4403 lines
261 KiB
Plaintext
4403 lines
261 KiB
Plaintext
1900
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THE SON OF THE WOLF
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by Jack London
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THE WHITE SILENCE.
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'CARMEN WON'T LAST MORE than a couple of days.' Mason spat out a
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chunk of ice and surveyed the poor animal ruefully, then put her
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foot in his mouth and proceeded to bite out the ice which clustered
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cruelly between the toes.
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'I never saw a dog with a highfalutin' name that ever was worth a
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rap,' he said, as he concluded his task and shoved her aside. 'They
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just fade away and die under the responsibility. Did ye ever see one
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go wrong with a sensible name like Cassiar, Siwash, or Husky? No, sir!
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Take a look at Shookum here, he's-'
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Snap! The lean brute flashed up, the white teeth just missing
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Mason's throat.
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'Ye will, will ye?' A shrewd clout behind the ear with the butt of
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the dog whip stretched the animal in the snow, quivering softly, a
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yellow slaver dripping from its fangs.
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'As I was saying, just look at Shookum here- he's got the spirit.
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Bet ye he eats Carmen before the week's out.'
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'I'll bank another proposition against that,' replied Malemute
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Kid, reversing the frozen bread placed before the fire to thaw. 'We'll
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eat Shookum before the trip is over. What d'ye say, Ruth?'
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The Indian woman settled the coffee with a piece of ice, glanced
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from Malemute Kid to her husband, then at the dogs, but vouchsafed
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no reply. It was such a palpable truism that none was necessary. Two
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hundred miles of unbroken trail in prospect, with a scant six days'
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grub for themselves and none for the dogs, could admit no other
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alternative. The two men and the woman grouped about the fire and
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began their meager meal. The dogs lay in their harnesses for it was
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a midday halt, and watched each mouthful enviously.
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'No more lunches after today,' said Malemute Kid. 'And we've got
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to keep a close eye on the dogs- they're getting vicious. They'd
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just as soon pull a fellow down as not, if they get a chance.'
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'And I was president of an Epworth once, and taught in the Sunday
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school.' Having irrelevantly delivered himself of this, Mason fell
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into a dreamy contemplation of his steaming moccasins, but was aroused
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by Ruth filling his cup. 'Thank God, we've got slathers of tea! I've
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seen it growing, down in Tennessee. What wouldn't I give for a hot
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corn pone just now! Never mind, Ruth; you won't starve much longer,
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nor wear moccasins either.'
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The woman threw off her gloom at this, and in her eyes welled up a
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great love for her white lord- the first white man she had ever
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seen- the first man whom she had known to treat a woman as something
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better than a mere animal or beast of burden.
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'Yes, Ruth,' continued her husband, having recourse to the macaronic
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jargon in which it was alone possible for them to understand each
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other; 'wait till we clean up and pull for the Outside. We'll take the
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White Man's canoe and go to the Salt Water. Yes, bad water, rough
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water- great mountains dance up and down all the time. And so big,
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so far, so far away- you travel ten sleep, twenty sleep, forty sleep'-
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he graphically enumerated the days on his fingers- 'all the time
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water, bad water. Then you come to great village, plenty people,
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just the same mosquitoes next summer. Wigwams oh, so high- ten, twenty
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pines. Hi-yu skookum!'
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He paused impotently, cast an appealing glance at Malemute Kid, then
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laboriously placed the twenty pines, end on end, by sign language.
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Malemute Kid smiled with cheery cynicism; but Ruth's eyes were wide
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with wonder, and with pleasure; for she half believed he was joking,
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and such condescension pleased her poor woman's heart.
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'And then you step into a- a box, and pouf! up you go.' He tossed
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his empty cup in the air by way of illustration and, as he deftly
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caught it, cried: 'And biff! down you come. Oh, great medicine men!
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You go Fort Yukon. I go Arctic City- twenty-five sleep- big string,
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all the time- I catch him string- I say, "Hello, Ruth! How are ye?"-
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and you say, "Is that my good husband?"- and I say, "Yes"- and you
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say, "No can bake good bread, no more soda"- then I say, "Look in
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cache, under flour; good-by." You look and catch plenty soda. All
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the time you Fort Yukon, me Arctic City. Hi-yu medicine man!'
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Ruth smiled so ingenuously at the fairy story that both men burst
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into laughter. A row among the dogs cut short the wonders of the
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Outside, and by the time the snarling combatants were separated, she
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had lashed the sleds and all was ready for the trail.
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'Mush! Baldy! Hi! Mush on!' Mason worked his whip smartly and, as
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the dogs whined low in the traces, broke out the sled with the gee
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pole. Ruth followed with the second team, leaving Malemute Kid, who
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had helped her start, to bring up the rear. Strong man, brute that
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he was, capable of felling an ox at a blow, he could not bear to
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beat the poor animals, but humored them as a dog driver rarely does-
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nay, almost wept with them in their misery.
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'Come, mush on there, you poor sore-footed brutes!' he murmured,
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after several ineffectual attempts to start the load. But his patience
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was at last rewarded, and though whimpering with pain, they hastened
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to join their fellows.
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No more conversation; the toil of the trail will not permit such
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extravagance. And of all deadening labors, that of the Northland trail
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is the worst. Happy is the man who can weather a day's travel at the
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price of silence, and that on a beaten track.
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And of all heartbreaking labors, that of breaking trail is the
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worst. At every step the great webbed shoe sinks till the snow is
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level with the knee. Then up, straight up, the deviation of a fraction
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of an inch being a certain precursor of disaster, the snowshoe must be
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lifted till the surface is cleared; then forward, down, and the
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other foot is raised perpendicularly for the matter of half a yard. He
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who tries this for the first time, if haply he avoids bringing his
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shoes in dangerous propinquity and measures not his length on the
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treacherous footing, will give up exhausted at the end of a hundred
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yards; he who can keep out of the way of the dogs for a whole day
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may well crawl into his sleeping bag with a clear conscience and a
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pride which passeth all understanding; and he who travels twenty
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sleeps on the Long Trail is a man whom the gods may envy.
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The afternoon wore on, and with the awe, born of the White
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Silence, the voiceless travelers bent to their work. Nature has many
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tricks wherewith she convinces man of his finity- the ceaseless flow
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of the tides, the fury of the storm, the shock of the earthquake,
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the long roll of heaven's artillery- but the most tremendous, the most
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stupefying of all, is the passive phase of the White Silence. All
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movement ceases, the sky clears, the heavens are as brass; the
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slightest whisper seems sacrilege, and man becomes timid, affrighted
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at the sound of his own voice. Sole speck of life journeying across
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the ghostly wastes of a dead world, he trembles at his audacity,
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realizes that his is a maggot's life, nothing more. Strange thoughts
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arise unsummoned, and the mystery of all things strives for utterance.
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And the fear of death, of God, of the universe, comes over him- the
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hope of the Resurrection and the Life, the yearning for immortality,
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the vain striving of the imprisoned essence- it is then, if ever,
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man walks alone with God.
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So wore the day away. The river took a great bend, and Mason
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headed his team for the cutoff across the narrow neck of land. But the
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dogs balked at the high bank. Again and again, though Ruth and
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Malemute Kid were shoving on the sled, they slipped back. Then came
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the concerted effort. The miserable creatures, weak from hunger,
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exerted their last strength. Up- up- the sled poised on the top of the
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bank; but the leader swung the string of dogs behind him to the right,
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fouling Mason's snowshoes. The result was grievous. Mason was
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whipped off his feet; one of the dogs fell in the traces; and the sled
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toppled back, dragging everything to the bottom again.
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Slash! the whip fell among the dogs savagely, especially upon the
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one which had fallen.
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'Don't,- Mason,' entreated Malemute Kid; 'the poor devil's on its
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last legs. Wait and we'll put my team on.'
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Mason deliberately withheld the whip till the last word had
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fallen, then out flashed the long lash, completely curling about the
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offending creature's body. Carmen- for it was Carmen- cowered in the
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snow, cried piteously, then rolled over on her side.
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It was a tragic moment, a pitiful incident of the trail- a dying
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dog, two comrades in anger. Ruth glanced solicitously from man to man.
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But Malemute Kid restrained himself, though there was a world of
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reproach in his eyes, and, bending over the dog, cut the traces. No
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word was spoken. The teams were double-spanned and the difficulty
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overcome; the sleds were under way again, the dying dog dragging
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herself along in the rear. As long as an animal can travel, it is
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not shot, and this last chance is accorded it- the crawling into camp,
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if it can, in the hope of a moose being killed.
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Already penitent for his angry action, but too stubborn to make
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amends, Mason toiled on at the head of the cavalcade, little
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dreaming that danger hovered in the air. The timber clustered thick in
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the sheltered bottom, and through this they threaded their way.
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Fifty feet or more from the trail towered a lofty pine. For
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generations it had stood there, and for generations destiny had had
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this one end in view- perhaps the same had been decreed of Mason.
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He stooped to fasten the loosened thong of his moccasin. The sleds
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came to a halt, and the dogs lay down in the snow without a whimper.
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The stillness was weird; not a breath rustled the frost-encrusted
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forest; the cold and silence of outer space had chilled the heart
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and smote the trembling lips of nature. A sigh pulsed through the air-
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they did not seem to actually hear it, but rather felt it, like the
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premonition of movement in a motionless void. Then the great tree,
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burdened with its weight of years and snow, played its last part in
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the tragedy of life. He heard the warning crash and attempted to
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spring up but, almost erect, caught the blow squarely on the shoulder.
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The sudden danger, the quick death- how often had Malemute Kid faced
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it! The pine needles were still quivering as he gave his commands
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and sprang into action. Nor did the Indian girl faint or raise her
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voice in idle wailing, as might many of her white sisters. At his
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order, she threw her weight on the end of a quickly extemporized
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handspike, easing the pressure and listening to her husband's
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groans, while Malemute Kid attacked the tree with his ax. The steel
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rang merrily as it bit into the frozen trunk, each stroke being
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accompanied by a forced, audible respiration, the 'Huh!' 'Huh!' of the
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woodsman.
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At last the Kid laid the pitiable thing that was once a man in the
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snow. But worse than his comrade's pain was the dumb anguish in the
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woman's face, the blended look of hopeful, hopeless query. Little
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was said; those of the Northland are early taught the futility of
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words and the inestimable value of deeds. With the temperature at
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sixty-five below zero, a man cannot lie many minutes in the snow and
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live. So the sled lashings were cut, and the sufferer, rolled in furs,
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laid on a couch of boughs. Before him roared a fire, built of the very
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wood which wrought the mishap. Behind and partially over him was
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stretched the primitive fly- a piece of canvas, which caught the
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radiating heat and threw it back and down upon him- a trick which
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men may know who study physics at the fount.
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And men who have shared their bed with death know when the call is
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sounded. Mason was terribly crushed. The most cursory examination
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revealed it. His right arm, leg, and back were broken; his limbs
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were paralyzed from the hips; and the likelihood of internal
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injuries was large. An occasional moan was his only sign of life.
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No hope; nothing to be done. The pitiless night crept slowly by-
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Ruth's portion, the despairing stoicism of her race, and Malemute
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Kid adding new lines to his face of bronze. In fact, Mason suffered
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least of all, for he spent his time in eastern Tennessee, in the Great
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Smoky Mountains, living over the scenes of his childhood. And most
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pathetic was the melody of his long-forgotten Southern vernacular,
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as he raved of swimming holes and coon hunts and watermelon raids.
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It was as Greek to Ruth, but the Kid understood and felt- felt as only
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one can feel who has been shut out for years from all that
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civilization means.
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Morning brought consciousness to the stricken man, and Malemute
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Kid bent closer to catch his whispers.
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'You remember when we foregathered on the Tanana, four years come
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next ice run? I didn't care so much for her then. It was more like she
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was pretty, and there was a smack of excitement about it, I think. But
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d'ye know, I've come to think a heap of her. She's been a good wife to
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me, always at my shoulder in the pinch. And when it comes to
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trading, you know there isn't her equal. D'ye recollect the time she
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shot the Moosehorn Rapids to pull you and me off that rock, the
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bullets whipping the water like hailstones?- and the time of the
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famine at Nuklukyeto?- when she raced the ice run to bring the news?
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Yes, she's been a good wife to me, better'n that other one. Didn't
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know I'd been there? Never told you, eh? Well, I tried it once, down
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in the States. That's why I'm here. Been raised together, too. I
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came away to give her a chance for divorce. She got it.
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'But that's got nothing to do with Ruth. I had thought of cleaning
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up and pulling for the Outside next year- her and I- but it's too
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late. Don't send her back to her people, Kid. It's beastly hard for
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a woman to go back. Think of it!- nearly four years on our bacon and
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beans and flour and dried fruit, and then to go back to her fish and
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caribou. It's not good for her to have tried our ways, to come to know
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they're better'n her people's, and then return to them. Take care of
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her, Kid- why don't you- but no, you always fought shy of them- and
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you never told me why you came to this country. Be kind to her, and
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send her back to the States as soon as you can. But fix it so she
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can come back- liable to get homesick, you know.
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'And the youngster- it's drawn us closer, Kid. I only hope it is a
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boy. Think of it!- flesh of my flesh, Kid. He mustn't stop in this
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country. And if it's a girl, why, she can't. Sell my furs; they'll
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fetch at least five thousand, and I've got as much more with the
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company. And handle my interests with yours. I think that bench
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claim will show up. See that he gets a good schooling; and Kid,
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above all, don't let him come back. This country was not made for
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white men.
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'I'm a gone man, Kid. Three or four sleeps at the best. You've got
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to go on. You must go on! Remember, it's my wife, it's my boy- O
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God! I hope it's a boy! You can't stay by me- and I charge you, a
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dying man, to pull on.'
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'Give me three days,' pleaded Malemute Kid. 'You may change for
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the better; something may turn up.'
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'No.'
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'Just three days.'
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'You must pull on.'
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'Two days.'
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'It's my wife and my boy, Kid. You would not ask it.'
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'One day.'
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'No, no! I charge-'
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'Only one day. We can shave it through on the grub, and I might
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knock over a moose.'
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'No- all right; one day, but not a minute more. And, Kid, don't-
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don't leave me to face it alone. Just a shot, one pull on the trigger.
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You understand. Think of it! Think of it! Flesh of my flesh, and
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I'll never live to see him!
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'Send Ruth here. I want to say good-by and tell her that she must
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think of the boy and not wait till I'm dead. She might refuse to go
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with you if I didn't. Good-by, old man; good-by.
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'Kid! I say- a- sink a hole above the pup, next to the slide. I
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panned out forty cents on my shovel there.
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'And, Kid!' He stooped lower to catch the last faint words, the
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dying man's surrender of his pride. 'I'm sorry- for- you know-
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Carmen.'
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Leaving the girl crying softly over her man, Malemute Kid slipped
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into his parka and snowshoes, tucked his rifle under his arm, and
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crept away into the forest. He was no tyro in the stern sorrows of the
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Northland, but never had he faced so stiff a problem as this. In the
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abstract, it was a plain, mathematical proposition- three possible
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lives as against one doomed one. But now he hesitated. For five years,
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shoulder to shoulder, on the rivers and trails, in the camps and
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mines, facing death by field and flood and famine, had they knitted
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the bonds of their comradeship. So close was the tie that he had often
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been conscious of a vague jealousy of Ruth, from the first time she
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had come between. And now it must be severed by his own hand.
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Though he prayed for a moose, just one moose, all game seemed to
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have deserted the land, and nightfall found the exhausted man crawling
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into camp, lighthanded, heavyhearted. An uproar from the dogs and
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shrill cries from Ruth hastened him.
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Bursting into the camp, he saw the girl in the midst of the snarling
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pack, laying about her with an ax. The dogs had broken the iron rule
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of their masters and were rushing the grub. He joined the issue with
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his rifle reversed, and the hoary game of natural selection was played
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out with all the ruthlessness of its primeval environment. Rifle and
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ax went up and down, hit or missed with monotonous regularity; lithe
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bodies flashed, with wild eyes and dripping fangs; and man and beast
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fought for supremacy to the bitterest conclusion. Then the beaten
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brutes crept to the edge of the firelight, licking their wounds,
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voicing their misery to the stars.
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The whole stock of dried salmon had been devoured, and perhaps
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five pounds of flour remained to tide them over two hundred miles of
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wilderness. Ruth returned to her husband, while Malemute Kid cut up
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the warm body of one of the dogs, the skull of which had been
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crushed by the ax. Every portion was carefully put away, save the hide
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and offal, which were cast to his fellows of the moment before.
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Morning brought fresh trouble. The animals were turning on each
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other. Carmen, who still clung to her slender thread of life, was
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downed by the pack. The lash fell among them unheeded. They cringed
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and cried under the blows, but refused to scatter till the last
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wretched bit had disappeared- bones, hide, hair, everything.
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Malemute Kid went about his work, listening to Mason, who was back
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in Tennessee, delivering tangled discourses and wild exhortations to
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his brethren of other days.
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Taking advantage of neighboring pines, he worked rapidly, and Ruth
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watched him make a cache similar to those sometimes used by hunters to
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preserve their meat from the wolverines and dogs. One after the other,
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he bent the tops of two small pines toward each other and nearly to
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the ground, making them fast with thongs of moosehide. Then he beat
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the dogs into submission and harnessed them to two of the sleds,
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loading the same with everything but the furs which enveloped Mason.
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These he wrapped and lashed tightly about him, fastening either end of
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the robes to the bent pines. A single stroke of his hunting knife
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would release them and send the body high in the air.
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Ruth had received her husband's last wishes and made no struggle.
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Poor girl, she had learned the lesson of obedience well. From a child,
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she had bowed, and seen all women bow, to the lords of creation, and
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it did not seem in the nature of things for woman to resist. The Kid
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permitted her one outburst of grief, as she kissed her husband- her
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own people had no such custom- then led her to the foremost sled and
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helped her into her snowshoes. Blindly, instinctively, she took the
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gee pole and whip, and 'mushed' the dogs out on the trail. Then he
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returned to Mason, who had fallen into a coma, and long after she
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was out of sight crouched by the fire, waiting, hoping, praying for
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his comrade to die.
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It is not pleasant to be alone with painful thoughts in the White
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Silence. The silence of gloom is merciful, shrouding one as with
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protection and breathing a thousand intangible sympathies; but the
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bright White Silence, clear and cold, under steely skies, is pitiless.
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An hour passed- two hours- but the man would not die. At high noon
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the sun, without raising its rim above the southern horizon, threw a
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suggestion of fire athwart the heavens, then quickly drew it back.
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Malemute Kid roused and dragged himself to his comrade's side. He cast
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one glance about him. The White Silence seemed to sneer, and a great
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fear came upon him. There was a sharp report; Mason swung into his
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aerial sepulcher, and Malemute Kid lashed the dogs into a wild
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gallop as he fled across the snow.
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THE SON OF THE WOLF.
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MAN RARELY PLACES A PROPER valuation upon his womankind, at least
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not until deprived of them. He has no conception of the subtle
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atmosphere exhaled by the sex feminine, so long as he bathes in it;
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but let it be withdrawn, and an ever-growing void begins to manifest
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itself in his existence, and he becomes hungry, in a vague sort of
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way, for a something so indefinite that he cannot characterize it.
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If his comrades have no more experience than himself, they will
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shake their heads dubiously and dose him with strong physic. But the
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hunger will continue and become stronger; he will lose interest in the
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things of his everyday life and wax morbid; and one day, when the
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emptiness has become unbearable, a revelation will dawn upon him.
