainly for fresh sign of the wild
|
|
brother, killing his meat as he travelled and travelling with the
|
|
long, easy lope that seems never to tire. He fished for salmon in
|
|
a broad stream that emptied somewhere into the sea, and by this
|
|
stream he killed a large black bear, blinded by the mosquitoes
|
|
while likewise fishing, and raging through the forest helpless and
|
|
terrible. Even so, it was a hard fight, and it aroused the last
|
|
latent remnants of Buck's ferocity. And two days later, when he
|
|
returned to his kill and found a dozen wolverenes quarrelling over
|
|
the spoil, he scattered them like chaff; and those that fled left
|
|
two behind who would quarrel no more.
|
|
|
|
The blood-longing became stronger than ever before. He was a
|
|
killer, a thing that preyed, living on the things that lived,
|
|
unaided, alone, by virtue of his own strength and prowess,
|
|
surviving triumphantly in a hostile environment where only the
|
|
strong survived. Because of all this he became possessed of a
|
|
great pride in himself, which communicated itself like a contagion
|
|
to his physical being. It advertised itself in all his movements,
|
|
was apparent in the play of every muscle, spoke plainly as speech
|
|
in the way he carried himself, and made his glorious furry coat if
|
|
anything more glorious. But for the stray brown on his muzzle and
|
|
above his eyes, and for the splash of white hair that ran midmost
|
|
down his chest, he might well have been mistaken for a gigantic
|
|
wolf, larger than the largest of the breed. From his St. Bernard
|
|
father he had inherited size and weight, but it was his shepherd
|
|
mother who had given shape to that size and weight. His muzzle
|
|
was the long wolf muzzle, save that was larger than the muzzle of
|
|
any wolf; and his head, somewhat broader, was the wolf head on a
|
|
massive scale.
|
|
|
|
His cunning was wolf cunning, and wild cunning; his intelligence,
|
|
shepherd intelligence and St. Bernard intelligence; and all this,
|
|
plus an experience gained in the fiercest of schools, made him as
|
|
formidable a creature as any that intelligence roamed the wild. A
|
|
carnivorous animal living on a straight meat diet, he was in full
|
|
flower, at the high tide of his life, overspilling with vigor and
|
|
virility. When Thornton passed a caressing hand along his back, a
|
|
snapping and crackling followed the hand, each hair discharing its
|
|
pent magnetism at the contact. Every part, brain and body, nerve
|
|
tissue and fibre, was keyed to the most exquisite pitch; and
|
|
between all the parts there was a perfect equilibrium or
|
|
adjustment. To sights and sounds and events which required
|
|
action, he responded with lightning-like rapidity. Quickly as a
|
|
husky dog could leap to defend from attack or to attack, he could
|
|
leap twice as quickly. He saw the movement, or heard sound, and
|
|
responded in less time than another dog required to compass the
|
|
mere seeing or hearing. He perceived and determined and responded
|
|
in the same instant. In point of fact the three actions of
|
|
perceiving, determining, and responding were sequential; but so
|
|
infinitesimal were the intervals of time between them that they
|
|
appeared simultaneous. His muscles were surcharged with vitality,
|
|
and snapped into play sharply, like steel springs. Life streamed
|
|
through him in splendid flood, glad and rampant, until it seemed
|
|
that it would burst him asunder in sheer ecstasy and pour forth
|
|
generously over the world.
|
|
|
|
"Never was there such a dog," said John Thornton one day, as the
|
|
partners watched Buck marching out of camp.
|
|
|
|
"When he was made, the mould was broke," said Pete.
|
|
|
|
"Py jingo! I t'ink so mineself," Hans affirmed.
|
|
|
|
They saw him marching out of camp, but they did not see the
|
|
instant and terrible transformation which took place as soon as he
|
|
was within the secrecy of the forest. He no longer marched. At
|
|
once he became a thing of the wild, stealing along softly, cat-
|
|
footed, a passing shadow that appeared and disappeared among the
|
|
shadows. He knew how to take advantage of every cover, to crawl
|
|
on his belly like a snake, and like a snake to leap and strike.