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In the Yukon country, when this comes to pass, the man usually
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provisions a poling boat, if it is summer, and if winter, harnesses
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his dogs, and heads for the Southland. A few months later, supposing
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him to be possessed of a faith in the country, he returns with a
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wife to share with him in that faith, and incidentally in his
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hardships. This but serves to show the innate selfishness of man. It
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also brings us to the trouble of 'Scruff' Mackenzie, which occurred in
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the old days, before the country was stampeded and staked by a
|
|
tidal-wave of the che-cha-quas, and when the Klondike's only claim
|
|
to notice was its salmon fisheries.
|
|
'Scruff' Mackenzie bore the earmarks of a frontier birth and a
|
|
frontier life. His face was stamped with twenty-five years of
|
|
incessant struggle with Nature in her wildest moods,- the last two,
|
|
the wildest and hardest of all, having been spent in groping for the
|
|
gold which lies in the shadow of the Arctic Circle. When the
|
|
yearning sickness came upon him, he was not surprised, for he was a
|
|
practical man and had seen other men thus stricken. But he showed no
|
|
sign of his malady, save that he worked harder. All summer he fought
|
|
mosquitoes and washed the sure-thing bars of the Stuart River for a
|
|
double grubstake. Then he floated a raft of houselogs down the Yukon
|
|
to Forty Mile, and put together as comfortable a cabin as any the camp
|
|
could boast of. In fact, it showed such cozy promise that many men
|
|
elected to be his partner and to come and live with him. But he
|
|
crushed their aspirations with rough speech, peculiar for its strength
|
|
and brevity, and bought a double supply of grub from the trading-post.
|
|
As has been noted, 'Scruff' Mackenzie was a practical man. If he
|
|
wanted a thing he usually got it, but in doing so, went no farther out
|
|
of his way than was necessary. Though a son of toil and hardship, he
|
|
was averse to a journey of six hundred miles on the ice, a second of
|
|
two thousand miles on the ocean, and still a third thousand miles or
|
|
so to his last stamping-grounds,- all in the mere quest of a wife.
|
|
Life was too short. So he rounded up his dogs, lashed a curious
|
|
freight to his sled, and faced across the divide whose westward slopes
|
|
were drained by the head-reaches of the Tanana.
|
|
He was a sturdy traveler, and his wolf-dogs could work harder and
|
|
travel farther on less grub than any other team in the Yukon. Three
|
|
weeks later he strode into a hunting-camp of the Upper Tanana
|
|
Sticks. They marveled at his temerity; for they had a bad name and had
|
|
been known to kill white men for as trifling a thing as a sharp ax
|
|
or a broken rifle. But he went among them single-handed, his bearing
|
|
being a delicious composite of humility, familiarity, sang-froid,
|
|
and insolence. It required a deft hand and deep knowledge of the
|
|
barbaric mind effectually to handle such diverse weapons; but he was a
|
|
past-master in the art, knowing when to conciliate and when to
|
|
threaten with Jove-like wrath.
|
|
He first made obeisance to the Chief Thling-Tinneh, presenting him
|
|
with a couple of pounds of black tea and tobacco, and thereby
|
|
winning his most cordial regard. Then he mingled with the men and
|
|
maidens, and that night gave a potlach. The snow was beaten down in
|
|
the form of an oblong, perhaps a hundred feet in length and quarter as
|
|
many across. Down the center a long fire was built, while either
|
|
side was carpeted with spruce boughs. The lodges were forsaken, and
|
|
the fivescore or so members of the tribe gave tongue to their
|
|
folk-chants in honor of their guest.
|
|
'Scruff' Mackenzie's two years had taught him the not many hundred
|
|
words of their vocabulary, and he had likewise conquered their deep
|
|
gutturals, their Japanese idioms, constructions, and honorific and
|
|
agglutinative particles. So he made oration after their manner,
|
|
satisfying their instinctive poetry-love with crude flights of
|
|
eloquence and metaphorical contortions. After Thling-Tinneh and the
|
|
Shaman had responded in kind, he made trifling presents to the
|
|
menfolk, joined in their singing, and proved an expert in their
|
|
fifty-two-stick gambling game.
|
|
And they smoked his tobacco and were pleased. But among the
|
|
younger men there was a defiant attitude, a spirit of braggadocio,
|
|
easily understood by the raw insinuations of the toothless squaws
|
|
and the giggling of the maidens. They had known few white men, 'Sons
|
|
of the Wolf,' but from those few they had learned strange lessons.
|
|
Nor had 'Scruff' Mackenzie, for all his seeming carelessness, failed
|
|
to note these phenomena. In truth, rolled in his sleeping-furs, he
|
|
thought it all over, thought seriously, and emptied many pipes in
|
|
mapping out a campaign. One maiden only had caught his fancy,- none
|
|
other than Zarinska, daughter to the chief. In features, form, and
|
|
poise, answering more nearly to the white man's type of beauty, she
|
|
was almost an anomaly among her tribal sisters. He would possess
|
|
her, make her his wife, and name her- ah, he would name her
|
|
Gertrude! Having thus decided, he rolled over on his side and
|
|
dropped off to sleep, a true son of his all-conquering race, a
|
|
Samson among the Philistines.
|
|
It was slow work and a stiff game; but 'Scruff' Mackenzie maneuvered
|
|
cunningly, with an unconcern which served to puzzle the Sticks. He
|
|
took great care to impress the men that he was a sure shot and a
|
|
mighty hunter, and the camp rang with his plaudits when he brought
|
|
down a moose at six hundred yards. Of a night he visited in Chief
|
|
Thling-Tinneh's lodge of moose and cariboo skins, talking big and
|
|
dispensing tobacco with a lavish hand. Nor did he fail to likewise
|
|
honor the Shaman; for he realized the medicine-man's influence with
|
|
his people, and was anxious to make of him an ally. But that worthy
|
|
was high and mighty, refused to be propitiated, and was unerringly
|
|
marked down as a prospective enemy.
|
|
Though no opening presented for an interview with Zarinska,
|
|
Mackenzie stole many a glance to her, giving fair warning of his
|
|
intent. And well she knew, yet coquettishly surrounded herself with
|
|
a ring of women whenever the men were away and he had a chance. But he
|
|
was in no hurry; besides, he knew she could not help but think of him,
|
|
and a few days of such thought would only better his suit.
|
|
At last, one night, when he deemed the time to be ripe, he
|
|
abruptly left the chief's smoky dwelling and hastened to a neighboring
|
|
lodge. As usual, she sat with squaws and maidens about her, all
|
|
engaged in sewing moccasins and beadwork. They laughed at his
|
|
entrance, and badinage, which linked Zarinska to him, ran high. But
|
|
one after the other they were unceremoniously bundled into the outer
|
|
snow, whence they hurried to spread the tale through all the camp.
|
|
His cause was well pleaded, in her tongue, for she did not know his,
|
|
and at the end of two hours he rose to go.
|
|
'So Zarinska will come to the White Man's lodge? Good! I go now to
|
|
have talk with thy father, for he may not be so minded. And I will
|
|
give him many tokens; but he must not ask too much. If he say no?
|
|
Good! Zarinska shall yet come to the White Man's lodge.'
|
|
He had already lifted the skin flap to depart, when a low
|
|
exclamation brought him back to the girl's side. She brought herself
|
|
to her knees on the bearskin mat, her face aglow with true
|
|
Eve-light, and shyly unbuckled his heavy belt. He looked down,
|
|
perplexed, suspicious, his ears alert for the slightest sound without.
|
|
But her next move disarmed his doubt, and he smiled with pleasure. She
|
|
took from her sewing bag a moosehide sheath, brave with bright
|
|
beadwork, fantastically designed. She drew his great hunting-knife,
|
|
gazed reverently along the keen edge, half tempted to try it with
|
|
her thumb, and shot it into place in its new home. Then she slipped
|
|
the sheath along the belt to its customary resting-place, just above
|
|
the hip.
|
|
For all the world, it was like a scene of olden time,- a lady and
|
|
her knight. Mackenzie drew her up full height and swept her red lips
|
|
with his moustache,- the, to her, foreign caress of the Wolf. It was a
|
|
meeting of the stone age and the steel; but she was none the less a
|
|
woman, as her crimson cheeks and the luminous softness of her eyes
|
|
attested.
|
|
There was a thrill of excitement in the air as 'Scruff' Mackenzie, a
|
|
bulky bundle under his arm, threw open the flap of Thling-Tinneh's
|
|
tent. Children were running about in the open, dragging dry wood to
|
|
the scene of the potlach, a babble of women's voices was growing in
|
|
intensity, the young men were consulting in sullen groups, while
|
|
from the Shaman's lodge rose the eerie sounds of an incantation.
|
|
The chief was alone with his blear-eyed wife, but a glance
|
|
sufficed to tell Mackenzie that the news was already told. So he
|
|
plunged at once into the business, shifting the beaded sheath
|
|
prominently to the fore as advertisement of the betrothal.
|
|
'O Thling-Tinneh, mighty chief of the Sticks And the land of the
|
|
Tanana, ruler of the salmon and the bear, the moose and the cariboo!
|
|
The White Man is before thee with a great purpose. Many moons has
|
|
his lodge been empty, and he is lonely. And his heart has eaten itself
|
|
in silence, and grown hungry for a woman to sit beside him in his
|
|
lodge, to meet him from the hunt with warm fire and good food. He
|
|
has heard strange things, the patter of baby moccasins and the sound
|
|
of children's voices. And one night a vision came upon him, and he
|
|
beheld the Raven, who is thy father, the great Raven, who is the
|
|
father of all the Sticks. And the Raven spake to the lonely White Man,
|
|
saying: "Bind thou thy moccasins upon thee, and gird thy snow-shoes
|
|
on, and lash thy sled with food for many sleeps and fine tokens for
|
|
the Chief Thling-Tinneh. For thou shalt turn thy face to where the
|
|
midspring sun is wont to sink below the land and journey to this great
|
|
chief's hunting-grounds. There thou shalt make big presents, and
|
|
Thling-Tinneh, who is my son, shall become to thee as a father. In his
|
|
lodge there is a maiden into whom I breathed the breath of life for
|
|
thee. This maiden shalt thou take to wife."
|
|
'O Chief, thus spake the great Raven; thus do I lay many presents at
|
|
thy feet; thus am I come to take thy daughter!'
|
|
The old man drew his furs about him with crude consciousness of
|
|
royalty, but delayed reply while a youngster crept in, delivered a
|
|
quick message to appear before the council, and was gone.
|
|
'O White Man, whom we have named Moose-Killer, also known as the
|
|
Wolf, and the Son of the Wolf! We know thou comest of a mighty race;
|
|
we are proud to have thee our potlach-guest; but the king-salmon
|
|
does not mate with the dog-salmon, nor the Raven with the Wolf.'
|
|
'Not so!' cried Mackenzie. 'The daughters of the Raven have I met in
|
|
the camps of the Wolf,- the squaw of Mortimer, the squaw of
|
|
Tregidgo, the squaw of Barnaby, who came two ice-runs back, and I have
|
|
heard of other squaws, though my eyes beheld them not.'
|
|
'Son, your words are true; but it were evil mating, like the water
|
|
with the sand, like the snow-flake with the sun. But met you one Mason
|
|
and his squaw' No? He came ten ice-runs ago,- the first of all the
|
|
Wolves. And with him there was a mighty man, straight as a
|
|
willow-shoot, and tall; strong as the bald-faced grizzly, with a heart
|
|
like the full summer moon; his-'
|
|
'Oh!' interrupted Mackenzie, recognizing the well-known Northland
|
|
figure, 'Malemute Kid!'
|
|
'The same,- a mighty man. But saw you aught of the squaw? She was
|
|
full sister to Zarinska.'
|
|
'Nay, Chief; but I have heard. Mason- far, far to the north, a
|
|
spruce-tree, heavy with years, crushed out his life beneath. But his
|
|
love was great, and he had much gold. With this, and her boy, she
|
|
journeyed countless sleeps toward the winter's noonday sun, and
|
|
there she yet lives,- no biting frost, no snow, no summer's midnight
|
|
sun, no winter's noonday night.'
|
|
A second messenger interrupted with imperative summons from the
|
|
council. As Mackenzie threw him into the snow, he caught a glimpse
|
|
of the swaying forms before the council-fire, heard the deep basses of
|
|
the men in rhythmic chant, and knew the Shaman was fanning the anger
|
|
of his people. Time pressed. He turned upon the chief.
|
|
'Come! I wish thy child. And now, see! Here are tobacco, tea, many
|
|
cups of sugar, warm blankets, handkerchiefs, both good and large;
|
|
and here, a true rifle, with many bullets and much powder.'
|
|
'Nay,' replied the old man, struggling against the great wealth
|
|
spread before him. 'Even now are my people come together. They will
|
|
not have this marriage.'
|
|
'But thou art chief.'
|
|
'Yet do my young men rage because the Wolves have taken their
|
|
maidens so that they may not marry.'
|
|
'Listen, O Thling-Tinneh! Ere the night has passed into the day, the
|
|
Wolf shall face his dogs to the Mountains of the East and fare forth
|
|
to the Country of the Yukon. And Zarinska shall break trail for his
|
|
dogs.'
|
|
'And ere the night has gained its middle, my young men may fling
|
|
to the dogs the flesh of the Wolf, and his bones be scattered in the
|
|
snow till the springtime lay them bare.'
|
|
It was threat and counter-threat. Mackenzie's bronzed face flushed
|
|
darkly. He raised his voice. The old squaw, who till now had sat an
|
|
impassive spectator, made to creep by him for the door. The song of
|
|
the men broke suddenly and there was a hubbub of many voices as he
|
|
whirled the old woman roughly to her couch of skins.
|
|
'Again I cry- listen, O Thling-Tinneh! The Wolf dies with teeth
|
|
fast-locked, and with him there shall sleep ten of thy strongest men,-
|
|
men who are needed, for the hunting is not begun, and the fishing is
|
|
not many moons away. And again, of what profit should I die? I know
|
|
the custom of thy people; thy share of my wealth shall be very
|
|
small. Grant me thy child, and it shall all be thine. And yet again,
|
|
my brothers will come, and they are many, and their maws are never
|
|
filled; and the daughters of the Raven shall bear children in the
|
|
lodges of the Wolf. My people are greater than thy people. It is
|
|
destiny. Grant, and all this wealth is thine.'
|
|
Moccasins were crunching the snow without. Mackenzie threw his rifle
|
|
to cock, and loosened the twin Colts in his belt.
|
|
'Grant, O Chief!'
|
|
'And yet will my people say no.'
|
|
'Grant, and the wealth is thine. Then shall I deal with thy people
|
|
after.'
|
|
'The Wolf will have it so. I will take his tokens,- but I would warn
|
|
him.'
|
|
Mackenzie passed over the goods, taking care to clog the rifle's
|
|
ejector, and capping the bargain with a kaleidoscopic silk kerchief.
|
|
The Shaman and half a dozen young braves entered, but he shouldered
|
|
boldly among them and passed out.
|
|
'Pack!' was his laconic greeting to Zarinska as he passed her
|
|
lodge and hurried to harness his dogs. A few minutes later he swept
|
|
into the council at the head of the team, the woman by his side. He
|
|
took his place at the upper end of the oblong, by the side of the
|
|
chief. To his left, a step to the rear, he stationed Zarinska,- her
|
|
proper place. Besides, the time was ripe for mischief, and there was
|
|
need to guard his back.
|
|
On either side, the men crouched to the fire, their voices lifted in
|
|
a folk-chant out of the forgotten past. Full of strange, halting
|
|
cadences and haunting recurrences, it was not beautiful. 'Fearful' may
|
|
inadequately express it. At the lower end, under the eye of the
|
|
Shaman, danced half a score of women. Stern were his reproofs of those
|
|
who did not wholly abandon themselves to the ecstasy of the rite. Half
|
|
hidden in their heavy masses of raven hair, all dishevelled and
|
|
falling to their waists, they slowly swayed to and fro, their forms
|
|
rippling to an ever-changing rhythm.
|
|
It was a weird scene; an anachronism. To the south, the nineteenth
|
|
century was reeling off the few years of its last decade; here
|
|
flourished man primeval, a shade removed from the prehistoric
|
|
cave-dweller, forgotten fragment of the Elder World. The tawny
|
|
wolf-dogs sat between their skin-clad masters or fought for room,
|
|
the firelight cast backward from their red eyes and dripping fangs.
|
|
The woods, in ghostly shroud, slept on unheeding. The White Silence,
|
|
for the moment driven to the rimming forest, seemed ever crushing
|
|
inward; the stars danced with great leaps, as is their wont in the
|
|
time of the Great Cold; while the Spirits of the Pole trailed their
|
|
robes of glory athwart the heavens.
|
|
'Scruff' Mackenzie dimly realized the wild grandeur of the setting
|
|
as his eyes ranged down the fur-fringed sides in quest of missing
|
|
faces. They rested for a moment on a newborn babe, suckling at its
|
|
mother's naked breast. It was forty below,- seven and odd degrees of
|
|
frost. He thought of the tender women of his own race and smiled
|
|
grimly. Yet from the loins of some such tender woman had he sprung
|
|
with a kingly inheritance,- an inheritance which gave to him and his
|
|
dominance over the land and sea, over the animals and the peoples of
|
|
all the zones. Single-handed against fivescore, girt by the Arctic
|
|
winter, far from his own, he felt the prompting of his heritage, the
|
|
desire to possess, the wild danger- love, the thrill of battle, the
|
|
power to conquer or to die.
|
|
The singing and the dancing ceased, and the Shaman flared up in rude
|
|
eloquence. Through the sinuosities of their vast mythology, he
|
|
worked cunningly upon the credulity of his people. The case was
|
|
strong. Opposing the creative principles as embodied in the Crow and
|
|
the Raven, he stigmatized Mackenzie as the Wolf, the fighting and
|
|
the destructive principle. Not only was the combat of these forces
|
|
spiritual, but men fought, each to his totem. They were the children
|
|
of Jelchs, the Raven, the Promethean fire-bringer; Mackenzie was the
|
|
child of the Wolf, or in other words, the Devil. For them to bring a
|
|
truce to this perpetual warfare, to marry their daughters to the
|
|
arch-enemy, were treason and blasphemy of the highest order. No phrase
|
|
was harsh nor figure vile enough in branding Mackenzie as a sneaking
|
|
interloper and emissary of Satan. There was a subdued, savage roar
|
|
in the deep chests of his listeners as he took the swing of his
|
|
peroration.
|
|
'Aye, my brothers, Jelchs is all-powerful! Did he not bring
|
|
heaven-borne fire that we might be warm? Did he not draw the sun,
|
|
moon, and stars, from their holes that we might see? Did he not
|
|
teach us that we might fight the Spirits of Famine and of Frost? But
|
|
now Jelchs is angry with his children, and they are grown to a
|
|
handful, and he will not help. For they have forgotten him, and done
|
|
evil things, and trod bad trails, and taken his enemies into their
|
|
lodges to sit by their fires. And the Raven is sorrowful at the
|
|
wickedness of his children; but when they shall rise up and show
|
|
they have come back, he will come out of the darkness to aid them. O
|
|
brothers! the Fire-Bringer has whispered messages to thy Shaman; the
|
|
same shall ye hear. Let the young men take the young women to their
|
|
lodges; let them fly at the throat of the Wolf; let them be undying in
|
|
their enmity! Then shall their women become fruitful and they shall
|
|
multiply into a mighty people! And the Raven shall lead great tribes
|
|
of their fathers and their fathers' fathers from out of the North; and
|
|
they shall beat back the Wolves till they are as last year's
|
|
campfires; and they shall again come to rule over all the land! 'Tis
|
|
the message of Jelchs, the Raven.'
|
|
This foreshadowing of the Messiah's coming brought a hoarse howl
|
|
from the Sticks as they leaped to their feet. Mackenzie slipped the
|
|
thumbs of his mittens and waited. There was a clamor for the 'Fox,'
|
|
not to be stilled till one of the young men stepped forward to speak.
|
|
'Brothers! The Shaman has spoken wisely. The Wolves have taken our
|
|
women, and our men are childless. We are grown to a handful. The
|
|
Wolves have taken our warm furs and given for them evil spirits
|
|
which dwell in bottles, and clothes which come not from the beaver
|
|
or the lynx, but are made from the grass. And they are not warm, and
|
|
our men die of strange sicknesses. I, the Fox, have taken no woman
|
|
to wife; and why? Twice have the maidens which pleased me gone to
|
|
the camps of the Wolf. Even now have I laid by skins of the beaver, of
|
|
the moose, of the cariboo, that I might win favor in the eyes of
|
|
Thling-Tinneh, that I might marry Zarinska, his daughter. Even now are
|
|
her snow-shoes bound to her feet, ready to break trail for the dogs of
|
|
the Wolf. Nor do I speak for myself alone. As I have done, so has
|
|
the Bear. He, too, had fain been the father of her children, and
|
|
many skins has he cured thereto. I speak for all the young men who
|
|
know not wives. The Wolves are ever hungry. Always do they take the
|
|
choice meat at the killing. To the Ravens are left the leavings.
|
|
'There is Gugkla,' he cried, brutally pointing out one of the women,
|
|
who was a cripple. 'Her legs are bent like the ribs of a birch
|
|
canoe. She cannot gather wood nor carry the meat of the hunters. Did
|
|
the Wolves choose her?'
|
|
'Ai! ai!' vociferated his tribesmen.
|
|
'There is Moyri, whose eyes are crossed by the Evil Spirit. Even the
|
|
babes are affrighted when they gaze upon her, and it is said the
|
|
bald-face gives her the trail. Was she chosen?'
|
|
Again the cruel applause rang out.
|
|
'And there sits Pischet. She does not hearken to my words. Never has
|
|
she heard the cry of the chit-chat, the voice of her husband, the
|
|
babble of her child. She lives in the White Silence. Cared the
|
|
Wolves aught for her? No! Theirs is the choice of the kill; ours is
|
|
the leavings.
|
|
'Brothers, it shall not be! No more shall the Wolves slink among our
|
|
campfires. The time is come.'
|
|
A great streamer of fire, the aurora borealis, purple, green, and
|
|
yellow, shot across the zenith, bridging horizon to horizon. With head
|
|
thrown back and arms extended, he swayed to his climax.
|
|
'Behold! The spirits of our fathers have arisen and great deeds
|
|
are afoot this night!'
|
|
He stepped back, and another young man somewhat diffidently came
|
|
forward, pushed on by his comrades. He towered a full head above them,
|
|
his broad chest defiantly bared to the frost. He swung tentatively
|
|
from one foot to the other. Words halted upon his tongue, and he was
|
|
ill at ease. His face was horrible to look upon, for it had at one
|
|
time been half torn away by some terrific blow. At last he struck
|
|
his breast with his clenched fist, drawing sound as from a drum, and
|
|
his voice rumbled forth as does the surf from an ocean cavern.
|
|
'I am the Bear,- the Silver-Tip and the Son of the Silver-Tip!
|
|
When my voice was yet as a girl's, I slew the lynx, the moose, and the
|
|
cariboo; when it whistled like the wolverines from under a cache, I
|
|
crossed the Mountains of the South and slew three of the White Rivers;
|
|
when it became as the roar of the Chinook, I met the bald-faced
|
|
grizzly, but gave no trail.'
|
|
At this he paused, his hand significantly sweeping across his
|
|
hideous scars.
|
|
'I am not as the Fox. My tongue is frozen like the river. I cannot
|
|
make great talk. My words are few. The Fox says great deeds are
|
|
afoot this night. Good! Talk flows from his tongue like the freshets
|
|
of the spring, but he is chary of deeds. This night shall I do
|
|
battle with the Wolf. I shall slay him, and Zarinska shall sit by my
|
|
fire. The Bear has spoken.'
|
|
Though pandemonium raged about him, 'Scruff' Mackenzie held his
|
|
ground. Aware how useless was the rifle at close quarters, he
|
|
slipped both holsters to the fore, ready for action, and drew his
|
|
mittens till his hands were barely shielded by the elbow gauntlets. He
|
|
knew there was no hope in attack en masse, but true to his boast,
|
|
was prepared to die with teeth fast-locked. But the Bear restrained
|
|
his comrades, beating back the more impetuous with his terrible
|
|
fist. As the tumult began to die away, Mackenzie shot a glance in
|
|
the direction of Zarinska. It was a superb picture. She was leaning
|
|
forward on her snow-shoes, lips apart and nostrils quivering, like a
|
|
tigress about to spring. Her great black eyes were fixed upon her
|
|
tribesmen, in fear and defiance. So extreme the tension, she had
|
|
forgotten to breathe. With one hand pressed spasmodically against
|
|
her breast and the other as tightly gripped about the dog-whip, she
|
|
was as turned to stone. Even as he looked, relief came to her. Her
|
|
muscles loosened; with a heavy sigh she settled back, giving him a
|
|
look of more than love- of worship.
|
|
Thling-Tinneh was trying to speak, but his people drowned his voice.
|
|
Then Mackenzie strode forward. The Fox opened his mouth to a
|
|
piercing yell, but so savagely did Mackenzie whirl upon him that he
|
|
shrank back, his larynx all agurgle with suppressed sound. His
|
|
discomfiture was greeted with roars of laughter, and served to
|
|
soothe his fellows to a listening mood.