|
|
He could take a ptarmigan from its nest, kill a rabbit as it
|
|
slept, and snap in mid air the little chipmunks fleeing a second
|
|
too late for the trees. Fish, in open pools, were not too quick
|
|
for him; nor were beaver, mending their dams, too wary. He killed
|
|
to eat, not from wantonness; but he preferred to eat what he
|
|
killed himself. So a lurking humor ran through his deeds, and it
|
|
was his delight to steal upon the squirrels, and, when he all but
|
|
had them, to let them go, chattering in mortal fear to the
|
|
treetops.
|
|
|
|
As the fall of the year came on, the moose appeared in greater
|
|
abundance, moving slowly down to meet the winter in the lower and
|
|
less rigorous valleys. Buck had already dragged down a stray
|
|
part-grown calf; but he wished strongly for larger and more
|
|
formidable quarry, and he came upon it one day on the divide at
|
|
the head of the creek. A band of twenty moose had crossed over
|
|
from the land of streams and timber, and chief among them was a
|
|
great bull. He was in a savage temper, and, standing over six
|
|
feet from the ground, was as formidable an antagonist as even Buck
|
|
could desire. Back and forth the bull tossed his great palmated
|
|
antlers, branching to fourteen points and embracing seven feet
|
|
within the tips. His small eyes burned with a vicious and bitter
|
|
light, while he roared with fury at sight of Buck.
|
|
|
|
From the bull's side, just forward of the flank, protruded a
|
|
feathered arrow-end, which accounted for his savageness. Guided by
|
|
that instinct which came from the old hunting days of the
|
|
primordial world, Buck proceeded to cut the bull out from the
|
|
herd. It was no slight task. He would bark and dance about in
|
|
front of the bull, just out of reach of the great antlers and of
|
|
the terrible splay hoofs which could have stamped his life out
|
|
with a single blow. Unable to turn his back on the fanged danger
|
|
and go on, the bull would be driven into paroxysms of rage. At
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such moments he charged Buck, who retreated craftily, luring him
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on by a simulated inability to escape. But when he was thus
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separated from his fellows, two or three of the younger bulls
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would charge back upon Buck and enable the wounded bull to rejoin
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the herd.
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There is a patience of the wild--dogged, tireless, persistent as
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life itself--that holds motionless for endless hours the spider in
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its web, the snake in its coils, the panther in its ambuscade;
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this patience belongs peculiarly to life when it hunts its living
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food; and it belonged to Buck as he clung to the flank of the
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herd, retarding its march, irritating the young bulls, worrying
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the cows with their half-grown calves, and driving the wounded
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bull mad with helpless rage. For half a day this continued. Buck
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multiplied himself, attacking from all sides, enveloping the herd
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in a whirlwind of menace, cutting out his victim as fast as it
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could rejoin its mates, wearing out the patience of creatures
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preyed upon, which is a lesser patience than that of creatures
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preying.
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As the day wore along and the sun dropped to its bed in the
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northwest (the darkness had come back and the fall nights were six
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hours long), the young bulls retraced their steps more and more
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reluctantly to the aid of their beset leader. The down-coming
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winter was harrying them on to the lower levels, and it seemed
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they could never shake off this tireless creature that held them
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back. Besides, it was not the life of the herd, or of the young
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bulls, that was threatened. The life of only one member was
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demanded, which was a remoter interest than their lives, and in
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the end they were content to pay the toll.
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As twilight fell the old bull stood with lowered head, watching
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his mates--the cows he had known, the calves he had fathered, the
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bulls he had mastered--as they shambled on at a rapid pace through
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the fading light. He could not follow, for before his nose leaped
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the merciless fanged terror that would not let him go. Three
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hundredweight more than half a ton he weighed; he had lived a
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long, strong life, full of fight and struggle, and at the end he
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faced death at the teeth of a creature whose head did not reach
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beyond his great knuckled knees.
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From then on, night and day, Buck never left his prey, never gave
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it a moment's rest, never permitted it to browse the leaves of
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trees or the shoots of young birch and willow. Nor did he give the
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wounded bull opportunity to slake his burning thirst in the
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slender trickling streams they crossed. Often, in desperation, he
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burst into long stretches of flight. At such times Buck did not
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attempt to stay him, but loped easily at his heels, satisfied with
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the way the game was played, lying down when the moose stood
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still, attacking him fiercely when he strove to eat or drink.