|
|
'Brothers! The White Man, whom ye have chosen to call the Wolf, came
|
|
among you with fair words. He was not like the Innuit; he spoke not
|
|
lies. He came as a friend, as one who would be a brother. But your men
|
|
have had their say, and the time for soft words is past. First, I will
|
|
tell you that the Shaman has an evil tongue and is a false prophet,
|
|
that the messages he spake are not those of the Fire-Bringer. His ears
|
|
are locked to the voice of the Raven, and out of his own head he
|
|
weaves cunning fancies, and he has made fools of you. He has no power.
|
|
When the dogs were killed and eaten, and your stomachs were heavy with
|
|
untanned hide and strips of moccasins; when the old men died, and
|
|
the old women died, and the babes at the dry dugs of the mothers died;
|
|
when the land was dark, and ye perished as do the salmon in the
|
|
fall; aye, when the famine was upon you, did the Shaman bring reward
|
|
to your hunters? did the Shaman put meat in your bellies? Again I say,
|
|
the Shaman is without power. Thus I spit upon his face!'
|
|
Though taken aback by the sacrilege, there was no uproar. Some of
|
|
the women were even frightened, but among the men there was an
|
|
uplifting, as though in preparation or anticipation of the miracle.
|
|
All eyes were turned upon the two central figures. The priest realized
|
|
the crucial moment, felt his power tottering, opened his mouth in
|
|
denunciation, but fled backward before the truculent advance, upraised
|
|
fist, and flashing eyes, of Mackenzie. He sneered and resumed.
|
|
Was I stricken dead? Did the lightning burn me? Did the stars fall
|
|
from the sky and crush me? Pish! I have done with the dog. Now will
|
|
I tell you of my people, who are the mightiest of all the peoples, who
|
|
rule in all the lands. At first we hunt as I hunt, alone. After that
|
|
we hunt in packs; and at last, like the cariboo-run, we sweep across
|
|
all the land. Those whom we take into our lodges live; those who
|
|
will not come die. Zarinska is a comely maiden, full and strong, fit
|
|
to become the mother of Wolves. Though I die, such shall she become;
|
|
for my brothers are many, and they will follow the scent of my dogs.
|
|
Listen to the Law of the Wolf: Whoso taketh the life of one Wolf,
|
|
the forfeit shall ten of his people pay. In many lands has the price
|
|
been paid; in many lands shall it yet be paid.
|
|
'Now will I deal with the Fox and the Bear. It seems they have
|
|
cast eyes upon the maiden. So? Behold, I have bought her!
|
|
Thling-Tinneh leans upon the rifle; the goods of purchase are by his
|
|
fire. Yet will I be fair to the young men. To the Fox, whose tongue is
|
|
dry with many words, will I give of tobacco five long plugs. Thus will
|
|
his mouth be wetted that he may make much noise in the council. But to
|
|
the Bear, of whom I am well proud, will I give of blankets two; of
|
|
flour, twenty cups; of tobacco, double that of the Fox; and if he fare
|
|
with me over the Mountains of the East, then will I give him a
|
|
rifle, mate to Thling-Tinneh's. If not? Good! The Wolf is weary of
|
|
speech. Yet once again will he say the Law: Whoso taketh the life of
|
|
one Wolf, the forfeit shall ten of his people pay.'
|
|
Mackenzie smiled as he stepped back to his old position, but at
|
|
heart he was full of trouble. The night was yet dark. The girl came to
|
|
his side, and he listened closely as she told of the Bear's
|
|
battle-tricks with the knife.
|
|
The decision was for war. In a trice, scores of moccasins were
|
|
widening the space of beaten snow by the fire. There was much
|
|
chatter about the seeming defeat of the Shaman; some averred he had
|
|
but withheld his power, while others conned past events and agreed
|
|
with the Wolf. The Bear came to the center of the battle-ground, a
|
|
long naked hunting-knife of Russian make in his hand. The Fox called
|
|
attention to Mackenzie's revolvers; so he stripped his belt,
|
|
buckling it about Zarinska, into whose hands he also entrusted his
|
|
rifle. She shook her head that she could not shoot,- small chance
|
|
had a woman to handle such precious things.
|
|
'Then, if danger come by my back, cry aloud, "My husband!" No; thus,
|
|
"My husband!"'
|
|
He laughed as she repeated it, pinched her cheek, and reentered
|
|
the circle. Not only in reach and stature had the Bear the advantage
|
|
of him, but his blade was longer by a good two inches. 'Scruff'
|
|
Mackenzie had looked into the eyes of men before, and he knew it was a
|
|
man who stood against him; yet he quickened to the glint of light on
|
|
the steel, to the dominant pulse of his race.
|
|
Time and again he was forced to the edge of the fire or the deep
|
|
snow, and time and again, with the foot tactics of the pugilist, he
|
|
worked back to the center. Not a voice was lifted in encouragement,
|
|
while his antagonist was heartened with applause, suggestions, and
|
|
warnings. But his teeth only shut the tighter as the knives clashed
|
|
together, and he thrust or eluded with a coolness born of conscious
|
|
strength. At first he felt compassion for his enemy; but this fled
|
|
before the primal instinct of life, which in turn gave way to the lust
|
|
of slaughter. The ten thousand years of culture fell from him, and
|
|
he was a cave-dweller, doing battle for his female.
|
|
Twice he pricked the Bear, getting away unscathed; but the third
|
|
time caught, and to save himself, free hands closed on fighting hands,
|
|
and they came together. Then did he realize the tremendous strength of
|
|
his opponent. His muscles were knotted in painful lumps, and cords and
|
|
tendons threatened to snap with the strain; yet nearer and nearer came
|
|
the Russian steel. He tried to break away, but only weakened
|
|
himself. The fur-clad circle closed in, certain of and anxious to
|
|
see the final stroke. But with wrestler's trick, swinging partly to
|
|
the side, he struck at his adversary with his head. Involuntarily
|
|
the Bear leaned back, disturbing his center of gravity. Simultaneous
|
|
with this, Mackenzie tripped properly and threw his whole weight
|
|
forward, hurling him clear through the circle into the deep snow.
|
|
The Bear floundered out and came back full tilt.
|
|
'O my husband!' Zarinska's voice rang out, vibrant with danger.
|
|
To the twang of a bow-string, Mackenzie swept low to the ground, and
|
|
a bone-barbed arrow passed over him into the breast of the Bear, whose
|
|
momentum carried him over his crouching foe. The next instant
|
|
Mackenzie was up and about. The bear lay motionless, but across the
|
|
fire was the Shaman, drawing a second arrow.
|
|
Mackenzie's knife leaped short in the air. He caught the heavy blade
|
|
by the point. There was a flash of light as it spanned the fire.
|
|
Then the Shaman, the hilt alone appearing without his throat, swayed
|
|
and pitched forward into the glowing embers.
|
|
Click! Click!- the Fox had possessed himself of Thling-Tinneh's
|
|
rifle and was vainly trying to throw a shell into place. But he
|
|
dropped it at the sound of Mackenzie's laughter.
|
|
'So the Fox has not learned the way of the plaything? He is yet a
|
|
woman. Come! Bring it, that I may show thee!'
|
|
The Fox hesitated.
|
|
'Come, I say!'
|
|
He slouched forward like a beaten cur.
|
|
'Thus, and thus; so the thing is done.' A shell flew into place
|
|
and the trigger was at cock as Mackenzie brought it to shoulder.
|
|
'The Fox has said great deeds were afoot this night, and he spoke
|
|
true. There have been great deeds, yet least among them were those
|
|
of the Fox. Is he still intent to take Zarinska to his lodge? Is he
|
|
minded to tread the trail already broken by the Shaman and the Bear?
|
|
No? Good!'
|
|
Mackenzie turned contemptuously and drew his knife from the priest's
|
|
throat.
|
|
'Are any of the young men so minded? If so, the Wolf will take
|
|
them by two and three till none are left. No? Good! Thling-Tinneh, I
|
|
now give thee this rifle a second time. If, in the days to come,
|
|
thou shouldst journey to the Country of the Yukon, know thou that
|
|
there shall always be a place and much food by the fire of the Wolf.
|
|
The night is now passing into the day. I go, but I may come again. And
|
|
for the last time, remember the Law of the Wolf!'
|
|
He was supernatural in their sight as he rejoined Zarinska. She took
|
|
her place at the head of the team, and the dogs swung into motion. A
|
|
few moments later they were swallowed up by the ghostly forest. Till
|
|
now Mackenzie had waited; he slipped into his snow-shoes to follow.
|
|
'Has the Wolf forgotten the five long plugs?'
|
|
Mackenzie turned upon the Fox angrily; then the humor of it struck
|
|
him.
|
|
'I will give thee one short plug.'
|
|
'As the Wolf sees fit,' meekly responded the Fox, stretching out his
|
|
hand.
|
|
THE MEN OF FORTY-MILE.
|
|
|
|
WHEN BIG JIM BELDEN ventured the apparently innocuous proposition
|
|
that mush-ice was 'rather pecooliar,' he little dreamed of what it
|
|
would lead to. Neither did Lon McFane, when he affirmed that
|
|
anchor-ice was even more so; nor did Bettles, as he instantly
|
|
disagreed, declaring the very existence of such a form to be a
|
|
bugaboo.
|
|
'An' ye'd be tellin' me this,' cried Lon, 'after the years ye've
|
|
spint in the land! An' we atin' out the same pot this many's the day!'
|
|
'But the thing's agin reasin,' insisted Bettles. 'Look you,
|
|
water's warmer than ice-'
|
|
'An' little the difference, once ye break through.'
|
|
'Still it's warmer, because it ain't froze. An' you say it freezes
|
|
on the bottom?'
|
|
'Only the anchor-ice, David, only the anchor-ice. An' have ye
|
|
niver drifted along, the water clear as glass, whin suddin, belike a
|
|
cloud over the sun, the mushy-ice comes bubblin' up an' up till from
|
|
bank to bank an' bind to bind it's drapin' the river like a first
|
|
snowfall?'
|
|
'Unh, hunh! more'n once when I took a doze at the steering-oar.
|
|
But it allus come out the nighest side-channel, an' not bubblin' up
|
|
an' up.'
|
|
'But with niver a wink at the helm?'
|
|
'No; nor you. It's agin reason. I'll leave it to any man!'
|
|
Bettles appealed to the circle about the stove, but the fight was on
|
|
between himself and Lon McFane.
|
|
'Reason or no reason, it's the truth I'm tellin' ye. Last fall, a
|
|
year gone, 'twas Sitka Charley and meself saw the sight, droppin' down
|
|
the riffle ye'll remember below Fort Reliance. An' regular fall
|
|
weather it was- the glint o' the sun on the golden larch an' the
|
|
quakin' aspens; an' the glister of light on ivery ripple; an'
|
|
beyand, the winter an' the blue haze of the North comin' down hand
|
|
in hand. It's well ye know the same, with a fringe to the river an'
|
|
the ice formin' thick in the eddies- an' a snap an' sparkle to the
|
|
air, an' ye a-feelin' it through all yer blood, a-takin' new lease
|
|
of life with ivery suck of it. 'Tis then, me boy, the world grows
|
|
small an' the wandtherlust lays ye by the heels.
|
|
'But it's meself as wandthers. As I was sayin', we a-paddlin',
|
|
with niver a sign of ice, barrin' that by the eddies, when the Injun
|
|
lifts his paddle an' sings out, "Lon McFane! Look ye below!" So have I
|
|
heard, but niver thought to see! As ye know, Sitka Charley, like
|
|
meself, niver drew first breath in the land; so the sight was new.
|
|
Then we drifted, with a head over ayther side, peerin' down through
|
|
the sparkly water. For the world like the days I spint with the
|
|
pearlers, watchin' the coral banks a-growin' the same as so many
|
|
gardens under the sea. There it was, the anchor-ice, clingin' an'
|
|
clusterin' to ivery rock, after the manner of the white coral.
|
|
'But the best of the sight was to come. Just after clearin' the tail
|
|
of the riffle, the water turns quick the color of milk, an' the top of
|
|
it in wee circles, as when the graylin' rise in the spring, or there's
|
|
a splatter of wet from the sky. 'Twas the anchor-ice comin' up. To the
|
|
right, to the lift, as far as iver a man cud see, the water was
|
|
covered with the same. An' like so much porridge it was, slickin'
|
|
along the bark of the canoe, stickin' like glue to the paddles. It's
|
|
many's the time I shot the self-same riffle before, and it's many's
|
|
the time after, but niver a wink of the same have I seen. 'Twas the
|
|
sight of a lifetime.'
|
|
'Do tell!' dryly commented Bettles. 'D'ye think I'd b'lieve such a
|
|
yarn? I'd ruther say the glister of light'd gone to your eyes, and the
|
|
snap of the air to your tongue.'
|
|
''Twas me own eyes that beheld it, an' if Sitka Charley was here,
|
|
he'd be the lad to back me.'
|
|
'But facts is facts, an' they ain't no gettin' round 'em. It ain't
|
|
in the nature of things for the water furtherest away from the air
|
|
to freeze first.'
|
|
'But me own eyes-'
|
|
'Don't git het up over it,' admonished Bettles, as the quick
|
|
Celtic anger began to mount.
|
|
'Then yer not after belavin' me?'
|
|
'Sence you're so blamed forehanded about it, no; I'd b'lieve
|
|
nature first, and facts.'
|
|
'Is it the lie ye'd be givin' me?' threatened Lon. 'Ye'd better be
|
|
askin' that Siwash wife of yours. I'll lave it to her, for the truth I
|
|
spake.'
|
|
Bettles flared up in sudden wrath. The Irishman had unwittingly
|
|
wounded him; for his wife was the half-breed daughter of a Russian
|
|
fur-trader, married to him in the Greek Mission of Nulato, a
|
|
thousand miles or so down the Yukon, thus being of much higher caste
|
|
than the common Siwash, or native, wife. It was a mere Northland
|
|
nuance, which none but the Northland adventurer may understand.
|
|
'I reckon you kin take it that way,' was his deliberate affirmation.
|
|
The next instant Lon McFane had stretched him on the floor, the
|
|
circle was broken up, and half a dozen men had stepped between.
|
|
Bettles came to his feet, wiping the blood from his mouth. 'It
|
|
hain't new, this takin' and payin' of blows, and don't you never think
|
|
but that this will be squared.'
|
|
'An' niver in me life did I take the lie from mortal man,' was the
|
|
retort courteous. 'An' it's an avil day I'll not be to hand, waitin'
|
|
an' willin' to help ye lift yer debts, barrin' no manner of way.'
|
|
'Still got that 38-55?'
|
|
Lon nodded.
|
|
'But you'd better git a more likely caliber. Mine'll rip holes
|
|
through you the size of walnuts.'
|
|
'Niver fear; it's me own slugs smell their way with soft noses,
|
|
an' they'll spread like flapjacks against the coming out beyand. An'
|
|
when'll I have the pleasure of waitin' on ye? The waterhole's a
|
|
strikin' locality.'
|
|
''Tain't bad. Jest be there in an hour, and you won't set long on my
|
|
coming.'
|
|
Both men mittened and left the Post, their ears closed to the
|
|
remonstrances of their comrades. It was such a little thing; yet
|
|
with such men, little things, nourished by quick tempers and
|
|
stubborn natures, soon blossomed into big things. Besides, the art
|
|
of burning to bedrock still lay in the womb of the future, and the men
|
|
of Forty-Mile, shut in by the long Arctic winter, grew
|
|
high-stomached with overeating and enforced idleness, and became as
|
|
irritable as do the bees in the fall of the year when the hives are
|
|
overstocked with honey.
|
|
There was no law in the land. The mounted police was also a thing of
|
|
the future. Each man measured an offense, and meted out the punishment
|
|
inasmuch as it affected himself. Rarely had combined action been
|
|
necessary, and never in all the dreary history of the camp had the
|
|
eighth article of the Decalogue been violated.
|
|
Big Jim Belden called an impromptu meeting. Scruff Mackenzie was
|
|
placed as temporary chairman, and a messenger dispatched to solicit
|
|
Father Roubeau's good offices. Their position was paradoxical, and
|
|
they knew it. By the right of might could they interfere to prevent
|
|
the duel; yet such action, while in direct line with their wishes,
|
|
went counter to their opinions. While their rough-hewn, obsolete
|
|
ethics recognized the individual prerogative of wiping out blow with
|
|
blow, they could not bear to think of two good comrades, such as
|
|
Bettles and McFane, meeting in deadly battle. Deeming the man who
|
|
would not fight on provocation a dastard, when brought to the test
|
|
it seemed wrong that he should fight.
|
|
But a scurry of moccasins and loud cries, rounded off with a
|
|
pistol-shot, interrupted the discussion. Then the storm-doors opened
|
|
and Malemute Kid entered, a smoking Colt's in his hand, and a merry
|
|
light in his eye.
|
|
'I got him.' He replaced the empty shell, and added, 'Your dog,
|
|
Scruff.'
|
|
'Yellow Fang?' Mackenzie asked.
|
|
'No; the lop-eared one.'
|
|
'The devil! Nothing the matter with him.'
|
|
'Come out and take a look.'
|
|
'That's all right after all. Buess he's got 'em, too. Yellow Fang
|
|
came back this morning and took a chunk out of him, and came near to
|
|
making a widower of me. Made a rush for Zarinska, but she whisked
|
|
her skirts in his face and escaped with the loss of the same and a
|
|
good roll in the snow. Then he took to the woods again. Hope he
|
|
don't come back. Lost any yourself?'
|
|
'One- the best one of the pack- Shookum. Started amuck this morning,
|
|
but didn't get very far. Ran foul of Sitka Charley's team, and they
|
|
scattered him all over the street. And now two of them are loose,
|
|
and raging mad; so you see he got his work in. The dog census will
|
|
be small in the spring if we don't do something.'
|
|
'And the man census, too.'
|
|
'How's that? Who's in trouble now?'
|
|
'Oh, Bettles and Lon McFane had an argument, and they'll be down
|
|
by the waterhole in a few minutes to settle it.'
|
|
The incident was repeated for his benefit, and Malemute Kid,
|
|
accustomed to an obedience which his fellow men never failed to
|
|
render, took charge of the affair. His quickly formulated plan was
|
|
explained, and they promised to follow his lead implicitly.
|
|
'So you see,' he concluded, 'we do not actually take away their
|
|
privilege of fighting; and yet I don't believe they'll fight when they
|
|
see the beauty of the scheme. Life's a game and men the gamblers.
|
|
They'll stake their whole pile on the one chance in a thousand. Take
|
|
away that one chance, and- they won't play.'
|
|
He turned to the man in charge of the Post. 'Storekeeper, weight out
|
|
three fathoms of your best half-inch manila.
|
|
'We'll establish a precedent which will last the men of Forty-Mile
|
|
to the end of time,' he prophesied. Then he coiled the rope about
|
|
his arm and led his followers out of doors, just in time to meet the
|
|
principals.
|
|
'What danged right'd he to fetch my wife in?' thundered Bettles to
|
|
the soothing overtures of a friend. ''Twa'n't called for,' he
|
|
concluded decisively. ''Twa'n't called for,' he reiterated again and
|
|
again, pacing up and down and waiting for Lon McFane.
|
|
And Lon McFane- his face was hot and tongue rapid as he flaunted
|
|
insurrection in the face of the Church. 'Then, father,' he cried,
|
|
'it's with an aisy heart I'll roll in me flamy blankets, the broad
|
|
of me back on a bed of coals. Niver shall it be said that Lon McFane
|
|
took a lie 'twixt the teeth without iver liftin' a hand! An' I'll
|
|
not ask a blessin'. The years have been wild, but it's the heart was
|
|
in the right place.'
|
|
'But it's not the heart, Lon,' interposed Father Roubeau; 'It's
|
|
pride that bids you forth to slay your fellow man.'
|
|
'Yer Frinch,' Lon replied. And then, turning to leave him, 'An' will
|
|
ye say a mass if the luck is against me?'
|
|
But the priest smiled, thrust his moccasined feet to the fore, and
|
|
went out upon the white breast of the silent river. A packed trail,
|
|
the width of a sixteen-inch sled, led out to the waterhole. On
|
|
either side lay the deep, soft snow. The men trod in single file,
|
|
without conversation; and the black-stoled priest in their midst
|
|
gave to the function the solemn aspect of a funeral. It was a warm
|
|
winter's day for Forty-Mile- a day in which the sky, filled with
|
|
heaviness, drew closer to the earth, and the mercury sought the
|
|
unwonted level of twenty below. But there was no cheer in the
|
|
warmth. There was little air in the upper strata, and the clouds
|
|
hung motionless, giving sullen promise of an early snowfall. And the
|
|
earth, unresponsive, made no preparation, content in its hibernation.
|
|
When the waterhole was reached, Bettles, having evidently reviewed
|
|
the quarrel during the silent walk, burst out in a final ''Twa'n't
|
|
called for,' while Lon McFane kept grim silence. Indignation so choked
|
|
him that he could not speak.
|
|
Yet deep down, whenever their own wrongs were not uppermost, both
|
|
men wondered at their comrades. They had expected opposition, and this
|
|
tacit acquiescence hurt them. It seemed more was due them from the men
|
|
they had been so close with, and they felt a vague sense of wrong,
|
|
rebelling at the thought of so many of their brothers coming out, as
|
|
on a gala occasion, without one word of protest, to see them shoot
|
|
each other down. It appeared their worth had diminished in the eyes of
|
|
the community. The proceedings puzzled them.
|
|
'Back to back, David. An' will it be fifty paces to the man, or
|
|
double the quantity?'
|
|
'Fifty,' was the sanguinary reply, grunted out, yet sharply cut.
|
|
But the new manila, not prominently displayed, but casually coiled
|
|
about Malemute Kid's arm, caught the quick eye of the Irishman, and
|
|
thrilled him with a suspicious fear.
|
|
'An' what are ye doin' with the rope?'
|
|
'Hurry up!' Malemute Kid glanced at his watch. 'I've a batch of
|
|
bread in the cabin, and I don't want it to fall. Besides, my feet
|
|
are getting cold.'
|
|
The rest of the men manifested their impatience in various
|
|
suggestive ways.
|
|
'But the rope, Kid' It's bran' new, an' sure yer bread's not that
|
|
heavy it needs raisin' with the like of that?'
|
|
Bettles by this time had faced around. Father Roubeau, the humor
|
|
of the situation just dawning on him, hid a smile behind his
|
|
mittened hand.
|
|
'No, Lon; this rope was made for a man.' Malemute Kid could be
|
|
very impressive on occasion.