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The great head drooped more and more under its tree of horns, and
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the shambling trot grew weak and weaker. He took to standing for
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long periods, with nose to the ground and dejected ears dropped
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limply; and Buck found more time in which to get water for himself
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and in which to rest. At such moments, panting with red lolling
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tongue and with eyes fixed upon the big bull, it appeared to Buck
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that a change was coming over the face of things. He could feel a
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new stir in the land. As the moose were coming into the land,
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other kinds of life were coming in. Forest and stream and air
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seemed palpitant with their presence. The news of it was borne in
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upon him, not by sight, or sound, or smell, but by some other and
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subtler sense. He heard nothing, saw nothing, yet knew that the
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land was somehow different; that through it strange things were
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afoot and ranging; and he resolved to investigate after he had
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finished the business in hand.
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At last, at the end of the fourth day, he pulled the great moose
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down. For a day and a night he remained by the kill, eating and
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sleeping, turn and turn about. Then, rested, refreshed and
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strong, he turned his face toward camp and John Thornton. He
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broke into the long easy lope, and went on, hour after hour, never
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|
at loss for the tangled way, heading straight home through strange
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country with a certitude of direction that put man and his
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magnetic needle to shame.
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As he held on he became more and more conscious of the new stir in
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the land. There was life abroad in it different from the life
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|
which had been there throughout the summer. No longer was this
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|
fact borne in upon him in some subtle, mysterious way. The birds
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|
talked of it, the squirrels chattered about it, the very breeze
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|
whispered of it. Several times he stopped and drew in the fresh
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|
morning air in great sniffs, reading a message which made him leap
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|
on with greater speed. He was oppressed with a sense of calamity
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|
happening, if it were not calamity already happened; and as he
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crossed the last watershed and dropped down into the valley toward
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camp, he proceeded with greater caution.
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Three miles away he came upon a fresh trail that sent his neck
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hair rippling and bristling, It led straight toward camp and John
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|
Thornton. Buck hurried on, swiftly and stealthily, every nerve
|
|
straining and tense, alert to the multitudinous details which told
|
|
a story--all but the end. His nose gave him a varying description
|
|
of the passage of the life on the heels of which he was
|
|
travelling. He remarked die pregnant silence of the forest. The
|
|
bird life had flitted. The squirrels were in hiding. One only he
|
|
saw,--a sleek gray fellow, flattened against a gray dead limb so
|
|
that he seemed a part of it, a woody excrescence upon the wood
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|
itself.
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|
|
|
As Buck slid along with the obscureness of a gliding shadow, his
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|
nose was jerked suddenly to the side as though a positive force
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|
had gripped and pulled it. He followed the new scent into a
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|
thicket and found Nig. He was lying on his side, dead where he
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|
had dragged himself, an arrow protruding, head and feathers, from
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|
either side of his body.
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|
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|
A hundred yards farther on, Buck came upon one of the sled-dogs
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|
Thornton had bought in Dawson. This dog was thrashing about in a
|
|
death-struggle, directly on the trail, and Buck passed around him
|
|
without stopping. From the camp came the faint sound of many
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|
voices, rising and falling in a sing-song chant. Bellying forward
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|
to the edge of the clearing, he found Hans, lying on his face,
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|
feathered with arrows like a porcupine. At the same instant Buck
|
|
peered out where the spruce-bough lodge had been and saw what made
|
|
his hair leap straight up on his neck and shoulders. A gust of
|
|
overpowering rage swept over him. He did not know that he
|
|
growled, but he growled aloud with a terrible ferocity. For the
|
|
last time in his life he allowed passion to usurp cunning and
|
|
reason, and it was because of his great love for John Thornton
|
|
that he lost his head.
|
|
|
|
The Yeehats were dancing about the wreckage of the spruce-bough
|
|
lodge when they heard a fearful roaring and saw rushing upon them
|
|
an animal the like of which they had never seen before. It was
|
|
Buck, a live hurricane of fury, hurling himself upon them in a
|
|
frenzy to destroy. He sprang at the foremost man (it was the
|
|
chief of the Yeehats), ripping the throat wide open till the rent
|
|
jugular spouted a fountain of blood. He did not pause to worry
|
|
the victim, but ripped in passing, with the next bound tearing
|
|
wide the throat of a second man. There was no withstanding him.