|
|
'What man?' Bettles was becoming aware of a personal interest.
|
|
'The other man.'
|
|
'An' which is the one ye'd mane by that?'
|
|
'Listen, Lon- and you, too, Bettles! We've been talking this
|
|
little trouble of yours over, and we've come to one conclusion. We
|
|
know we have no right to stop your fighting-'
|
|
'True for ye, me lad!'
|
|
'And we're not going to. But this much we can do, and shall do- make
|
|
this the only duel in the history of Forty-Mile, set an example for
|
|
every che-cha-qua that comes up or down the Yukon. The man who escapes
|
|
killing shall be hanged to the nearest tree. Now, go ahead!'
|
|
Lon smiled dubiously, then his face lighted up. 'Pace her off,
|
|
David- fifty paces, wheel, an' niver a cease firin' till a lad's
|
|
down for good. 'Tis their hearts'll niver let them do the deed, an'
|
|
it's well ye should know it for a true Yankee bluff.'
|
|
He started off with a pleased grin on his face, but Malemute Kid
|
|
halted him.
|
|
'Lon! It's a long while since you first knew me?'
|
|
'Many's the day.'
|
|
'And you, Bettles?'
|
|
'Five year next June high water.'
|
|
'And have you once, in all that time, known me to break my word'
|
|
Or heard of me breaking it?'
|
|
Both men shook their heads, striving to fathom what lay beyond.
|
|
'Well, then, what do you think of a promise made by me?'
|
|
'As good as your bond,' from Bettles.
|
|
'The thing to safely sling yer hopes of heaven by,' promptly
|
|
endorsed Lon McFane.
|
|
'Listen! I, Malemute Kid, give you my word- and you know what that
|
|
means- that the man who is not shot stretches rope within ten
|
|
minutes after the shooting.' He stepped back as Pilate might have done
|
|
after washing his hands.
|
|
A pause and a silence came over the men of Forty-Mile. The sky
|
|
drew still closer, sending down a crystal flight of frost- little
|
|
geometric designs, perfect, evanescent as a breath, yet destined to
|
|
exist till the returning sun had covered half its northern journey.
|
|
Both men had led forlorn hopes in their time- led with a curse or a
|
|
jest on their tongues, and in their souls an unswerving faith in the
|
|
God of Chance. But that merciful deity had been shut out from the
|
|
present deal. They studied the face of Malemute Kid, but they
|
|
studied as one might the Sphinx. As the quiet minutes passed, a
|
|
feeling that speech was incumbent on them began to grow. At last the
|
|
howl of a wolf-dog cracked the silence from the direction of
|
|
Forty-Mile. The weird sound swelled with all the pathos of a
|
|
breaking heart, then died away in a long-drawn sob.
|
|
'Well I be danged!' Bettles turned up the collar of his mackinaw
|
|
jacket and stared about him helplessly.
|
|
'It's a gloryus game yer runnin', Kid,' cried Lon McFane. 'All the
|
|
percentage of the house an' niver a bit to the man that's buckin'. The
|
|
Devil himself'd niver tackle such a cinch- and damned if I do.'
|
|
There were chuckles, throttled in gurgling throats, and winks
|
|
brushed away with the frost which rimed the eyelashes, as the men
|
|
climbed the ice-notched bank and started across the street to the
|
|
Post. But the long howl had drawn nearer, invested with a new note
|
|
of menace. A woman screamed round the corner. There was a cry of,
|
|
'Here he comes!' Then an Indian boy, at the head of half a dozen
|
|
frightened dogs, racing with death, dashed into the crowd. And
|
|
behind came Yellow Fang, a bristle of hair and a flash of gray.
|
|
Everybody but the Yankee fled. The Indian boy had tripped and
|
|
fallen. Bettles stopped long enough to grip him by the slack of his
|
|
furs, then headed for a pile of cordwood already occupied by a
|
|
number of his comrades. Yellow Fang, doubling after one of the dogs,
|
|
came leaping back. The fleeing animal, free of the rabies, but
|
|
crazed with fright, whipped Bettles off his feet and flashed on up the
|
|
street. Malemute Kid took a flying shot at Yellow Fang. The mad dog
|
|
whirled a half airspring, came down on his back, then, with a single
|
|
leap, covered half the distance between himself and Bettles.
|
|
But the fatal spring was intercepted. Lon McFane leaped from the
|
|
woodpile, countering him in midair. Over they rolled, Lon holding
|
|
him by the throat at arm's length, blinking under the fetid slaver
|
|
which sprayed his face. Then Bettles, revolver in hand and coolly
|
|
waiting a chance, settled the combat.
|
|
''Twas a square game, Kid,' Lon remarked, rising to his feet and
|
|
shaking the snow from out his sleeves; 'with a fair percentage to
|
|
meself that bucked it.'
|
|
That night, while Lon McFane sought the forgiving arms of the Church
|
|
in the direction of Father Roubeau's cabin, Malemute Kid talked long
|
|
to little purpose.
|
|
'But would you,' persisted Mackenzie, 'supposing they had fought?'
|
|
'Have I ever broken my word?'
|
|
'No; but that isn't the point. Answer the question. Would you?'
|
|
Malemute Kid straightened up. 'Scruff, I've been asking myself
|
|
that question ever since, and-'
|
|
'Well?'
|
|
'Well, as yet, I haven't found the answer.'
|
|
IN A FAR COUNTRY.
|
|
|
|
WHEN A MAN JOURNEYS into a far country, he must be prepared to
|
|
forget many of the things he has learned, and to acquire such
|
|
customs as are inherent with existence in the new land; he must
|
|
abandon the old ideals and the old gods, and oftentimes he must
|
|
reverse the very codes by which his conduct has hitherto been
|
|
shaped. To those who have the protean faculty of adaptability, the
|
|
novelty of such change may even be a source of pleasure; but to
|
|
those who happen to be hardened to the ruts in which they were
|
|
created, the pressure of the altered environment is unbearable, and
|
|
they chafe in body and in spirit under the new restrictions which they
|
|
do not understand. This chafing is bound to act and react, producing
|
|
divers evils and leading to various misfortunes. It were better for
|
|
the man who cannot fit himself to the new groove to return to his
|
|
own country; if he delay too long, he will surely die.
|
|
The man who turns his back upon the comforts of an elder
|
|
civilization, to face the savage youth, the primordial simplicity of
|
|
the North, may estimate success at an inverse ratio to the quantity
|
|
and quality of his hopelessly fixed habits. He will soon discover,
|
|
if he be a fit candidate, that the material habits are the less
|
|
important. The exchange of such things as a dainty menu for rough
|
|
fare, of the stiff leather shoe for the soft, shapeless moccasin, of
|
|
the feather bed for a couch in the snow, is after all a very easy
|
|
matter. But his pinch will come in learning properly to shape his
|
|
mind's attitude toward all things, and especially toward his fellow
|
|
man. For the courtesies of ordinary life, he must substitute
|
|
unselfishness, forbearance, and tolerance. Thus, and thus only, can he
|
|
gain that pearl of great price- true comradeship. He must not say
|
|
'thank you'; he must mean it without opening his mouth, and prove it
|
|
by responding in kind. In short, he must substitute the deed for the
|
|
word, the spirit for the letter.
|
|
When the world rang with the tale of Arctic gold, and the lure of
|
|
the North gripped the heartstrings of men, Carter Weatherbee threw
|
|
up his snug clerkship, turned the half of his savings over to his
|
|
wife, and with the remainder bought an outfit. There was no romance in
|
|
his nature- the bondage of commerce had crushed all that; he was
|
|
simply tired of the ceaseless grind, and wished to risk great
|
|
hazards in view of corresponding returns. Like many another fool,
|
|
disdaining the old trails used by the Northland pioneers for a score
|
|
of years, he hurried to Edmonton in the spring of the year; and there,
|
|
unluckily for his soul's welfare, he allied himself with a party of
|
|
men.
|
|
There was nothing unusual about this party, except its plans. Even
|
|
its goal, like that of all the other parties, was the Klondike. But
|
|
the route it had mapped out to attain that goal took away the breath
|
|
of the hardiest native, born and bred to the vicissitudes of the
|
|
Northwest. Even Jacques Baptiste, born of a Chippewa woman and a
|
|
renegade voyageur (having raised his first whimpers in a deerskin
|
|
lodge north of the sixty-fifth parallel, and had the same hushed by
|
|
blissful sucks of raw tallow), was surprised. Though he sold his
|
|
services to them and agreed to travel even to the never-opening ice,
|
|
he shook his head ominously whenever his advice was asked.
|
|
Percy Cuthfert's evil star must have been in the ascendant, for
|
|
he, too, joined this company of argonauts. He was an ordinary man,
|
|
with a bank account as deep as his culture, which is saying a good
|
|
deal. He had no reason to embark on such a venture- no reason in the
|
|
world save that he suffered from an abnormal development of
|
|
sentimentality. He mistook this for the true spirit of romance and
|
|
adventure. Many another man has done the like, and made as fatal a
|
|
mistake.
|
|
The first break-up of spring found the party following the ice-run
|
|
of Elk River. It was an imposing fleet, for the outfit was large,
|
|
and they were accompanied by a disreputable contingent of half-breed
|
|
voyageurs with their women and children. Day in and day out, they
|
|
labored with the bateaux and canoes, fought mosquitoes and other
|
|
kindred pests, or sweated and swore at the portages. Severe toil
|
|
like this lays a man naked to the very roots of his soul, and ere Lake
|
|
Athabasca was lost in the south, each member of the party had
|
|
hoisted his true colors.
|
|
The two shirks and chronic grumblers were Carter Weatherbee and
|
|
Percy Cuthfert. The whole party complained less of its aches and pains
|
|
than did either of them. Not once did they volunteer for the
|
|
thousand and one petty duties of the camp. A bucket of water to be
|
|
brought, an extra armful of wood to be chopped, the dishes to be
|
|
washed and wiped, a search to be made through the outfit for some
|
|
suddenly indispensable article- and these two effete scions of
|
|
civilization discovered sprains or blisters requiring instant
|
|
attention. They were the first to turn in at night, with score of
|
|
tasks yet undone; the last to turn out in the morning, when the
|
|
start should be in readiness before the breakfast was begun. They were
|
|
the first to fall to at mealtime, the last to have a hand in the
|
|
cooking; the first to dive for a slim delicacy, the last to discover
|
|
they had added to their own another man's share. If they toiled at the
|
|
oars, they slyly cut the water at each stroke and allowed the boat's
|
|
momentum to float up the blade. They thought nobody noticed; but their
|
|
comrades swore under their breaths and grew to hate them, while
|
|
Jacques Baptiste sneered openly and damned them from morning till
|
|
night. But Jacques Baptiste was no gentleman.
|
|
At the Great Slave, Hudson Bay dogs were purchased, and the fleet
|
|
sank to the guards with its added burden of dried fish and pemican.
|
|
Then canoe and bateau answered to the swift current of the
|
|
Mackenzie, and they plunged into the Great Barren Ground. Every
|
|
likely-looking 'feeder' was prospected, but the elusive 'pay-dirt'
|
|
danced ever to the north. At the Great Bear, overcome by the common
|
|
dread of the Unknown Lands, their voyageurs began to desert, and
|
|
Fort of Good Hope saw the last and bravest bending to the towlines
|
|
as they bucked the current down which they had so treacherously
|
|
glided. Jacques Baptiste alone remained. Had he not sworn to travel
|
|
even to the never-opening ice?
|
|
The lying charts, compiled in main from hearsay, were now constantly
|
|
consulted. And they felt the need of hurry, for the sun had already
|
|
passed its northern solstice and was leading the winter south again.
|
|
Skirting the shores of the bay, where the Mackenzie disembogues into
|
|
the Arctic Ocean, they entered the mouth of the Little Peel River.
|
|
Then began the arduous up-stream toil, and the two Incapables fared
|
|
worse than ever. Towline and pole, paddle and tumpline, rapids and
|
|
portages- such tortures served to give the one a deep disgust for
|
|
great hazards, and printed for the other a fiery text on the true
|
|
romance of adventure. One day they waxed mutinous, and being vilely
|
|
cursed by Jacques Baptiste, turned, as worms sometimes will. But the
|
|
half-breed thrashed the twain, and sent them, bruised and bleeding,
|
|
about their work. It was the first time either had been manhandled.
|
|
Abandoning their river craft at the headwaters of the Little Peel,
|
|
they consumed the rest of the summer in the great portage over the
|
|
Mackenzie watershed to the West Rat. This little stream fed the
|
|
Porcupine, which in turn joined the Yukon where that mighty highway of
|
|
the North countermarches on the Arctic Circle. But they had lost in
|
|
the race with winter, and one day they tied their rafts to the thick
|
|
eddy-ice and hurried their goods ashore. That night the river jammed
|
|
and broke several times; the following morning it had fallen asleep
|
|
for good.
|
|
|
|
'We can't be more'n four hundred miles from the Yukon,' concluded
|
|
Sloper, multiplying his thumb nails by the scale of the map. The
|
|
council, in which the two Incapables had whined to excellent
|
|
disadvantage, was drawing to a close.
|
|
'Hudson Bay Post, long time ago. No use um now.' Jacques
|
|
Baptiste's father had made the trip for the Fur Company in the old
|
|
days, incidentally marking the trail with a couple of frozen toes.
|
|
Sufferin' cracky!' cried another of the party. 'No whites?'
|
|
'Nary white,' Sloper sententiously affirmed; 'but it's only five
|
|
hundred more up the Yukon to Dawson. Call it a rough thousand from
|
|
here.'
|
|
Weatherbee and Cuthfert groaned in chorus.
|
|
'How long'll that take, Baptiste?'
|
|
The half-breed figured for a moment. 'Workum like hell, no man
|
|
play out, ten- twenty- forty- fifty days. Um babies come' (designating
|
|
the Incapables), 'no can tell. Mebbe when hell freeze over; mebbe
|
|
not then.'
|
|
The manufacture of snowshoes and moccasins ceased. Somebody called
|
|
the name of an absent member, who came out of an ancient cabin at
|
|
the edge of the campfire and joined them. The cabin was one of the
|
|
many mysteries which lurk in the vast recesses of the North. Built
|
|
when and by whom, no man could tell. Two graves in the open, piled
|
|
high with stones, perhaps contained the secret of those early
|
|
wanderers. But whose hand had piled the stones?
|
|
The moment had come. Jacques Baptiste paused in the fitting of a
|
|
harness and pinned the struggling dog in the snow. The cook made
|
|
mute protest for delay, threw a handful of bacon into a noisy pot of
|
|
beans, then came to attention. Sloper rose to his feet. His body was a
|
|
ludicrous contrast to the healthy physiques of the Incapables.
|
|
Yellow and weak, fleeing from a South American fever-hole, he had
|
|
not broken his flight across the zones, and was still able to toil
|
|
with men. His weight was probably ninety pounds, with the heavy
|
|
hunting knife thrown in, and his grizzled hair told of a prime which
|
|
had ceased to be. The fresh young muscles of either Weatherbee or
|
|
Cuthfert were equal to ten times the endeavor of his; yet he could
|
|
walk them into the earth in a day's journey. And all this day he had
|
|
whipped his stronger comrades into venturing a thousand miles of the
|
|
stiffest hardship man can conceive. He was the incarnation of the
|
|
unrest of his race, and the old Teutonic stubbornness, dashed with the
|
|
quick grasp and action of the Yankee, held the flesh in the bondage of
|
|
the spirit.
|
|
'All those in favor of going on with the dogs as soon as the ice
|
|
sets, say ay.'
|
|
'Ay!' rang out eight voices- voices destined to string a trail of
|
|
oaths along many a hundred miles of pain.
|
|
'Contrary minded?'
|
|
'No!' For the first time the Incapables were united without some
|
|
compromise of personal interests.
|
|
'And what are you going to do about it?' Weatherbee added
|
|
belligerently.
|
|
'Majority rule! Majority rule!' clamored the rest of the party.
|
|
'I know the expedition is liable to fall through if you don't come,'
|
|
Sloper replied sweetly; 'but I guess, if we try real hard, we can
|
|
manage to do without you. What do you say, boys?'
|
|
The sentiment was cheered to the echo.
|
|
'But I say, you know,' Cuthfert ventured apprehensively; 'what's a
|
|
chap like me to do?'
|
|
'Ain't you coming with us.'
|
|
'No- o.'
|
|
'Then do as you damn well please. We won't have nothing to say.'
|
|
'Kind o' calkilate yuh might settle it with that canoodlin'
|
|
pardner of yourn,' suggested a heavy-going Westerner from the Dakotas,
|
|
at the same time pointing out Weatherbee. 'He'll be shore to ask yuh
|
|
what yur a-goin' to do when it comes to cookin' an' gatherin' the
|
|
wood.'
|
|
'Then we'll consider it all arranged,' concluded Sloper. 'We'll pull
|
|
out tomorrow, if we camp within five miles- just to get everything
|
|
in running order and remember if we've forgotten anything.'
|
|
|
|
The sleds groaned by on their steel-shod runners, and the dogs
|
|
strained low in the harnesses in which they were born to die.
|
|
Jacques Baptiste paused by the side of Sloper to get a last glimpse of
|
|
the cabin. The smoke curled up pathetically from the Yukon
|
|
stovepipe. The two Incapables were watching them from the doorway.
|
|
Sloper laid his hand on the other's shoulder.
|
|
'Jacques Baptiste, did you ever hear of the Kilkenny cats?'
|
|
The half-breed shook his head.
|
|
'Well, my friend and good comrade, the Kilkenny cats fought till
|
|
neither hide, nor hair, nor yowl, was left. You understand?- till
|
|
nothing was left. Very good. Now, these two men don't like work.
|
|
They'll be all alone in that cabin all winter- a mighty long, dark
|
|
winter. Kilkenny cats- well?'
|
|
The Frenchman in Baptiste shrugged his shoulders, but the Indian
|
|
in him was silent. Nevertheless, it was an eloquent shrug, pregnant
|
|
with prophecy.
|
|
|
|
Things prospered in the little cabin at first. The rough badinage of
|
|
their comrades had made Weatherbee and Cuthfert conscious of the
|
|
mutual responsibility which had devolved upon them; besides, there was
|
|
not so much work after all for two healthy men. And the removal of the
|
|
cruel whiphand, or in other words the bulldozing half-breed, had
|
|
brought with it a joyous reaction. At first, each strove to outdo
|
|
the other, and they performed petty tasks with an unction which
|
|
would have opened the eyes of their comrades who were now wearing
|
|
out bodies and souls on the Long Trail.
|
|
All care was banished. The forest, which shouldered in upon them
|
|
from three sides, was an inexhaustible woodyard. A few yards from
|
|
their door slept the Porcupine, and a hole through its winter robe
|
|
formed a bubbling spring of water, crystal clear and painfully cold.
|
|
But they soon grew to find fault with even that. The hole would
|
|
persist in freezing up, and thus gave them many a miserable hour of
|
|
ice-chopping. The unknown builders of the cabin had extended the
|
|
sidelogs so as to support a cache at the rear. In this was stored
|
|
the bulk of the party's provisions. Food there was, without stint, for
|
|
three times the men who were fated to live upon it. But the most of it
|
|
was the kind which built up brawn and sinew, but did not tickle the
|
|
palate. True, there was sugar in plenty for two ordinary men; but
|
|
these two were little else than children. They early discovered the
|
|
virtues of hot water judiciously saturated with sugar, and they
|
|
prodigally swam their flapjacks and soaked their crusts in the rich,
|
|
white syrup. Then coffee and tea, and especially the dried fruits,
|
|
made disastrous inroads upon it. The first words they had were over
|
|
the sugar question. And it is a really serious thing when two men,
|
|
wholly dependent upon each other for company, begin to quarrel.
|
|
Weatherbee loved to discourse blatantly on politics, while Cuthfert,
|
|
who had been prone to clip his coupons and let the commonwealth jog on
|
|
as best it might, either ignored the subject or delivered himself of
|
|
startling epigrams. But the clerk was too obtuse to appreciate the
|
|
clever shaping of thought, and this waste of ammunition irritated
|
|
Cuthfert. He had been used to blinding people by his brilliancy, and
|
|
it worked him quite a hardship, this loss of an audience. He felt
|
|
personally aggrieved and unconsciously held his muttonhead companion
|
|
responsible for it.
|
|
Save existence, they had nothing in common- came in touch on no
|
|
single point. Weatherbee was a clerk who had known naught but clerking
|
|
all his life; Cuthfert was a master of arts, a dabbler in oils, and
|
|
had written not a little. The one was a lower-class man who considered
|
|
himself a gentleman, and the other was a gentleman who knew himself to
|
|
be such. From this it may be remarked that a man can be a gentleman
|
|
without possessing the first instinct of true comradeship. The clerk
|
|
was as sensuous as the other was aesthetic, and his love adventures,
|
|
told at great length and chiefly coined from his imagination, affected
|
|
the supersensitive master of arts in the same way as so many whiffs of
|
|
sewer gas. He deemed the clerk a filthy, uncultured brute, whose place
|
|
was in the muck with the swine, and told him so; and he was
|
|
reciprocally informed that he was a milk-and-water sissy and a cad.
|
|
Weatherbee could not have defined 'cad' for his life; but it satisfied
|
|
its purpose, which after all seems the main point in life.
|
|
Weatherbee flatted every third note and sang such songs as 'The
|
|
Boston Burglar' and 'the Handsome Cabin Boy,' for hours at a time,
|
|
while Cuthfert wept with rage, till he could stand it no longer and
|
|
fled into the outer cold. But there was no escape. The intense frost
|
|
could not be endured for long at a time, and the little cabin
|
|
crowded them- beds, stove, table, and all- into a space of ten by
|
|
twelve. The very presence of either became a personal affront to the
|
|
other, and they lapsed into sullen silences which increased in
|
|
length and strength as the days went by. Occasionally, the flash of an
|
|
eye or the curl of a lip got the better of them, though they strove to
|
|
wholly ignore each other during these mute periods. And a great wonder
|
|
sprang up in the breast of each, as to how God had ever come to create
|
|
the other.
|
|
With little to do, time became an intolerable burden to them. This
|
|
naturally made them still lazier. They sank into a physical lethargy
|
|
which there was no escaping, and which made them rebel at the
|
|
performance of the smallest chore. One morning when it was his turn to
|
|
cook the common breakfast, Weatherbee rolled out of his blankets,
|
|
and to the snoring of his companion, lighted first the slush-lamp
|
|
and then the fire. The kettles were frozen hard, and there was no
|
|
water in the cabin with which to wash. But he did not mind that.