|
|
He plunged about in their very midst, tearing, rending,
|
|
destroying, in constant and terrific motion which defied the
|
|
arrows they discharged at him. In fact, so inconceivably rapid
|
|
were his movements, and so closely were the Indians tangled
|
|
together, that they shot one another with the arrows; and one
|
|
young hunter, hurling a spear at Buck in mid air, drove it through
|
|
the chest of another hunter with such force that the point broke
|
|
through the skin of the back and stood out beyond. Then a panic
|
|
seized the Yeehats, and they fled in terror to the woods,
|
|
proclaiming as they fled the advent of the Evil Spirit.
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|
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|
And truly Buck was the Fiend incarnate, raging at their heels and
|
|
dragging them down like deer as they raced through the trees. It
|
|
was a fateful day for the Yeehats. They scattered far and wide
|
|
over the country, and it was not till a week later that the last
|
|
of the survivors gathered together in a lower valley and counted
|
|
their losses. As for Buck, wearying of the pursuit, he returned
|
|
to the desolated camp. He found Pete where he had been killed in
|
|
his blankets in the first moment of surprise. Thornton's
|
|
desperate struggle was fresh-written on the earth, and Buck
|
|
scented every detail of it down to the edge of a deep pool. By
|
|
the edge, head and fore feet in the water, lay Skeet, faithful to
|
|
the last. The pool itself, muddy and discolored from the sluice
|
|
boxes, effectually hid what it contained, and it contained John
|
|
Thornton; for Buck followed his trace into the water, from which
|
|
no trace led away.
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|
All day Buck brooded by the pool or roamed restlessly about the
|
|
camp. Death, as a cessation of movement, as a passing out and
|
|
away from the lives of the living, he knew, and he knew John
|
|
Thornton was dead. It left a great void in him, somewhat akin to
|
|
hunger, but a void which ached and ached, and which food could not
|
|
fill, At times, when he paused to contemplate the carcasses of the
|
|
Yeehats, he forgot the pain of it; and at such times he was aware
|
|
of a great pride in himself,--a pride greater than any he had yet
|
|
experienced. He had killed man, the noblest game of all, and he
|
|
had killed in the face of the law of club and fang. He sniffed
|
|
the bodies curiously. They had died so easily. It was harder to
|
|
kill a husky dog than them. They were no match at all, were it
|
|
not for their arrows and spears and clubs. Thenceforward he would
|
|
be unafraid of them except when they bore in their hands their
|
|
arrows, spears, and clubs.
|
|
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|
Night came on, and a full moon rose high over the trees into the
|
|
sky, lighting the land till it lay bathed in ghostly day. And with
|
|
the coming of the night, brooding and mourning by the pool, Buck
|
|
became alive to a stirring of the new life in the forest other
|
|
than that which the Yeehats had made, He stood up, listening and
|
|
scenting. From far away drifted a faint, sharp yelp, followed by
|
|
a chorus of similar sharp yelps. As the moments passed the yelps
|
|
grew closer and louder. Again Buck knew them as things heard in
|
|
that other world which persisted in his memory. He walked to the
|
|
centre of the open space and listened. It was the call, the many-
|
|
noted call, sounding more luringly and compellingly than ever
|
|
before. And as never before, he was ready to obey. John Thornton
|
|
was dead. The last tie was broken. Man and the claims of man no
|
|
longer bound him.
|
|
|
|
Hunting their living meat, as the Yeehats were hunting it, on the
|
|
flanks of the migrating moose, the wolf pack had at last crossed
|
|
over from the land of streams and timber and invaded Buck's
|
|
valley. Into the clearing where the moonlight streamed, they
|
|
poured in a silvery flood; and in the centre of the clearing stood
|
|
Buck, motionless as a statue, waiting their coming. They were
|
|
awed, so still and large he stood, and a moment's pause fell, till
|
|
the boldest one leaped straight for him. Like a flash Buck
|
|
struck, breaking the neck. Then he stood, without movement, as
|
|
before, the stricken wolf rolling in agony behind him. Three
|
|
others tried it in sharp succession; and one after the other they
|
|
drew back, streaming blood from slashed throats or shoulders.
|
|
|
|
This was sufficient to fling the whole pack forward, pell-mell,
|
|
crowded together, blocked and confused by its eagerness to pull
|
|
down the prey. Buck's marvellous quickness and agility stood him
|
|
in good stead. Pivoting on his hind legs, and snapping and
|
|
gashing, he was everywhere at once, presenting a front which was
|
|
apparently unbroken so swiftly did he whirl and guard from side to
|
|
side. But to prevent them from getting behind him, he was forced
|
|
back, down past the pool and into the creek bed, till he brought
|
|
up against a high gravel bank. He worked along to a right angle
|
|
in the bank which the men had made in the course of mining, and in
|
|
this angle he came to bay, protected on three sides and with
|
|
nothing to do but face the front.
|
|
|
|
And so well did he face it, that at the end of half an hour the
|
|
wolves drew back discomfited. The tongues of all were out and
|
|
lolling, the white fangs showing cruelly white in the moonlight.
|
|
Some were lying down with heads raised and ears pricked forward;
|
|
others stood on their feet, watching him; and still others were
|
|
lapping water from the pool. One wolf, long and lean and gray,
|
|
advanced cautiously, in a friendly manner, and Buck recognized the
|
|
wild brother with whom he had run for a night and a day. He was
|
|
whining softly, and, as Buck whined, they touched noses.
|
|
|
|
Then an old wolf, gaunt and battle-scarred, came forward. Buck
|
|
writhed his lips into the preliminary of a snarl, but sniffed
|
|
noses with him, Whereupon the old wolf sat down, pointed nose at
|
|
the moon, and broke out the long wolf howl. The others sat down
|
|
and howled. And now the call came to Buck in unmistakable
|
|
accents. He, too, sat down and howled. This over, he came out of
|
|
his angle and the pack crowded around him, sniffing in half-
|
|
friendly, half-savage manner. The leaders lifted the yelp of the
|
|
pack and sprang away into the woods. The wolves swung in behind,
|
|
yelping in chorus. And Buck ran with them, side by side with the
|
|
wild brother, yelping as he ran.
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
And here may well end the story of Buck. The years were not many
|
|
when the Yeehats noted a change in the breed of timber wolves; for
|
|
some were seen with splashes of brown on head and muzzle, and with
|
|
a rift of white centring down the chest. But more remarkable than
|
|
this, the Yeehats tell of a Ghost Dog that runs at the head of the
|
|
pack. They are afraid of this Ghost Dog, for it has cunning
|
|
greater than they, stealing from their camps in fierce winters,
|
|
robbing their traps, slaying their dogs, and defying their bravest
|
|
hunters.
|
|
|
|
Nay, the tale grows worse. Hunters there are who fail to return
|
|
to the camp, and hunters there have been whom their tribesmen
|
|
found with throats slashed cruelly open and with wolf prints about
|
|
them in the snow greater than the prints of any wolf. Each fall,
|
|
when the Yeehats follow the movement of the moose, there is a
|
|
certain valley which they never enter. And women there are who
|
|
become sad when the word goes over the fire of how the Evil Spirit
|
|
came to select that valley for an abiding-place.
|
|
|
|
In the summers there is one visitor, however, to that valley, of
|
|
which the Yeehats do not know. It is a great, gloriously coated
|
|
wolf, like, and yet unlike, all other wolves. He crosses alone
|
|
from the smiling timber land and comes down into an open space
|
|
among the trees. Here a yellow stream flows from rotted moose-
|
|
hide sacks and sinks into the ground, with long grasses growing
|
|
through it and vegetable mould overrunning it and hiding its
|
|
yellow from the sun; and here he muses for a time, howling once,
|
|
long and mournfully, ere he departs.
|
|
|
|
But he is not always alone. When the long winter nights come on
|
|
and the wolves follow their meat into the lower valleys, he may be
|
|
seen running at the head of the pack through the pale moonlight or
|
|
glimmering borealis, leaping gigantic above his fellows, his great
|
|
throat a-bellow as he sings a song of the younger world, which is
|
|
the song of the pack.
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
"This is the end of the Project Gutenberg Edition of The Call of
|
|
the Wild"
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