|
|
Waiting for it to thaw, he sliced the bacon and plunged into the
|
|
hateful task of bread-making. Cuthfert had been slyly watching through
|
|
his half-closed lids. Consequently there was a scene, in which they
|
|
fervently blessed each other, and agreed, henceforth, that each do his
|
|
own cooking. A week later, Cuthfert neglected his morning ablutions,
|
|
but none the less complacently ate the meal which he had cooked.
|
|
Weatherbee grinned. After that the foolish custom of washing passed
|
|
out of their lives.
|
|
As the sugar-pile and other little luxuries dwindled, they began
|
|
to be afraid they were not getting their proper shares, and in order
|
|
that they might not be robbed, they fell to gorging themselves. The
|
|
luxuries suffered in this gluttonous contest, as did also the men.
|
|
In the absence of fresh vegetables and exercise, their blood became
|
|
impoverished, and a loathsome, purplish rash crept over their
|
|
bodies. Yet they refused to heed the warning. Next, their muscles
|
|
and joints began to swell, the flesh turning black, while their
|
|
mouths, gums, and lips took on the color of rich cream. Instead of
|
|
being drawn together by their misery, each gloated over the other's
|
|
symptoms as the scurvy took its course.
|
|
They lost all regard for personal appearance, and for that matter,
|
|
common decency. The cabin became a pigpen, and never once were the
|
|
beds made or fresh pine boughs laid underneath. Yet they could not
|
|
keep to their blankets, as they would have wished; for the frost was
|
|
inexorable, and the fire box consumed much fuel. The hair of their
|
|
heads and faces grew long and shaggy, while their garments would
|
|
have disgusted a ragpicker. But they did not care. They were sick, and
|
|
there was no one to see; besides, it was very painful to move about.
|
|
To all this was added a new trouble- the Fear of the North. This
|
|
Fear was the joint child of the Great Cold and the Great Silence,
|
|
and was born in the darkness of December, when the sun dipped below
|
|
the horizon for good. It affected them according to their natures.
|
|
Weatherbee fell prey to the grosser superstitions, and did his best to
|
|
resurrect the spirits which slept in the forgotten graves. It was a
|
|
fascinating thing, and in his dreams they came to him from out of
|
|
the cold, and snuggled into his blankets, and told him of their
|
|
toils and troubles ere they died. He shrank away from the clammy
|
|
contact as they drew closer and twined their frozen limbs about him,
|
|
and when they whispered in his ear of things to come, the cabin rang
|
|
with his frightened shrieks. Cuthfert did not understand- for they
|
|
no longer spoke- and when thus awakened he invariably grabbed for
|
|
his revolver. Then he would sit up in bed, shivering nervously, with
|
|
the weapon trained on the unconscious dreamer. Cuthfert deemed the man
|
|
going mad, and so came to fear for his life.
|
|
His own malady assumed a less concrete form. The mysterious
|
|
artisan who had laid the cabin, log by log, had pegged a wind-vane
|
|
to the ridgepole. Cuthfert noticed it always pointed south, and one
|
|
day, irritated by its steadfastness of purpose, he turned it toward
|
|
the east. He watched eagerly, but never a breath came by to disturb
|
|
it. Then he turned the vane to the north, swearing never again to
|
|
touch it till the wind did blow. But the air frightened him with its
|
|
unearthly calm, and he often rose in the middle of the night to see if
|
|
the vane had veered- ten degrees would have satisfied him. But no,
|
|
it poised above him as unchangeable as fate. His imagination ran riot,
|
|
till it became to him a fetish. Sometimes he followed the path it
|
|
pointed across the dismal dominions, and allowed his soul to become
|
|
saturated with the Fear. He dwelt upon the unseen and the unknown till
|
|
the burden of eternity appeared to be crushing him. Everything in
|
|
the Northland had that crushing effect- the absence of life and
|
|
motion; the darkness; the infinite peace of the brooding land; the
|
|
ghastly silence, which made the echo of each heartbeat a sacrilege;
|
|
the solemn forest which seemed to guard an awful, inexpressible
|
|
something, which neither word nor thought could compass.
|
|
The world he had so recently left, with its busy nations and great
|
|
enterprises, seemed very far away. Recollections occasionally
|
|
obtruded- recollections of marts and galleries and crowded
|
|
thoroughfares, of evening dress and social functions, of good men
|
|
and dear women he had known- but they were dim memories of a life he
|
|
had lived long centuries agone, on some other planet. This phantasm
|
|
was the Reality. Standing beneath the wind-vane, his eyes fixed on the
|
|
polar skies, he could not bring himself to realize that the
|
|
Southland really existed, that at that very moment it was a-roar
|
|
with life and action. There was no Southland, no men being born of
|
|
women, no giving and taking in marriage. Beyond his bleak skyline
|
|
there stretched vast solitudes, and beyond these still vaster
|
|
solitudes. There were no lands of sunshine, heavy with the perfume
|
|
of flowers. Such things were only old dreams of paradise. The sunlands
|
|
of the West and the spicelands of the East, the smiling Arcadias and
|
|
blissful Islands of the Blest- ha! ha! His laughter split the void and
|
|
shocked him with its unwonted sound. There was no sun. This was the
|
|
Universe, dead and cold and dark, and he its only citizen. Weatherbee?
|
|
At such moments Weatherbee did not count. He was a Caliban, a
|
|
monstrous phantom, fettered to him for untold ages, the penalty of
|
|
some forgotten crime.
|
|
He lived with Death among the dead, emasculated by the sense of
|
|
his own insignificance, crushed by the passive mastery of the
|
|
slumbering ages. The magnitude of all things appalled him.
|
|
Everything partook of the superlative save himself- the perfect
|
|
cessation of wind and motion, the immensity of the snow-covered
|
|
wildness, the height of the sky and the depth of the silence. That
|
|
wind-vane- if it would only move. If a thunderbolt would fall, or
|
|
the forest flare up in flame. The rolling up of the heavens as a
|
|
scroll, the crash of Doom- anything, anything! But no, nothing
|
|
moved; the Silence crowded in, and the Fear of the North laid icy
|
|
fingers on his heart.
|
|
Once, like another Crusoe, by the edge of the river he came upon a
|
|
track- the faint tracery of a snowshoe rabbit on the delicate
|
|
snow-crust. It was a revelation. There was life in the Northland. He
|
|
would follow it, look upon it, gloat over it. He forgot his swollen
|
|
muscles, plunging through the deep snow in an ecstasy of anticipation.
|
|
The forest swallowed him up, and the brief midday twilight vanished;
|
|
but he pursued his quest till exhausted nature asserted itself and
|
|
laid him helpless in the snow. There he groaned and cursed his
|
|
folly, and knew the track to be the fancy of his brain; and late
|
|
that night he dragged himself into the cabin on hands and knees, his
|
|
cheeks frozen and a strange numbness about his feet. Weatherbee
|
|
grinned malevolently, but made no offer to help him. He thrust needles
|
|
into his toes and thawed them out by the stove. A week later
|
|
mortification set in.
|
|
But the clerk had his own troubles. The dead men came out of their
|
|
graves more frequently now, and rarely left him, waking or sleeping.
|
|
He grew to wait and dread their coming, never passing the twin
|
|
cairns without a shudder. One night they came to him in his sleep
|
|
and led him forth to an appointed task. Frightened into inarticulate
|
|
horror, he awoke between the heaps of stones and fled wildly to the
|
|
cabin. But he had lain there for some time, for his feet and cheeks
|
|
were also frozen.
|
|
Sometimes he became frantic at their insistent presence, and
|
|
danced about the cabin, cutting the empty air with an axe, and
|
|
smashing everything within reach. During these ghostly encounters,
|
|
Cuthfert huddled into his blankets and followed the madman about
|
|
with a cocked revolver, ready to shoot him if he came too near. But,
|
|
recovering from one of these spells, the clerk noticed the weapon
|
|
trained upon him. His suspicions were aroused, and thenceforth he,
|
|
too, lived in fear of his life. They watched each other closely
|
|
after that, and faced about in startled fright whenever either
|
|
passed behind the other's back. The apprehensiveness became a mania
|
|
which controlled them even in their sleep. Through mutual fear they
|
|
tacitly let the slush-lamp burn all night, and saw to a plentiful
|
|
supply of bacon-grease before retiring. The slightest movement on
|
|
the part of one was sufficient to arouse the other, and many a still
|
|
watch their gazes countered as they shook beneath their blankets
|
|
with fingers on the trigger-guards.
|
|
What with the Fear of the North, the mental strain, and the
|
|
ravages of the disease, they lost all semblance of humanity, taking on
|
|
the appearance of wild beasts, hunted and desperate. Their cheeks
|
|
and noses, as an aftermath of the freezing, had turned black. Their
|
|
frozen toes had begun to drop away at the first and second joints.
|
|
Every movement brought pain, but the fire box was insatiable, wringing
|
|
a ransom of torture from their miserable bodies. Day in, day out, it
|
|
demanded its food- a veritable pound of flesh- and they dragged
|
|
themselves into the forest to chop wood on their knees. Once, crawling
|
|
thus in search of dry sticks, unknown to each other they entered a
|
|
thicket from opposite sides. Suddenly, without warning, two peering
|
|
death's-heads confronted each other. Suffering had so transformed them
|
|
that recognition was impossible. They sprang to their feet,
|
|
shrieking with terror, and dashed away on their mangled stumps; and
|
|
falling at the cabin's door, they clawed and scratched like demons
|
|
till they discovered their mistake.
|
|
|
|
Occasionally they lapsed normal, and during one of these sane
|
|
intervals, the chief bone of contention, the sugar, had been divided
|
|
equally between them. They guarded their separate sacks, stored up
|
|
in the cache, with jealous eyes; for there were but a few cupfuls
|
|
left, and they were totally devoid of faith in each other. But one day
|
|
Cuthfert made a mistake. Hardly able to move, sick with pain, with his
|
|
head swimming and eyes blinded, he crept into the cache, sugar
|
|
canister in hand, and mistook Weatherbee's sack for his own.
|
|
January had been born but a few days when this occurred. The sun had
|
|
some time since passed its lowest southern declination, and at
|
|
meridian now threw flaunting streaks of yellow light upon the northern
|
|
sky. On the day following his mistake with the sugarbag, Cuthfert
|
|
found himself feeling better, both in body and in spirit. As
|
|
noontime drew near and the day brightened, he dragged himself
|
|
outside to feast on the evanescent glow, which was to him an earnest
|
|
of the sun's future intentions. Weatherbee was also feeling somewhat
|
|
better, and crawled out beside him. They propped themselves in the
|
|
snow beneath the moveless wind-vane, and waited.
|
|
The stillness of death was about them. In other climes, when
|
|
nature falls into such moods, there is a subdued air of expectancy,
|
|
a waiting for some small voice to take up the broken strain. Not so in
|
|
the North. The two men had lived seeming eons in this ghostly peace.
|
|
They could remember no song of the past; they could conjure no song of
|
|
the future. This unearthly calm had always been- the tranquil
|
|
silence of eternity.
|
|
Their eyes were fixed upon the north. Unseen, behind their backs,
|
|
behind the towering mountains to the south, the sun swept toward the
|
|
zenith of another sky than theirs. Sole spectators of the mighty
|
|
canvas, they watched the false dawn slowly grow. A faint flame began
|
|
to glow and smoulder. It deepened in intensity, ringing the changes of
|
|
reddish-yellow, purple, and saffron. So bright did it become that
|
|
Cuthfert thought the sun must surely be behind it- a miracle, the
|
|
sun rising in the north! Suddenly, without warning and without fading,
|
|
the canvas was swept clean. There was no color in the sky. The light
|
|
had gone out of the day. They caught their breaths in half-sobs. But
|
|
lo! the air was aglint with particles of scintillating frost, and
|
|
there, to the north, the wind-vane lay in vague outline of the snow. A
|
|
shadow! A shadow! It was exactly midday. They jerked their heads
|
|
hurriedly to the south. A golden rim peeped over the mountain's
|
|
snowy shoulder, smiled upon them an instant, then dipped from sight
|
|
again.
|
|
There were tears in their eyes as they sought each other. A
|
|
strange softening came over them. They felt irresistibly drawn
|
|
toward each other. The sun was coming back again. It would be with
|
|
them tomorrow, and the next day, and the next. And it would stay
|
|
longer every visit, and a time would come when it would ride their
|
|
heaven day and night, never once dropping below the skyline. There
|
|
would be no night. The ice-locked winter would be broken; the winds
|
|
would blow and the forests answer; the land would bathe in the blessed
|
|
sunshine, and life renew. Hand in hand, they would quit this horrid
|
|
dream and journey back to the Southland. They lurched blindly forward,
|
|
and their hands met- their poor maimed hands, swollen and distorted
|
|
beneath their mittens.
|
|
But the promise was destined to remain unfulfilled. The Northland is
|
|
the Northland, and men work out their souls by strange rules, which
|
|
other men, who have not journeyed into far countries, cannot come to
|
|
understand.
|
|
|
|
An hour later, Cuthfert put a pan of bread into the oven, and fell
|
|
to speculating on what the surgeons could do with his feet when he got
|
|
back. Home did not seem so very far away now. Weatherbee was rummaging
|
|
in the cache. Of a sudden, he raised a whirlwind of blasphemy, which
|
|
in turn ceased with startling abruptness. The other man had robbed his
|
|
sugar-sack. Still, things might have happened differently, had not the
|
|
two dead men come out from under the stones and hushed the hot words
|
|
in his throat. They led him quite gently from the cache, which he
|
|
forgot to close. That consummation was reached; that something they
|
|
had whispered to him in his dreams was about to happen. They guided
|
|
him gently, very gently, to the woodpile, where they put the axe in
|
|
his hands. Then they helped him shove open the cabin door, and he felt
|
|
sure they shut it after him- at least he heard it slam and the latch
|
|
fall sharply into place. And he knew they were waiting just without,
|
|
waiting for him to do his task.
|
|
'Carter! I say, Carter!'
|
|
Percy Cuthfert was frightened at the look on the clerk's face, and
|
|
he made haste to put the table between them.
|
|
Carter Weatherbee followed, without haste and without enthusiasm.
|
|
There was neither pity nor passion in his face, but rather the
|
|
patient, stolid look of one who has certain work to do and goes
|
|
about it methodically.
|
|
'I say, what's the matter?'
|
|
The clerk dodged back, cutting off his retreat to the door, but
|
|
never opening his mouth.
|
|
'I say, Carter, I say; let's talk. There's a good chap.'
|
|
The master of arts was thinking rapidly, now, shaping a skillful
|
|
flank movement on the bed where his Smith & Wesson lay. Keeping his
|
|
eyes on the madman, he rolled backward on the bunk, at the same time
|
|
clutching the pistol.
|
|
'Carter!'
|
|
The powder flashed full in Weatherbee's face, but he swung his
|
|
weapon and leaped forward. The axe bit deeply at the base of the
|
|
spine, and Percy Cuthfert felt all consciousness of his lower limbs
|
|
leave him. Then the clerk fell heavily upon him, clutching him by
|
|
the throat with feeble fingers. The sharp bite of the axe had caused
|
|
Cuthfert to drop the pistol, and as his lungs panted for release, he
|
|
fumbled aimlessly for it among the blankets. Then he remembered. He
|
|
slid a hand up the clerk's belt to the sheath-knife; and they drew
|
|
very close to each other in that last clinch.
|
|
Percy Cuthfert felt his strength leave him. The lower portion of his
|
|
body was useless, The inert weight of Weatherbee crushed him-
|
|
crushed him and pinned him there like a bear under a trap. The cabin
|
|
became filled with a familiar odor, and he knew the bread to be
|
|
burning. Yet what did it matter? He would never need it. And there
|
|
were all of six cupfuls of sugar in the cache- if he had foreseen this
|
|
he would not have been so saving the last several days. Would the
|
|
wind-vane ever move? Why not' Had he not seen the sun today? He
|
|
would go and see. No; it was impossible to move. He had not thought
|
|
the clerk so heavy a man.
|
|
How quickly the cabin cooled! The fire must be out. The cold was
|
|
forcing in. It must be below zero already, and the ice creeping up the
|
|
inside of the door. He could not see it, but his past experience
|
|
enabled him to gauge its progress by the cabin's temperature. The
|
|
lower hinge must be white ere now. Would the tale of this ever reach
|
|
the world? How would his friends take it? They would read it over
|
|
their coffee, most likely, and talk it over at the clubs. He could see
|
|
them very clearly, 'Poor Old Cuthfert,' they murmured; 'not such a bad
|
|
sort of a chap, after all.' He smiled at their eulogies, and passed on
|
|
in search of a Turkish bath. It was the same old crowd upon the
|
|
streets. Strange, they did not notice his moosehide moccasins and
|
|
tattered German socks! He would take a cab. And after the bath a shave
|
|
would not be bad. No; he would eat first. Steak, and potatoes, and
|
|
green things how fresh it all was! And what was that? Squares of
|
|
honey, streaming liquid amber! But why did they bring so much? Ha! ha!
|
|
he could never eat it all. Shine! Why certainly. He put his foot on
|
|
the box. The bootblack looked curiously up at him, and he remembered
|
|
his moosehide moccasins and went away hastily.
|
|
Hark! The wind-vane must be surely spinning. No; a mere singing in
|
|
his ears. That was all- a mere singing. The ice must have passed the
|
|
latch by now. More likely the upper hinge was covered. Between the
|
|
moss-chinked roof-poles, little points of frost began to appear. How
|
|
slowly they grew! No; not so slowly. There was a new one, and there
|
|
another. Two- three- four; they were coming too fast to count. There
|
|
were two growing together. And there, a third had joined them. Why,
|
|
there were no more spots. They had run together and formed a sheet.
|
|
Well, he would have company. If Gabriel ever broke the silence of
|
|
the North, they would stand together, hand in hand, before the great
|
|
White Throne. And God would judge them, God would judge them!
|
|
Then Percy Cuthfert closed his eyes and dropped off to sleep.
|
|
TO THE MAN ON THE TRAIL.
|
|
|
|
'DUMP IT IN.'
|
|
'But I say, Kid, isn't that going it a little too strong' Whisky and
|
|
alcohol's bad enough; but when it comes to brandy and pepper sauce
|
|
and-'
|
|
'Dump it in. Who's making this punch, anyway?' And Malemute Kid
|
|
smiled benignantly through the clouds of steam. 'By the time you've
|
|
been in this country as long as I have, my son, and lived on rabbit
|
|
tracks and salmon belly, you'll learn that Christmas comes only once
|
|
per annum. And a Christmas without punch is sinking a hole to
|
|
bedrock with nary a pay streak.'
|
|
'Stack up on that fer a high cyard,' approved Big Jim Belden, who
|
|
had come down from his claim on Mazy May to spend Christmas, and
|
|
who, as everyone knew, had been living the two months past on straight
|
|
moose meat. 'Hain't fergot the hooch we-uns made on the Tanana, hey
|
|
yeh?'
|
|
'Well, I guess yes. Boys, it would have done your hearts good to see
|
|
that whole tribe fighting drunk- and all because of a glorious ferment
|
|
of sugar and sour dough. That was before your time,' Malemute Kid said
|
|
as he turned to Stanley Prince, a young mining expert who had been
|
|
in two years. 'No white women in the country then, and Mason wanted to
|
|
get married. Ruth's father was chief of the Tananas, and objected,
|
|
like the rest of the tribe. Stiff? Why, I used my last pound of sugar;
|
|
finest work in that line I ever did in my life. You should have seen
|
|
the chase, down the river and across the portage.'
|
|
'But the squaw?' asked Louis Savoy, the tall French Canadian,
|
|
becoming interested; for he had heard of this wild deed when at
|
|
Forty Mile the preceding winter.
|
|
Then Malemute Kid, who was a born raconteur, told the unvarnished
|
|
tale of the Northland Lochinvar. More than one rough adventurer of the
|
|
North felt his heartstrings draw closer and experienced vague
|
|
yearnings for the sunnier pastures of the Southland, where life
|
|
promised something more than a barren struggle with cold and death.
|
|
'We struck the Yukon just behind the first ice run,' he concluded,
|
|
'and the tribe only a quarter of an hour behind. But that saved us;
|
|
for the second run broke the jam above and shut them out. When they
|
|
finally got into Nuklukyeto, the whole post was ready for them. And as
|
|
to the forgathering, ask Father Roubeau here: he performed the
|
|
ceremony.'
|
|
The Jesuit took the pipe from his lips but could only express his
|
|
gratification with patriarchal smiles, while Protestant and Catholic
|
|
vigorously applauded.
|
|
'By gar!' ejaculated Louis Savoy, who seemed overcome by the romance
|
|
of it. 'La petite squaw: mon Mason brav. By gar!'
|
|
Then, as the first tin cups of punch went round, Bettles the
|
|
Unquenchable sprang to his feet and struck up his favorite drinking
|
|
song:
|
|
|
|
'There's Henry Ward Beecher
|
|
And Sunday-school teachers,
|
|
All drink of the sassafras root;
|
|
But you bet all the same,
|
|
If it had its right name,
|
|
It's the juice of the forbidden fruit.'
|
|
|
|
'Oh, the juice of the forbidden fruit,'
|
|
|
|
roared out the bacchanalian chorus,
|
|
|
|
'Oh, the juice of the forbidden fruit;
|
|
But you bet all the same,
|
|
If it had its right name,
|
|
It's the juice of the forbidden fruit.'
|
|
|
|
Malemute Kid's frightful concoction did its work; the men of the
|
|
camps and trails unbent in its genial glow, and jest and song and
|
|
tales of past adventure went round the board. Aliens from a dozen
|
|
lands, they toasted each and all. It was the Englishman, Prince, who
|
|
pledged 'Uncle Sam, the precocious infant of the New World'; the
|
|
Yankee, Bettles, who drank to 'The Queen, God bless her'; and
|
|
together, Savoy and Meyers, the German trader, clanged their cups to
|
|
Alsace and Lorraine.
|
|
Then Malemute Kid arose, cup in hand, and glanced at the
|
|
greased-paper window, where the frost stood full three inches thick.
|
|
'A health to the man on trail this night; may his grub hold out; may
|
|
his dogs keep their legs; may his matches never miss fire.'
|
|
Crack! Crack! heard the familiar music of the dog whip, the
|
|
whining howl of the Malemutes, and the crunch of a sled as it drew
|
|
up to the cabin. Conversation languished while they waited the issue.
|
|
'An old-timer; cares for his dogs and then himself,' whispered
|
|
Malemute Kid to Prince as they listened to the snapping jaws and the
|
|
wolfish snarls and yelps of pain which proclaimed to their practiced
|
|
ears that the stranger was beating back their dogs while he fed his
|
|
own.
|
|
Then came the expected knock, sharp and confident, and the
|
|
stranger entered. Dazzled by the light, he hesitated a moment at the
|
|
door, giving to all a chance for scrutiny. He was a striking
|
|
personage, and a most picturesque one, in his Arctic dress of wool and
|
|
fur. Standing six foot two or three, with proportionate breadth of
|
|
shoulders and depth of chest, his smooth-shaven face nipped by the
|
|
cold to a gleaming pink, his long lashes and eyebrows white with
|
|
ice, and the ear and neck flaps of his great wolfskin cap loosely
|
|
raised, he seemed, of a verity, the Frost King, just stepped in out of
|
|
the night. Clasped outside his Mackinaw jacket, a beaded belt held two
|
|
large Colt's revolvers and a hunting knife, while he carried, in
|
|
addition to the inevitable dog whip, a smokeless rifle of the
|
|
largest bore and latest pattern. As he came forward, for all his
|
|
step was firm and elastic, they could see that fatigue bore heavily
|
|
upon him.
|
|
An awkward silence had fallen, but his hearty 'What cheer, my lads?'
|
|
put them quickly at ease, and the next instant Malemute Kid and he had
|
|
gripped hands. Though they had never met, each had heard of the other,
|
|
and the recognition was mutual. A sweeping introduction and a mug of
|
|
punch were forced upon him before he could explain his errand.
|
|
How long since that basket sled, with three men and eight dogs,
|
|
passed?' he asked.
|
|
'An even two days ahead. Are you after them?'
|
|
'Yes; my team. Run them off under my very nose, the cusses. I've
|
|
gained two days on them already- pick them up on the next run.'
|
|
'Reckon they'll show spunk?' asked Belden, in order to keep up the
|
|
conversation, for Malemute Kid already had the coffeepot on and was
|
|
busily frying bacon and moose meat.
|
|
The stranger significantly tapped his revolvers.
|
|
'When'd yeh leave Dawson?'
|
|
'Twelve o'clock.'
|
|
'Last night?'- as a matter of course.
|
|
'Today.'
|
|
A murmur of surprise passed round the circle. And well it might; for
|
|
it was just midnight, and seventy-five miles of rough river trail
|
|
was not to be sneered at for a twelve hours' run.
|
|
The talk soon became impersonal, however, harking back to the trails
|
|
of childhood. As the young stranger ate of the rude fare Malemute
|
|
Kid attentively studied his face. Nor was he long in deciding that
|
|
it was fair, honest, and open, and that he liked it. Still youthful,
|
|
the lines had been firmly traced by toil and hardship. Though genial
|
|
in conversation, and mild when at rest, the blue eyes gave promise
|
|
of the hard steel-glitter which comes when called into action,
|
|
especially against odds. The heavy jaw and square-cut chin
|
|
demonstrated rugged pertinacity and indomitability. Nor, though the
|
|
attributes of the lion were there, was there wanting the certain
|
|
softness, the hint of womanliness, which bespoke the emotional nature.
|
|
'So thet's how me an' the ol' woman got spliced,' said Belden,
|
|
concluding the exciting tale of his courtship. '"Here we be, Dad," sez
|
|
she. "An' may yeh be damned," sez he to her, an' then to me, ''Jim,
|
|
yeh-yeh git outen them good duds o' yourn; I want a right peart
|
|
slice o' thet forty acre plowed 'fore dinner." An' then he sort o'
|
|
sniffled an' kissed her. An' I was thet happy- but he seen me an'
|
|
roars out, ''Yeh, Jim!' An' yeh bet I dusted fer the barn.'
|
|
'Any kids waiting for you back in the States?' asked the stranger.
|
|
'Nope; Sal died 'fore any come. Thet's why I'm here.' Belden
|
|
abstractedly began to light his pipe, which had failed to go out,
|
|
and then brightened up with, 'How 'bout yerself, stranger- married
|
|
man?'
|
|
For reply, he opened his watch, slipped it from the thong which
|
|
served for a chain, and passed it over. Belden picked up the slush
|
|
lamp, surveyed the inside of the case critically, and, swearing
|
|
admiringly to himself, handed it over to Louis Savoy. With numerous
|
|
'By gars!' he finally surrendered it to Prince, and they noticed
|
|
that his hands trembled and his eyes took on a peculiar softness.
|
|
And so it passed from horny hand to horny hand- the pasted
|
|
photograph of a woman, the clinging kind that such men fancy, with a
|
|
babe at the breast. Those who had not yet seen the wonder were keen
|
|
with curiosity; those who had became silent and retrospective. They
|
|
could face the pinch of famine, the grip of scurvy, or the quick death
|
|
by field or flood; but the pictured semblance of a stranger woman
|
|
and child made women and children of them all.
|
|
'Never have seen the youngster yet- he's a boy, she says, and two
|
|
years old,' said the stranger as he received the treasure back. A
|
|
lingering moment he gazed upon it, then snapped the case and turned
|
|
away, but not quick enough to hide the restrained rush of tears.
|
|
Malemute Kid led him to a bunk and bade him turn in.
|
|
'Call me at four sharp. Don't fail me,' were his last words, and a
|
|
moment later he was breathing in the heaviness of exhausted sleep.
|
|
'By Jove! He's a plucky chap,' commented Prince. 'Three hours' sleep
|
|
after seventy-five miles with the dogs, and then the trail again.
|
|
Who is he, Kid?'
|
|
'Jack Westondale. Been in going on three years, with nothing but the
|
|
name of working like a horse, and any amount of bad luck to his
|
|
credit. I never knew him, but Sitka Charley told me about him.'
|
|
'It seems hard that a man with a sweet young wife like his should be
|
|
putting in his years in this Godforsaken hole, where every year counts
|
|
two on the outside.'
|
|
'The trouble with him is clean grit and stubbornness. He's cleaned
|
|
up twice with a stake, but lost it both times.'
|
|
Here the conversation was broken off by an uproar from Bettles,
|
|
for the effect had begun to wear away. And soon the bleak years of
|
|
monotonous grub and deadening toil were being forgotten in rough
|
|
merriment. Malemute Kid alone seemed unable to lose himself, and
|
|
cast many an anxious look at his watch. Once he put on his mittens and
|
|
beaver-skin cap, and, leaving the cabin, fell to rummaging about in
|
|
the cache.
|
|
Nor could he wait the hour designated; for he was fifteen minutes
|
|
ahead of time in rousing his guest. The young giant had stiffened
|
|
badly, and brisk rubbing was necessary to bring him to his feet. He
|
|
tottered painfully out of the cabin, to find his dogs harnessed and
|
|
everything ready for the start. The company wished him good luck and a
|
|
short chase, while Father Roubeau, hurriedly blessing him, led the
|
|
stampede for the cabin; and small wonder, for it is not good to face
|
|
seventy-four degrees below zero with naked ears and hands.
|
|
Malemute Kid saw him to the main trail, and there, gripping his hand
|
|
heartily, gave him advice.
|
|
'You'll find a hundred pounds of salmon eggs on the sled,' he
|
|
said. 'The dogs will go as far on that as with one hundred and fifty
|
|
of fish, and you can't get dog food at Pelly, as you probably
|
|
expected.' The stranger started, and his eyes flashed, but he did
|
|
not interrupt. 'You can't get an ounce of food for dog or man till you
|
|
reach Five Fingers, and that's a stiff two hundred miles. Watch out
|
|
for open water on the Thirty Mile River, and be sure you take the
|
|
big cutoff above Le Barge.'
|
|
'How did you know it? Surely the news can't be ahead of me already?'
|
|
'I don't know it; and what's more, I don't want to know it. But
|
|
you never owned that team you're chasing. Sitka Charley sold it to
|
|
them last spring. But he sized you up to me as square once, and I
|
|
believe him. I've seen your face; I like it. And I've seen- why,
|
|
damn you, hit the high places for salt water and that wife of yours,
|
|
and-' Here the Kid unmittened and jerked out his sack.
|
|
'No; I don't need it,' and the tears froze on his cheeks as he
|
|
convulsively gripped Malemute Kid's hand.
|
|
'Then don't spare the dogs; cut them out of the traces as fast as
|
|
they drop; buy them, and think they're cheap at ten dollars a pound.
|
|
You can get them at Five Fingers, Little Salmon, and Hootalinqua.
|
|
And watch out for wet feet,' was his parting advice. 'Keep a-traveling
|
|
up to twenty-five, but if it gets below that, build a fire and
|
|
change your socks.'
|
|
|
|
Fifteen minutes had barely elapsed when the jingle of bells
|
|
announced new arrivals. The door opened, and a mounted policeman of
|
|
the Northwest Territory entered, followed by two half-breed dog
|
|
drivers. Like Westondale, they were heavily armed and showed signs
|
|
of fatigue. The half-breeds had been borne to the trail and bore it
|
|
easily; but the young policeman was badly exhausted. Still, the dogged
|
|
obstinacy of his race held him to the pace he had set, and would
|
|
hold him till he dropped in his tracks.
|
|
'When did Westondale pull out?' he asked. 'He stopped here, didn't
|
|
he?' This was supererogatory, for the tracks told their own tale too
|
|
well.
|
|
Malemute Kid had caught Belden's eye, and he, scenting the wind,
|
|
replied evasively, 'A right peart while back.'
|
|
'Come, my man; speak up,' the policeman admonished.
|
|
'Yeh seem to want him right smart. Hez he ben gittin' cantankerous
|
|
down Dawson way?'
|
|
'Held up Harry McFarland's for forty thousand; exchanged it at the
|
|
P.C. store for a check on Seattle; and who's to stop the cashing of it
|
|
if we don't overtake him? When did he pull out?'
|
|
Every eye suppressed its excitement, for Malemute Kid had given
|
|
the cue, and the young officer encountered wooden faces on every hand.
|
|
Striding over to Prince, he put the question to him. Though it
|
|
hurt him, gazing into the frank, earnest face. of his fellow
|
|
countryman, he replied inconsequentially on the state of the trail.
|
|
Then he espied Father Roubeau, who could not lie. 'A quarter of an
|
|
hour ago,' the priest answered; 'but he had four hours' rest for
|
|
himself and dogs.'
|
|
'Fifteen minutes' start, and he's fresh! My God!' The poor fellow
|
|
staggered back, half fainting from exhaustion and disappointment,
|
|
murmuring something about the run from Dawson in ten hours and the
|
|
dogs being played out.
|
|
Malemute Kid forced a mug of punch upon him; then he turned for
|
|
the door, ordering the dog drivers to follow. But the warmth and
|
|
promise of rest were too tempting, and they objected strenuously.
|
|
The Kid was conversant with their French patois, and followed it
|
|
anxiously.
|
|
They swore that the dogs were gone up; that Siwash and Babette would
|
|
have to be shot before the first mile was covered; that the rest were
|
|
almost as bad; and that it would be better for all hands to rest up.
|
|
'Lend me five dogs?' he asked, turning to Malemute Kid.
|
|
But the Kid shook his head.
|
|
'I'll sign a check on Captain Constantine for five thousand-
|
|
here's my papers- I'm authorized to draw at my own discretion.'
|
|
Again the silent refusal.
|
|
'Then I'll requisition them in the name of the Queen.'
|
|
Smiling incredulously, the Kid glanced at his well-stocked
|
|
arsenal, and the Englishman, realizing his impotency, turned for the
|
|
door. But the dog drivers still objecting, he whirled upon them
|
|
fiercely, calling them women and curs. The swart face of the older
|
|
half-breed flushed angrily as he drew himself up and promised in good,
|
|
round terms that he would travel his leader off his legs, and would
|
|
then be delighted to plant him in the snow.
|
|
The young officer- and it required his whole will- walked steadily
|
|
to the door, exhibiting a freshness he did not possess. But they all
|
|
knew and appreciated his proud effort; nor could he veil the twinges
|
|
of agony that shot across his face. Covered with frost, the dogs
|
|
were curled up in the snow, and it was almost impossible to get them
|
|
to their feet. The poor brutes whined under the stinging lash, for the
|
|
dog drivers were angry and cruel; nor till Babette, the leader, was
|
|
cut from the traces, could they break out the sled and get under way.
|
|
'A dirty scoundrel and a liar!' 'By gar! Him no good!' 'A thief!'
|
|
'Worse than an Indian!' It was evident that they were angry- first
|
|
at the way they had been deceived; and second at the outraged ethics
|
|
of the Northland, where honesty, above all, was man's prime jewel.
|
|
'An' we gave the cuss a hand, after knowin' what he'd did.' All eyes
|
|
turned accusingly upon Malemute Kid, who rose from the corner where he
|
|
had been making Babette comfortable, and silently emptied the bowl for
|
|
a final round of punch.
|
|
'It's a cold night, boys- a bitter cold night,' was the irrelevant
|
|
commencement of his defense. 'You've all traveled trail, and know what
|
|
that stands for. Don't jump a dog when he's down. You've only heard
|
|
one side. A whiter man than Jack Westondale never ate from the same
|
|
pot nor stretched blanket with you or me. Last fall he gave his
|
|
whole clean-up, forty thousand, to Joe Castrell, to buy in on
|
|
Dominion. Today he'd be a millionaire. But, while he stayed behind
|
|
at Circle City, taking care of his partner with the scurvy, what
|
|
does Castell do? Goes into McFarland's, jumps the limit, and drops the
|
|
whole sack. Found him dead in the snow the next day. And poor Jack
|
|
laying his plans to go out this winter to his wife and the boy he's
|
|
never seen. You'll notice he took exactly what his partner lost- forty
|
|
thousand. Well, he's gone out; and what are you going to do about it?'
|
|
The Kid glanced round the circle of his judges, noted the
|
|
softening of their faces, then raised his mug aloft. 'So a health to
|
|
the man on trail this night; may his grub hold out; may his dogs
|
|
keep their legs; may his matches never miss fire. God prosper him;
|
|
good luck go with him; and-'
|
|
'Confusion to the Mounted Police!' cried Bettles, to the crash of
|
|
the empty cups.
|
|
THE PRIESLTY PREROGATIVE.
|
|
|
|
THIS IS THE STORY OF A MAN who did not appreciate his wife; also, of
|
|
a woman who did him too great an honor when she gave herself to him.
|
|
Incidentally, it concerns a Jesuit priest who had never been known
|
|
to lie. He was an appurtenance, and a very necessary one, to the Yukon
|
|
country; but the presence of the other two was merely accidental. They
|
|
were specimens of the many strange waifs which ride the breast of a
|
|
gold rush or come tailing along behind.
|
|
Edwin Bentham and Grace Bentham were waifs; they were also tailing
|
|
along behind, for the Klondike rush of '97 had long since swept down
|
|
the great river and subsided into the famine-stricken city of
|
|
Dawson. When the Yukon shut up shop and went to sleep under a
|
|
three-foot ice-sheet, this peripatetic couple found themselves at
|
|
the Five Finger Rapids, with the City of Gold still a journey of
|
|
many sleeps to the north.
|
|
Many cattle had been butchered at this place in the fall of the
|
|
year, and the offal made a goodly heap. The three fellow-voyagers of
|
|
Edwin Bentham and wife gazed upon this deposit, did a little mental
|
|
arithmetic, caught a certain glimpse of a bonanza, and decided to
|
|
remain. And all winter they sold sacks of bones and frozen hides to
|
|
the famished dog-teams. It was a modest price they asked, a dollar a
|
|
pound, just as it came. Six months later, when the sun came back and
|
|
the Yukon awoke, they buckled on their heavy moneybelts and
|
|
journeyed back to the Southland, where they yet live and lie
|
|
mightily about the Klondike they never saw.
|
|
But Edwin Bentham- he was an indolent fellow, and had he not been
|
|
possessed of a wife, would have gladly joined issued in the dog-meat
|
|
speculation. As it was, she played upon his vanity, told him how great
|
|
and strong he was, how a man such as he certainly was could overcome
|
|
all obstacles and of a surety obtain the Golden Fleece. So he
|
|
squared his jaw, sold his share in the bones and hides for a sled
|
|
and one dog, and turned his snowshoes to the north. Needless to state,
|
|
Grace Bentham's snowshoes never allowed his tracks to grow cold.
|
|
Nay, ere their tribulations had seen three days, it was the man who
|
|
followed in the rear, and the woman who broke trail in advance. Of
|
|
course, if anybody hove in sight, the position was instantly reversed.
|
|
Thus did his manhood remain virgin to the travelers who passed like
|
|
ghosts on the silent trail. There are such men in this world.
|
|
How such a man and such a woman came to take each other for better
|
|
and for worse is unimportant to this narrative. These things are
|
|
familiar to us all, and those people who do them, or even question
|
|
them too closely, are apt to lose a beautiful faith which is known
|
|
as Eternal Fitness.
|
|
Edwin Bentham was a boy, thrust by mischance into a man's body,- a
|
|
boy who could complacently pluck a butterfly, wing from wing, or cower
|
|
in abject terror before a lean, nervy fellow, not half his size. He
|
|
was a selfish cry-baby, hidden behind a man's mustache and stature,
|
|
and glossed over with a skin-deep veneer of culture and
|
|
conventionality. Yes; he was a clubman and a society man,- the sort
|
|
that grace social functions and utter inanities with a charm and
|
|
unction which is indescribable; the sort that talk big, and cry over a
|
|
toothache; the sort that put more hell into a woman's life by marrying
|
|
her than can the most graceless libertine that ever browsed in
|
|
forbidden pastures. We meet these men every day, but we rarely know
|
|
them for what they are. Second to marrying them, the best way to get
|
|
this knowledge is to eat out of the same pot and crawl under the
|
|
same blanket with them for- well, say a week; no greater margin is
|
|
necessary.
|
|
To see Grace Bentham, was to see a slender, girlish creature; to
|
|
know her, was to know a soul which dwarfed your own, yet retained
|
|
all the elements of the eternal feminine. This was the woman who urged
|
|
and encouraged her husband in his Northland quest, who broke trail for
|
|
him when no one was looking, and cried in secret over her weakling
|
|
woman's body.
|
|
So journeyed this strangely assorted couple down to old Fort
|
|
Selkirk, then through fivescore miles of dismal wilderness to Stuart
|
|
River. And when the short day left them, and the man lay down in the
|
|
snow and blubbered, it was the woman who lashed him to the sled, bit
|
|
her lips with the pain of her aching limbs, and helped the dog haul
|
|
him to Malemute Kid's cabin. Malemute Kid was not at home, but Meyers,
|
|
the German trader, cooked great moose-steaks and shook up a bed of
|
|
fresh pine boughs.
|
|
|
|
Lake, Langham, and Parker, were excited, and not unduly so when
|
|
the cause was taken into account.
|
|
'Oh, Sandy! Say, can you tell a porterhouse from a round? Come out
|
|
and lend us a hand, anyway!' This appeal emanated from the cache,
|
|
where Langham was vainly struggling with divers quarters of frozen
|
|
moose.
|
|
'Don't you budge from those dishes!' commanded Parker.
|
|
'I say, Sandy; there's a good fellow- just run down to the
|
|
Missouri Camp and borrow some cinnamon,' begged Lake.
|
|
'Oh! oh! hurry up! Why don't-' But the crash of meat and boxes, in
|
|
the cache, abruptly quenched this peremptory summons.
|
|
'Come now, Sandy; it won't take a minute to go down to
|
|
the Missouri-'
|
|
'You leave him alone,' interrupted Parker. 'How am I to mix the
|
|
biscuits if the table isn't cleared off?'
|
|
Sandy paused in indecision, till suddenly the fact that he was
|
|
Langham's 'man' dawned upon him. Then he apologetically threw down the
|
|
greasy dishcloth, and went to his master's rescue.
|
|
These promising scions of wealthy progenitors had come to the
|
|
Northland in search of laurels, with much money to burn, and a 'man'
|
|
apiece. Luckily for their souls, the other two men were up the White
|
|
River in search of a mythical quartz-ledge; so Sandy had to grin under
|
|
the responsibility of three healthy masters, each of whom was
|
|
possessed of peculiar cookery ideas. Twice that morning had a
|
|
disruption of the whole camp been imminent, only averted by immense
|
|
concessions from one or the other of these knights of the
|
|
chafing-dish. But at last their mutual creation, a really dainty
|
|
dinner, was completed. Then they sat down to a three-cornered game
|
|
of 'cut-throat,'- a proceeding which did away with all casus belli for
|
|
future hostilities, and permitted the victor to depart on a most
|
|
important mission.
|
|
This fortune fell to Parker, who parted his hair in the middle,
|
|
put on his mittens and bearskin cap, and stepped over to Malemute
|
|
Kid's cabin. And when he returned, it was in the company of Grace
|
|
Bentham and Malemute Kid,- the former very sorry her husband could not
|
|
share with her their hospitality, for he had gone up to look at the
|
|
Henderson Creek mines, and the latter still a trifle stiff from
|
|
breaking trail down the Stuart River. Meyers had been asked, but had
|
|
declined, being deeply engrossed in an experiment of raising bread
|
|
from hops.
|
|
Well, they could do without the husband; but a woman- why they had
|
|
not seen one all winter, and the presence of this one promised a new
|
|
era in their lives. They were college men and gentlemen, these three
|
|
young fellows, yearning for the flesh-pots they had been so long
|
|
denied. Probably Grace Bentham suffered from a similar hunger; at
|
|
least, it meant much to her, the first bright hour in many weeks of
|
|
darkness.
|
|
But that wonderful first course, which claimed the versatile Lake
|
|
for its parent, had no sooner been served than there came a loud knock
|
|
at the door.
|
|
'Oh! Ah! Won't you come in, Mr. Bentham?' said Parker, who had
|
|
stepped to see who the newcomer might be.
|
|
'Is my wife here?' gruffly responded that worthy.
|
|
'Why, yes. We left word with Mr. Meyers.' Parker was exerting his
|
|
most dulcet tones, inwardly wondering what the deuce it all meant.
|
|
'Won't you come in? Expecting you at any moment, we reserved a
|
|
place. And just in time for the first course, too.'
|
|
'Come in, Edwin, dear,' chirped Grace Bentham from her seat at the
|
|
table.
|
|
Parker naturally stood aside.
|
|
'I want my wife,' reiterated Bentham hoarsely, the intonation
|
|
savoring disagreeably of ownership.
|
|
Parker gasped, was within an ace of driving his fist into the face
|
|
of his boorish visitor, but held himself awkwardly in check. Everybody
|
|
rose. Lake lost his head and caught himself on the verge of saying,
|
|
'Must you go?'
|
|
Then began the farrago of leave-taking. 'So nice of you-' 'I am
|
|
awfully sorry-' 'By Jove! how things did brighten-' 'Really now, you-'
|
|
'Thank you ever so much-' 'Nice trip to Dawson-' etc., etc.
|
|
In this wise the lamb was helped into her jacket and led to the
|
|
slaughter. Then the door slammed, and they gazed woefully upon the
|
|
deserted table.
|
|
'Damn!' Langham had suffered disadvantages in his early training,
|
|
and his oaths were weak and monotonous. 'Damn!' he repeated, vaguely
|
|
conscious of the incompleteness and vainly struggling for a more
|
|
virile term.
|
|
|
|
It is a clever woman who can fill out the many weak places in an
|
|
inefficient man, by her own indomitability, re-enforce his vacillating
|
|
nature, infuse her ambitious soul into his, and spur him on to great
|
|
achievements. And it is indeed a very clever and tactful woman who can
|
|
do all this, and do it so subtly that the man receives all the
|
|
credit and believes in his inmost heart that everything is due to
|
|
him and him alone.
|
|
This is what Grace Bentham proceeded to do. Arriving in Dawson
|
|
with a few pounds of flour and several letters of introduction, she at
|
|
once applied herself to the task of pushing her big baby to the
|
|
fore. It was she who melted the stony heart and wrung credit from
|
|
the rude barbarian who presided over the destiny of the P. C. Company;
|
|
yet it was Edwin Bentham to whom the concession was ostensibly
|
|
granted. It was she who dragged her baby up and down creeks, over
|
|
benches and divides, and on a dozen wild stampedes; yet everybody
|
|
remarked what an energetic fellow that Bentham was. It was she who
|
|
studied maps, and catechised miners, and hammered geography and
|
|
locations into his hollow head, till everybody marveled at his broad
|
|
grasp of the country and knowledge of its conditions. Of course,
|
|
they said the wife was a brick, and only a few wise ones appreciated
|
|
and pitied the brave little woman.
|
|
She did the work; he got the credit and reward. In the Northwest
|
|
Territory a married woman cannot stake or record a creek, bench, or
|
|
quartz claim; so Edwin Bentham went down to the Gold Commissioner
|
|
and filed on Bench Claim 23, second tier, of French Hill. And when
|
|
April came they were washing out a thousand dollars a day, with
|
|
many, many such days in prospect.
|
|
At the base of French Hill lay Eldorado Creek, and on a creek
|
|
claim stood the cabin of Clyde Wharton. At present he was not
|
|
washing out a diurnal thousand dollars; but his dumps grew, shift by
|
|
shift, and there would come a time when those dumps would pass through
|
|
his sluice-boxes, depositing in the riffles, in the course of half a
|
|
dozen days, several hundred thousand dollars. He often sat in that
|
|
cabin, smoked his pipe, and dreamed beautiful little dreams,- dreams
|
|
in which neither the dumps nor the half-ton of dust in the P. C.
|
|
Company's big safe, played a part.
|
|
And Grace Bentham, as she washed tin dishes in her hillside cabin,
|
|
often glanced down into Eldorado Creek, and dreamed,- not of dumps nor
|
|
dust, however. They met frequently, as the trail to the one claim
|
|
crossed the other, and there is much to talk about in the Northland
|
|
spring; but never once, by the light of an eye nor the slip of a
|
|
tongue, did they speak their hearts.
|
|
This is as it was at first. But one day Edwin Bentham was brutal.
|
|
All boys are thus; besides, being a French Hill king now, he began
|
|
to think a great deal of himself and to forget all he owed to his
|
|
wife. On this day, Wharton heard of it, and waylaid Grace Bentham, and
|
|
talked wildly. This made her very happy, though she would not
|
|
listen, and made him promise to not say such things again. Her hour
|
|
had not come.
|
|
But the sun swept back on its northern journey, the black of
|
|
midnight changed to the steely color of dawn, the snow slipped away,
|
|
the water dashed again over the glacial drift, and the wash-up
|
|
began. Day and night the yellow clay and scraped bedrock hurried
|
|
through the swift sluices, yielding up its ransom to the strong men
|
|
from the Southland. And in that time of tumult came Grace Bentham's
|
|
hour.
|
|
To all of us such hours at some time come,- that is, to us who are
|
|
not too phlegmatic. Some people are good, not from inherent love of
|
|
virtue, but from sheer laziness. But those of us who know weak moments
|
|
may understand.
|
|
Edwin Bentham was weighing dust over the bar of the saloon at the
|
|
Forks- altogether too much of his dust went over that pine board- when
|
|
his wife came down the hill and slipped into Clyde Wharton's cabin.
|
|
Wharton was not expecting her, but that did not alter the case. And
|
|
much subsequent misery and idle waiting might have been avoided, had
|
|
not Father Roubeau seen this and turned aside from the main creek
|
|
trail.
|
|
|
|
'My child,-'
|
|
'Hold on, Father Roubeau! Though I'm not of your faith, I respect
|
|
you; but you can't come in between this woman and me!'
|
|
'You know what you are doing?'
|
|
'Know! Were you God Almighty, ready to fling me into eternal fire,
|
|
I'd bank my will against yours in this matter.'
|
|
Wharton had placed Grace on a stool and stood belligerently before
|
|
her.
|
|
'You sit down on that chair and keep quiet,' he continued,
|
|
addressing the Jesuit. 'I'll take my innings now. You can have yours
|
|
after.'
|
|
Father Roubeau bowed courteously and obeyed. He was an easy-going
|
|
man and had learned to bide his time. Wharton pulled a stool alongside
|
|
the woman's, smothering her hand in his.
|
|
'Then you do care for me, and will take me away?' Her face seemed to
|
|
reflect the peace of this man, against whom she might draw close for
|
|
shelter.
|
|
'Dear, don't you remember what I said before? Of course I-'
|
|
'But how can you?- the wash-up?'
|
|
'Do you think that worries? Anyway, I'll give the job to Father
|
|
Roubeau, here. I can trust him to safely bank the dust with the
|
|
company.'
|
|
'To think of it!- I'll never see him again.'
|
|
'A blessing!'
|
|
'And to go- O, Clyde, I can't! I can't!'
|
|
'There, there; of course you can. just let me plan it.- You see,
|
|
as soon as we get a few traps together, we'll start, and-'
|
|
'Suppose he comes back?'
|
|
'I'll break every-'
|
|
'No, no! No fighting, Clyde! Promise me that.'
|
|
'All right! I'll just tell the men to throw him off the claim.
|
|
They've seen how he's treated you, and haven't much love for him.'
|
|
'You mustn't do that. You mustn't hurt him.'
|
|
'What then? Let him come right in here and take you away before my
|
|
eyes?'
|
|
'No-o,' she half whispered, stroking his hand softly.
|
|
'Then let me run it, and don't worry. I'll see he doesn't get
|
|
hurt. Precious lot he cared whether you got hurt or not! We won't go
|
|
back to Dawson. I'll send word down for a couple of the boys to outfit
|
|
and pole a boat up the Yukon. We'll cross the divide and raft down the
|
|
Indian River to meet them. Then-'
|
|
'And then?'
|
|
Her head was on his shoulder. Their voices sank to softer
|
|
cadences, each word a caress. The Jesuit fidgeted nervously.
|
|
'And then?' she repeated.
|
|
'Why we'll pole up, and up, and up, and portage the White Horse
|
|
Rapids and the Box Canon.'
|
|
'Yes?'
|
|
'And the Sixty-Mile River; then the lakes, Chilcoot, Dyea, and
|
|
Salt Water.'
|
|
'But, dear, I can't pole a boat.'
|
|
'You little goose! I'll get Sitka Charley; he knows all the good
|
|
water and best camps, and he is the best traveler I ever met, if he is
|
|
an Indian. All you'll have to do, is to sit in the middle of the boat,
|
|
and sing songs, and play Cleopatra, and fight- no, we're in luck;
|
|
too early for mosquitoes.'
|
|
'And then, O my Antony?'
|
|
'And then a steamer, San Francisco, and the world! Never to come
|
|
back to this cursed hole again. Think of it! The world, and ours to
|
|
choose from! I'll sell out. Why, we're rich! The Waldworth Syndicate
|
|
will give me half a million for what's left in the ground, and I've
|
|
got twice as much in the dumps and with the P. C. Company. We'll go to
|
|
the Fair in Paris in 1900. We'll go to Jerusalem, if you say so. We'll
|
|
buy an Italian palace, and you can play Cleopatra to your heart's
|
|
content. No, you shall be Lucretia, Acte, or anybody your little heart
|
|
sees fit to become. But you mustn't, you really mustn't-'
|
|
'The wife of Caesar shall be above reproach.'
|
|
'Of course, but-'
|
|
'But I won't be your wife, will I, dear?'
|
|
'I didn't mean that.'
|
|
'But you'll love me just as much, and never even think- oh! I know
|
|
you'll be like other men; you'll grow tired, and- and-'
|
|
'How can you? I-'
|
|
'Promise me.'
|
|
'Yes, yes; I do promise.'
|
|
'You say it so easily, dear; but how do you know?- or I know? I have
|
|
so little to give, yet it is so much, and all I have. O, Clyde!
|
|
promise me you won't?'
|
|
'There, there! You musn't begin to doubt already. Till death do us
|
|
part, you know.'
|
|
'Think! I once said that to- to him, and now?'
|
|
'And now, little sweetheart, you're not to bother about such
|
|
things any more. Of course, I never, never will, and-'
|
|
And for the first time, lips trembled against lips. Father Roubeau
|
|
had been watching the main trail through the window, but could stand
|
|
the strain no longer. He cleared his throat and turned around.
|
|
'Your turn now, Father!' Wharton's face was flushed with the fire of
|
|
his first embrace. There was an exultant ring to his voice as he
|
|
abdicated in the other's favor. He had no doubt as to the result.
|
|
Neither had Grace, for a smile played about her mouth as she faced the
|
|
priest.
|
|
'My child,' he began, 'my heart bleeds for you. It is a pretty
|
|
dream, but it cannot be.'
|
|
'And why, Father? I have said yes.'
|
|
'You knew not what you did. You did not think of the oath you
|
|
took, before your God, to that man who is your husband. It remains for
|
|
me to make you realize the sanctity of such a pledge.'
|
|
'And if I do realize, and yet refuse?'
|
|
'Then God-'
|
|
'Which God? My husband has a God which I care not to worship.
|
|
There must be many such.'
|
|
'Child! unsay those words! Ah! you do not mean them. I understand.
|
|
I, too, have had such moments.' For an instant he was back in his
|
|
native France, and a wistful, sad-eyed face came as a mist between him
|
|
and the woman before him.
|
|
'Then, Father, has my God forsaken me? I am not wicked above
|
|
women. My misery with him has been great. Why should it be greater?
|
|
Why shall I not grasp at happiness? I cannot, will not, go back to
|
|
him!'
|
|
'Rather is your God forsaken. Return. Throw your burden upon Him,
|
|
and the darkness shall be lifted. O my child,-'
|
|
'No; it is useless; I have made my bed and so shall I lie. I will go
|
|
on. And if God punishes me, I shall bear it somehow. You do not
|
|
understand. You are not a woman.'
|
|
'My mother was a woman.'
|
|
'But-'
|
|
'And Christ was born of a woman.'
|
|
She did not answer. A silence fell. Wharton pulled his mustache
|
|
impatiently and kept an eye on the trail. Grace leaned her elbow on
|
|
the table, her face set with resolve. The smile had died away.
|
|
Father Roubeau shifted his ground.
|
|
'You have children?'
|
|
'At one time I wished- but now- no. And I am thankful.'
|
|
'And a mother?'
|
|
'Yes.'
|
|
'She loves you?'
|
|
'Yes.' Her replies were whispers.
|
|
And a brother?- no matter, he is a man. But a sister?'
|
|
Her head drooped a quavering 'Yes.'
|
|
'Younger? Very much?'
|
|
'Seven years.'
|
|
'And you have thought well about this matter? About them? About your
|
|
mother? And your sister? She stands on the threshold of her woman's
|
|
life, and this wildness of yours may mean much to her. Could you go
|
|
before her, look upon her fresh young face, hold her hand in yours, or
|
|
touch your cheek to hers?'
|
|
To his words, her brain formed vivid images, till she cried out,
|
|
'Don't! don't!' and shrank away as do the wolf-dogs from the lash.
|
|
'But you must face all this; and better it is to do it now.'
|
|
In his eyes, which she could not see, there was a great
|
|
compassion, but his face, tense and quivering, showed no relenting.
|
|
She raised her head from the table, forced back the tears, struggled
|
|
for control.
|
|
'I shall go away. They will never see me, and come to forget me. I
|
|
shall be to them as dead. And- and I will go with Clyde- today.'
|
|
It seemed final. Wharton stepped forward, but the priest waved him
|
|
back.
|
|
'You have wished for children?'
|
|
A silent 'Yes.'
|
|
'And prayed for them?'
|
|
'Often.'
|
|
'And have you thought, if you should have children?' Father
|
|
Roubeau's eyes rested for a moment on the man by the window.
|
|
A quick light shot across her face. Then the full import dawned upon
|
|
her. She raised her hand appealingly, but he went on.
|
|
'Can you picture an innocent babe in your arms,' A boy? The world is
|
|
not so hard upon a girl. Why, your very breast would turn to gall! And
|
|
you could be proud and happy of your boy, as you looked on other
|
|
children?-'
|
|
'O, have pity! Hush!'
|
|
'A scapegoat-'
|
|
'Don't! don't! I will go back!' She was at his feet.
|
|
'A child to grow up with no thought of evil, and one day the world
|
|
to fling a tender name in his face. A child to look back and curse you
|
|
from whose loins he sprang!'
|
|
'O my God! my God!'
|
|
She groveled on the floor. The priest sighed and raised her to her
|
|
feet.
|
|
Wharton pressed forward, but she motioned him away.
|
|
'Don't come near me, Clyde! I am going back!' The tears were
|
|
coursing pitifully down her face, but she made no effort to wipe
|
|
them away.
|
|
'After all this? You cannot! I will not let you!'
|
|
'Don't touch me!' She shivered and drew back.
|
|
'I will! You are mine! Do you hear? You are mine!' Then he whirled
|
|
upon the priest. 'O what a fool I was to ever let you wag your silly
|
|
tongue! Thank your God you are not a common man, for I'd- but the
|
|
priestly prerogative must be exercised, eh? Well, you have exercised
|
|
it. Now get out of my house, or I'll forget who and what you are!'
|
|
Father Roubeau bowed, took her hand, and started for the door. But
|
|
Wharton cut them off.
|
|
'Grace! You said you loved me?'
|
|
'I did.'
|
|
'And you do now?'
|
|
'I do.'
|
|
'Say it again.'
|
|
'I do love you, Clyde; I do.'
|
|
'There, you priest!' he cried. 'You have heard it, and with those
|
|
words on her lips you would send her back to live a lie and a hell
|
|
with that man?'
|
|
But Father Roubeau whisked the woman into the inner room and
|
|
closed the door. 'No words!' he whispered to Wharton, as he struck a
|
|
casual posture on a stool. 'Remember, for her sake,' he added.
|
|
The room echoed to a rough knock at the door; the latch raised and
|
|
Edwin Bentham stepped in.
|
|
'Seen anything of my wife?' he asked as soon as salutations had been
|
|
exchanged.
|
|
Two heads nodded negatively.
|
|
'I saw her tracks down from the cabin,' he continued tentatively,
|
|
'and they broke off, just opposite here, on the main trail.'
|
|
His listeners looked bored.
|
|
'And I- I though-'
|
|
'She was here!' thundered Wharton.
|
|
The priest silenced him with a look. 'Did you see her tracks leading
|
|
up to this cabin, my son?' Wily Father Roubeau- he had taken good care
|
|
to obliterate them as he came up the same path an hour before.
|
|
'I didn't stop to look, I-' His eyes rested suspiciously on the door
|
|
to the other room, then interrogated the priest. The latter shook
|
|
his head; but the doubt seemed to linger.
|
|
Father Roubeau breathed a swift, silent prayer, and rose to his
|
|
feet. 'If you doubt me, why-' He made as though to open the door.
|
|
A priest could not lie. Edwin Bentham had heard this often, and
|
|
believed it. 'Of course not, Father,' he interposed hurriedly. 'I
|
|
was only wondering where my wife had gone, and thought maybe- I
|
|
guess she's up at Mrs. Stanton's on French Gulch. Nice weather,
|
|
isn't it? Heard the news? Flour's gone down to forty dollars a
|
|
hundred, and they say the che-cha-quas are flocking down the river
|
|
in droves. But I must be going; so good-by.'
|
|
The door slammed, and from the window they watched him take his
|
|
quest up French Gulch.
|
|
|
|
A few weeks later, just after the June high-water, two men shot a
|
|
canoe into mid-stream and made fast to a derelict pine. This tightened
|
|
the painter and jerked the frail craft along as would a tow-boat.
|
|
Father Roubeau had been directed to leave the Upper Country and return
|
|
to his swarthy children at Minook. The white men had come among
|
|
them, and they were devoting too little time to fishing, and too
|
|
much to a certain deity whose transient habitat was in countless black
|
|
bottles. Malemute Kid also had business in the Lower Country, so
|
|
they journeyed together.
|
|
But one, in all the Northland, knew the man Paul Roubeau, and that
|
|
man was Malemute Kid. Before him alone did the priest cast off the
|
|
sacerdotal garb and stand naked. And why not? These two men knew
|
|
each other. Had they not shared the last morsel of fish, the last
|
|
pinch of tobacco, the last and inmost thought, on the barren stretches
|
|
of Bering Sea, in the heartbreaking mazes of the Great Delta, on the
|
|
terrible winter journey from Point Barrow to the Porcupine?
|
|
Father Roubeau puffed heavily at his trail-worn pipe, and gazed on
|
|
the red-disked sun, poised somberly on the edge of the northern
|
|
horizon. Malemute Kid wound up his watch. It was midnight.
|
|
'Cheer up, old man!' The Kid was evidently gathering up a broken
|
|
thread. 'God surely will forgive such a lie. Let me give you the
|
|
word of a man who strikes a true note:
|
|
|
|
If She have spoken a word, remember thy lips are sealed,
|
|
And the brand of the Dog is upon him by whom is the secret
|
|
revealed.
|
|
If there be trouble to Herward, and a lie of the blackest can
|
|
clear,
|
|
Lie, while thy lips can move or a man is alive to hear.'
|
|
|
|
Father Roubeau removed his pipe and reflected. 'The man speaks true,
|
|
but my soul is not vexed with that. The lie and the penance stand with
|
|
God; but- but-'
|
|
'What then? Your hands are clean.'
|
|
'Not so. Kid, I have thought much, and yet the thing remains. I
|
|
knew, and made her go back.'
|
|
The clear note of a robin rang out from the wooden bank, a partridge
|
|
drummed the call in the distance, a moose lunged noisily in the
|
|
eddy; but the twain smoked on in silence.
|
|
THE WISDOM OF THE TRAIL.
|
|
|
|
SITKA CHARLEY HAD ACHIEVED the impossible. Other Indians might
|
|
have known as much of the wisdom of the trail as he did; but he
|
|
alone knew the white man's wisdom, the honor of the trail, and the
|
|
law. But these things had not come to him in a day. The aboriginal
|
|
mind is slow to generalize, and many facts, repeated often, are
|
|
required to compass an understanding. Sitka Charley, from boyhood, had
|
|
been thrown continually with white men, and as a man he had elected to
|
|
cast his fortunes with them, expatriating himself, once and for all,
|
|
from his own people. Even then, respecting, almost venerating their
|
|
power, and pondering over it, he had yet to divine its secret essence-
|
|
the honor and the law. And it was only by the cumulative evidence of
|
|
years that he had finally come to understand. Being an alien, when
|
|
he did know, he knew it better than the white man himself; being an
|
|
Indian, he had achieved the impossible.
|
|
And of these things had been bred a certain contempt for his own
|
|
people- a contempt which he had made it a custom to conceal, but which
|
|
now burst forth in a polyglot whirlwind of curses upon the heads of
|
|
Kah-Chucte and Gowhee. They cringed before him like a brace of
|
|
snarling wolf dogs, too cowardly to spring, too wolfish to cover their
|
|
fangs. They were not handsome creatures. Neither was Sitka Charley.
|
|
All three were frightful-looking. There was no flesh to their faces;
|
|
their cheekbones were massed with hideous scabs which had cracked
|
|
and frozen alternately under the intense frost; while their eyes
|
|
burned luridly with the light which is born of desperation and hunger.
|
|
Men so situated, beyond the pale of the honor and the law, are not
|
|
to be trusted. Sitka Charley knew this; and this was why he had forced
|
|
them to abandon their rifles with the rest of the camp outfit ten days
|
|
before. His rifle and Captain Eppingwell's were the only ones that
|
|
remained.
|
|
'Come, get a fire started,' he commanded, drawing out the precious
|
|
matchbox with its attendant strips of dry birchbark.
|
|
The two Indians fell sullenly to the task of gathering dead branches
|
|
and underwood. They were weak and paused often, catching themselves,
|
|
in the act of stooping, with giddy motions, or staggering to the
|
|
center of operations with their knees shaking like castanets. After
|
|
each trip they rested for a moment, as though sick and deadly weary.
|
|
At times their eyes took on the patient stoicism of dumb suffering;
|
|
and again the ego seemed almost burst forth with its wild cry, 'I,
|
|
I, I want to exist!'- the dominant note of the whole living universe.
|
|
A light breath of air blew from the south, nipping the exposed
|
|
portions of their bodies and driving the frost, in needles of fire,
|
|
through fur and flesh to the bones. So, when the fire had grown
|
|
lusty and thawed a damp circle in the snow about it, Sitka Charley
|
|
forced his reluctant comrades to lend a hand in pitching a fly. It was
|
|
a primitive affair, merely a blanket stretched parallel with the
|
|
fire and to windward of it, at an angle of perhaps forty-five degrees.
|
|
This shut out the chill wind and threw the heat backward and down upon
|
|
those who were to huddle in its shelter. Then a layer of green
|
|
spruce boughs were spread, that their bodies might not come in contact
|
|
with the snow. When this task was completed, Kah-Chucte and Gowhee
|
|
proceeded to take care of their feet. Their icebound mocassins were
|
|
sadly worn by much travel, and the sharp ice of the river jams had cut
|
|
them to rags. Their Siwash socks were similarly conditioned, and
|
|
when these had been thawed and removed, the dead-white tips of the
|
|
toes, in the various stages of mortification, told their simple tale
|
|
of the trail.
|
|
Leaving the two to the drying of their footgear, Sitka Charley
|
|
turned back over the course he had come. He, too, had a mighty longing
|
|
to sit by the fire and tend his complaining flesh, but the honor and
|
|
the law forbade. He toiled painfully over the frozen field, each
|
|
step a protest, every muscle in revolt. Several times, where the
|
|
open water between the jams had recently crusted, he was forced to
|
|
miserably accelerate his movements as the fragile footing swayed and
|
|
threatened beneath him. In such places death was quick and easy; but
|
|
it was not his desire to endure no more.
|
|
His deepening anxiety vanished as two Indians dragged into view
|
|
round a bend in the river. They staggered and panted like men under
|
|
heavy burdens; yet the packs on their backs were a matter of but a few
|
|
pounds. He questioned them eagerly, and their replies seemed to
|
|
relieve him. He hurried on. Next came two white men, supporting
|
|
between them a woman. They also behaved as though drunken, and their
|
|
limbs shook with weakness. But the woman leaned lightly upon them,
|
|
choosing to carry herself forward with her own strength. At the
|
|
sight of her a flash of joy cast its fleeting light across Sitka
|
|
Charley's face. He cherished a very great regard for Mrs.
|
|
Eppingwell. He had seen many white women, but this was the first to
|
|
travel the trail with him. When Captain Eppingwell proposed the
|
|
hazardous undertaking and made him an offer for his services, he had
|
|
shaken his head gravely; for it was an unknown journey through the
|
|
dismal vastnesses of the Northland, and he knew it to be of the kind
|
|
that try to the uttermost the souls of men. But when he learned that
|
|
the captain's wife was to accompany them, he had refused flatly to
|
|
have anything further to do with it. Had it been a woman of his own
|
|
race he would have harbored no objections; but these women of the
|
|
Southland- no, no, they were too soft, too tender, for such
|
|
enterprises.
|
|
Sitka Charley did not know this kind of woman. Five minutes
|
|
before, he did not even dream of taking charge of the expedition;
|
|
but when she came to him with her wonderful smile and her straight
|
|
clean English, and talked to the point, without pleading or
|
|
persuading, he had incontinently yielded. Had there been a softness
|
|
and appeal to mercy in the eyes, a tremble to the voice, a taking
|
|
advantage of sex, he would have stiffened to steel; instead her
|
|
clear-searching eyes and clear-ringing voice, her utter frankness
|
|
and tacit assumption of equality, had robbed him of his reason. He
|
|
felt, then, that this was a new breed of woman; and ere they had
|
|
been trail mates for many days he knew why the sons of such women
|
|
mastered the land and the sea, and why the sons of his own womankind
|
|
could not prevail against them. Tender and soft! Day after day he
|
|
watched her, muscle-weary, exhausted, indomitable, and the words
|
|
beat in upon him in a perennial refrain. Tender and soft! He knew
|
|
her feet had been born to easy paths and sunny lands, strangers to the
|
|
moccasined pain of the North, unkissed by the chill lips of the frost,
|
|
and he watched and marveled at them twinkling ever through the weary
|
|
day.
|
|
She had always a smile and a word of cheer, from which not even
|
|
the meanest packer was excluded. As the way grew darker she seemed
|
|
to stiffen and gather greater strength, and when Kah-Chucte and
|
|
Gowhee, who had bragged that they knew every landmark of the way as
|
|
a child did the skin bails of the tepee, acknowledged that they knew
|
|
not where they were, it was she who raised a forgiving voice amid
|
|
the curses of the men. She had sung to them that night till they
|
|
felt the weariness fall from them and were ready to face the future
|
|
with fresh hope. And when the food failed and each scant stint was
|
|
measured jealously, she it was who rebelled against the machinations
|
|
of her husband and Sitka Charley, and demanded and received a share
|
|
neither greater nor less than that of the others.
|
|
Sitka Charley was proud to know this woman. A new richness, a
|
|
greater breadth, had come into his life with her presence. Hitherto he
|
|
had been his own mentor, had turned to right or left at no man's beck;
|
|
he had moulded himself according to his own dictates, nourished his
|
|
manhood regardless of all save his own opinion. For the first time
|
|
he had felt a call from without for the best that was in him. just a
|
|
glance of appreciation from the clear-searching eyes, a word of thanks
|
|
from the clear-ringing voice, just a slight wreathing of the lips in
|
|
the wonderful smile, and he walked with the gods for hours to come. It
|
|
was a new stimulant to his manhood; for the first time he thrilled
|
|
with a conscious pride in his wisdom of the trail; and between the
|
|
twain they ever lifted the sinking hearts of their comrades.
|
|
|
|
The faces of the two men and the woman brightened as they saw him,
|
|
for after all he was the staff they leaned upon. But Sitka Charley,
|
|
rigid as was his wont, concealing pain and pleasure impartially
|
|
beneath an iron exterior, asked them the welfare of the rest, told the
|
|
distance to the fire, and continued on the back-trip. Next he met a
|
|
single Indian, unburdened, limping, lips compressed, and eyes set with
|
|
the pain of a foot in which the quick fought a losing battle with
|
|
the dead. All possible care had been taken of him, but in the last
|
|
extremity the weak and unfortunate must perish, and Sitka Charley
|
|
deemed his days to be few. The man could not keep up for long, so he
|
|
gave him rough cheering words. After that came two more Indians, to
|
|
whom he had allotted the task of helping along Joe, the third white
|
|
man of the party. They had deserted him. Sitka Charley saw at a glance
|
|
the lurking spring in their bodies, and knew they had at last cast off
|
|
his mastery. So he was not taken unawares when he ordered them back in
|
|
quest of their abandoned charge, and saw the gleam of the hunting
|
|
knives that they drew from the sheaths. A pitiful spectacle, three
|
|
weak men lifting their puny strength in the face of the mighty
|
|
vastness; but the two recoiled under the fierce rifle blows of the one
|
|
and returned like beaten dogs to the leash. Two hours later, with
|
|
Joe reeling between them and Sitka Charley bringing up the rear,
|
|
they came to the fire, where the remainder of the expedition
|
|
crouched in the shelter of the fly.
|
|
'A few words, my comrades, before we sleep,' Sitka Charley said
|
|
after they had devoured their slim rations of unleavened bread. He was
|
|
speaking to the Indians in their own tongue, having already given
|
|
the import to the whites. 'A few words, my comrades, for your own
|
|
good, that ye may yet perchance live. I shall give you the law; on his
|
|
own head by the death of him that breaks it. We have passed the
|
|
Hills of Silence, and we now travel the head reaches of the Stuart. It
|
|
may be one sleep, it may be several, it may be many sleeps, but in
|
|
time we shall come among the men of the Yukon, who have much grub.
|
|
It were well that we look to the law. Today Kah-Chucte and Gowhee,
|
|
whom I commanded to break trail, forgot they were men, and like
|
|
frightened children ran away. True, they forgot; so let us forget. But
|
|
hereafter, let them remember. If it should happen they do not...' He
|
|
touched his rifle carelessly, grimly. 'Tomorrow they shall carry the
|
|
flour and see that the white man Joe lies not down by the trail. The
|
|
cups of flour are counted; should so much as an ounce be wanting at
|
|
nightfall... Do ye understand? Today there were others that forgot.
|
|
Moose Head and Three Salmon left the white man Joe to lie in the snow.
|
|
Let them forget no more. With the light of day shall they go forth and
|
|
break trail. Ye have heard the law. Look well, lest ye break it.'
|
|
|
|
Sitka Charley found it beyond him to keep the line close up. From
|
|
Moose Head and Three Salmon, who broke trail in advance, to
|
|
Kah-Chucte, Gowhee, and Joe, it straggled out over a mile. Each
|
|
staggered, fell or rested as he saw fit. The line of march was a
|
|
progression through a chain of irregular halts. Each drew upon the
|
|
last remnant of his strength and stumbled onward till it was expended,
|
|
but in some miraculous way there was always another last remnant. Each
|
|
time a man fell it was with the firm belief that he would rise no
|
|
more; yet he did rise, and again and again. The flesh yielded, the
|
|
will conquered; but each triumph was a tragedy. The Indian with the
|
|
frozen foot, no longer erect, crawled forward on hand and knee. He
|
|
rarely rested, for he knew the penalty exacted by the frost. Even Mrs.
|
|
Eppingwell's lips were at last set in a stony smile, and her eyes,
|
|
seeing, saw not. Often she stopped, pressing a mittened hand to her
|
|
heart, gasping and dizzy.
|
|
Joe, the white man, had passed beyond the stage of suffering. He
|
|
no longer begged to be let alone, prayed to die; but was soothed and
|
|
content under the anodyne of delirium. Kah-Chucte and Gowhee dragged
|
|
him on roughly, venting upon him many a savage glance or blow. To them
|
|
it was the acme of injustice. Their hearts were bitter with hate,
|
|
heavy with fear. Why should they cumber their strength with his
|
|
weakness? To do so meant death; not to do so- and they remembered
|
|
the law of Sitka Charley, and the rifle.
|
|
Joe fell with greater frequency as the daylight waned, and so hard
|
|
was he to raise that they dropped farther and farther behind.
|
|
Sometimes all three pitched into the snow, so weak had the Indians
|
|
become. Yet on their backs was life, and strength, and warmth.
|
|
Within the flour sacks were all the potentialities of existence.
|
|
They could not but think of this, and it was not strange, that which
|
|
came to pass. They had fallen by the side of a great timber jam
|
|
where a thousand cords of firewood waited the match. Near by was an
|
|
air hole through the ice. Kah-Chucte looked on the wood and the water,
|
|
as did Gowhee; then they looked at each other. Never a word was
|
|
spoken. Gowhee struck a fire; Kah-Chucte filled a tin cup with water
|
|
and heated it; Joe babbled of things in another land, in a tongue they
|
|
did not understand. They mixed flour with the warm water till it was a
|
|
thin paste, and of this they drank many cups. They did not offer any
|
|
to Joe; but he did not mind. He did not mind anything, not even his
|
|
moccasins, which scorched and smoked among the coals.
|
|
A crystal mist of snow fell about them, softly, caressingly,
|
|
wrapping them in clinging robes of white. And their feet would have
|
|
yet trod many trails had not destiny brushed the clouds aside and
|
|
cleared the air. Nay, ten minutes' delay would have been salvation.
|
|
Sitka Charley, looking back, saw the pillared smoke of their fire, and
|
|
guessed. And he looked ahead at those who were faithful, and at Mrs.
|
|
Eppingwell.
|
|
|
|
'So, my good comrades, ye have again forgotten that you were men?
|
|
Good! Very good. There will be fewer bellies to feed.'
|
|
Sitka Charley retied the flour as he spoke, strapping the pack to
|
|
the one on his own back. He kicked Joe till the pain broke through the
|
|
poor devil's bliss and brought him doddering to his feet. Then he
|
|
shoved him out upon the trail and started him on his way. The two
|
|
Indians attempted to slip off.
|
|
'Hold, Gowhee! And thou, too, Kah-Chucte! Hath the flour given
|
|
such strength to thy legs that they may outrun the swift-winged
|
|
lead? Think not to cheat the law. Be men for the last time, and be
|
|
content that ye die full-stomached. Come, step up, back to the timber,
|
|
shoulder to shoulder. Come!'
|
|
The two men obeyed, quietly, without fear; for it is the future
|
|
which pressed upon the man, not the present.
|
|
'Thou, Gowhee, hast a wife and children and a deerskin lodge in
|
|
the Chipewyan. What is thy will in the matter?'
|
|
'Give thou her of the goods which are mine by the word of the
|
|
captain- the blankets, the beads, the tobacco, the box which makes
|
|
strange sounds after the manner of the white men. Say that I did die
|
|
on the trail, but say not how.'
|
|
'And thou, Kah-Chucte, who hast nor wife nor child?'
|
|
'Mine is a sister, the wife of the factor at Koshim. He beats her,
|
|
and she is not happy. Give thou her the goods which are mine by the
|
|
contract, and tell her it were well she go back to her own people.
|
|
Shouldst thou meet the man, and be so minded, it were a good deed that
|
|
he should die. He beats her, and she is afraid.'
|
|
'Are ye content to die by the law?'
|
|
'We are.'
|
|
'Then good-bye, my good comrades. May ye sit by the well-filled pot,
|
|
in warm lodges, ere the day is done.'
|
|
As he spoke he raised his rifle, and many echoes broke the
|
|
silence. Hardly had they died away when other rifles spoke in the
|
|
distance. Sitka Charley started. There had been more than one shot,
|
|
yet there was but one other rifle in the party. He gave a fleeting
|
|
glance at the men who lay so quietly, smiled viciously at the wisdom
|
|
of the trail, and hurried on to meet the men of the Yukon.
|
|
THE WIFE OF A KING.
|
|
|
|
ONCE, WHEN THE NORTHLAND was very young, the social and civic
|
|
virtues were remarkably alike for their paucity and their
|
|
simplicity. When the burden of domestic duties grew grievous, and
|
|
the fireside mood expanded to a constant protest against its bleak
|
|
loneliness, the adventurers from the Southland, in lieu of better,
|
|
paid the stipulated prices and took unto themselves native wives. It
|
|
was a foretaste of Paradise to the women, for it must be confessed
|
|
that the white rovers gave far better care and treatment of them
|
|
than did their Indian copartners. Of course, the white men
|
|
themselves were satisfied with such deals, as were also the Indian men
|
|
for that matter. Having sold their daughters and sisters for cotton
|
|
blankets and obsolete rifles and traded their warm furs for flimsy
|
|
calico and bad whisky, the sons of the soil promptly and cheerfully
|
|
succumbed to quick consumption and other swift diseases correlated
|
|
with the blessings of a superior civilization.
|
|
It was in these days of Arcadian simplicity that Cal Galbraith
|
|
journeyed through the land and fell sick on the Lower River. It was
|
|
a refreshing advent in the lives of the good Sisters of the Holy
|
|
Cross, who gave him shelter and medicine; though they little dreamed
|
|
of the hot elixir infused into his veins by the touch of their soft
|
|
hands and their gentle ministrations. Cal Galbraith, became troubled
|
|
with strange thoughts which clamored for attention till he laid eyes
|
|
on the Mission girl, Madeline. Yet he gave no sign, biding his time
|
|
patiently. He strengthened with the coming spring, and when the sun
|
|
rode the heavens in a golden circle, and the joy and throb of life was
|
|
in all the land, he gathered his still weak body together and
|
|
departed.
|
|
Now, Madeline, the Mission girl, was an orphan. Her white father had
|
|
failed to give a bald-faced grizzly the trail one day, and had died
|
|
quickly. Then her Indian mother, having no man to fill the winter
|
|
cache, had tried the hazardous experiment of waiting till the
|
|
salmon-run on fifty pounds of flour and half as many of bacon. After
|
|
that, the baby, Chook-ra, went to live with the good Sisters, and to
|
|
be thenceforth known by another name.
|
|
But Madeline still had kinsfolk, the nearest being a dissolute uncle
|
|
who outraged his vitals with inordinate quantities of the white
|
|
man's whisky. He strove daily to walk with the gods, and incidentally,
|
|
his feet sought shorter trails to the grave. When sober he suffered
|
|
exquisite torture. He had no conscience. To this ancient vagabond
|
|
Cal Galbraith duly presented himself, and they consumed many words and
|
|
much tobacco in the conversation that followed. Promises were also
|
|
made; and in the end the old heathen took a few pounds of dried salmon
|
|
and his birch-bark canoe, and paddled away to the Mission of the
|
|
Holy Cross.
|
|
It is not given the world to know what promises he made and what
|
|
lies he told- the Sisters never gossip; but when he returned, upon his
|
|
swarthy chest there was a brass crucifix, and in his canoe his niece
|
|
Madeline. That night there was a grand wedding and a potlach; so
|
|
that for two days to follow there was no fishing done by the
|
|
village. But in the morning Madeline shook the dust of the Lower River
|
|
from her moccasins, and with her husband, in a poling-boat, went to
|
|
live on the Upper River in a place known as the Lower Country. And
|
|
in the years which followed she was a good wife, sharing her husband's
|
|
hardships and cooking his food. And she kept him in straight trails,
|
|
till he learned to save his dust and to work mightily. In the end,
|
|
he struck it rich and built a cabin in Circle City; and his
|
|
happiness was such that men who came to visit him in his home-circle
|
|
became restless at the sight of it and envied him greatly.
|
|
But the Northland began to mature and social amenities to make their
|
|
appearance. Hitherto, the Southland had sent forth its sons; but it
|
|
now belched forth a new exodus- this time of its daughters. Sisters
|
|
and wives they were not; but they did not fail to put new ideas in the
|
|
heads of the men, and to elevate the tone of things in ways peculiarly
|
|
their own. No more did the squaws gather at the dances, go roaring
|
|
down the center in the good, old Virginia reels, or make merry with
|
|
jolly 'Dan Tucker.' They fell back on their natural stoicism and
|
|
uncomplainingly watched the rule of their white sisters from their
|
|
cabins.
|
|
Then another exodus came over the mountains from the prolific
|
|
Southland. This time it was of women that became mighty in the land.
|
|
Their word was law; their law was steel. They frowned upon the
|
|
Indian wives, while the other women became mild and walked humbly.
|
|
There were cowards who became ashamed of their ancient covenants
|
|
with the daughters of the soil, who looked with a new distaste upon
|
|
their dark-skinned children; but there were also others- men- who
|
|
remained true and proud of their aboriginal vows. When it became the
|
|
fashion to divorce the native wives. Cal Galbraith retained his
|
|
manhood, and in so doing felt the heavy hand of the women who had come
|
|
last, knew least, but who ruled the land.
|
|
One day, the Upper Country, which lies far above Circle City, was
|
|
pronounced rich. Dog-teams carried the news to Salt Water; golden
|
|
argosies freighted the lure across the North Pacific; wires and cables
|
|
sang with the tidings; and the world heard for the first time of the
|
|
Klondike River and the Yukon Country.
|
|
|
|
Cal Galbraith had lived the years quietly. He had been a good
|
|
husband to Madeline, and she had blessed him. But somehow discontent
|
|
fell upon him; he felt vague yearnings for his own kind, for the
|
|
life he had been shut out from- a general sort of desire, which men
|
|
sometimes feel, to break out and taste the prime of living. Besides,
|
|
there drifted down the river wild rumors of the wonderful El Dorado,
|
|
glowing descriptions of the city of logs and tents, and ludicrous
|
|
accounts of the che-cha-quas who had rushed in and were stampeding the
|
|
whole country. Circle City was dead. The world had moved on up river
|
|
and become a new and most marvelous world.
|
|
Cal Galbraith grew restless on the edge of things, and wished to see
|
|
with his own eyes. So, after the wash-up, he weighed in a couple of
|
|
hundred pounds of dust on the Company's big scales, and took a draft
|
|
for the same on Dawson. Then he put Tom Dixon in charge of his
|
|
mines, kissed Madeline good-by, promised to be back before the first
|
|
mush-ice ran, and took passage on an up-river steamer.
|
|
Madeline waited, waited through all the three months of daylight.
|
|
She fed the dogs, gave much of her time to Young Cal, watched the
|
|
short summer fade away and the sun begin its long journey to the
|
|
south. And she prayed much in the manner of the Sisters of the Holy
|
|
Cross. The fall came, and with it there was mush-ice on the Yukon, and
|
|
Circle City kings returning to the winter's work at their mines, but
|
|
no Cal Galbraith. Tom Dixon received a letter, however, for his men
|
|
sledded up her winter's supply of dry pine. The Company received a
|
|
letter for its dog-teams filled her cache with their best
|
|
provisions, and she was told that her credit was limitless.
|
|
Through all the ages man has been held the chief instigator of the
|
|
woes of woman; but in this case the men held their tongues and swore
|
|
harshly at one of their number who was away, while the women failed
|
|
utterly to emulate them. So, without needless delay, Madeline heard
|
|
strange tales of Cal Galbraith's doings; also, of a certain Greek
|
|
dancer who played with men as children did with bubbles. Now
|
|
Madeline was an Indian woman, and further, she had no woman friend
|
|
to whom to go for wise counsel. She prayed and planned by turns, and
|
|
that night, being quick of resolve and action, she harnessed the dogs,
|
|
and with Young Cal securely lashed to the sled, stole away.
|
|
Though the Yukon still ran free, the eddy-ice was growing, and
|
|
each day saw the river dwindling to a slushy thread. Save him who
|
|
has done the like, no man may know what she endured in traveling a
|
|
hundred miles on the rim-ice; nor may they understand the toil and
|
|
hardship of breaking the two hundred miles of packed ice which
|
|
remained after the river froze for good. But Madeline was an Indian
|
|
woman, so she did these things, and one night there came a knock at
|
|
Malemute Kid's door. Thereat he fed a team of starving dogs, put a
|
|
healthy youngster to bed, and turned his attention to an exhausted
|
|
woman. He removed her ice-bound moccasins while he listened to her
|
|
tale, and stuck the point of his knife into her feet that he might see
|
|
how far they were frozen.
|
|
Despite his tremendous virility, Malemute Kid was possessed of a
|
|
softer, womanly element, which could win the confidence of a
|
|
snarling wolf-dog or draw confessions from the most wintry heart.
|
|
Nor did he seek them. Hearts opened to him as spontaneously as flowers
|
|
to the sun. Even the priest, Father Roubeau, had been known to confess
|
|
to him, while the men and women of the Northland were ever knocking at
|
|
his door- a door from which the latch-string hung always out. To
|
|
Madeline, he could do no wrong, make no mistake. She had known him
|
|
from the time she first cast her lot among the people of her
|
|
father's race; and to her half-barbaric mind it seemed that in him was
|
|
centered the wisdom of the ages, that between his vision and the
|
|
future there could be no intervening veil.
|
|
There were false ideals in the land. The social strictures of Dawson
|
|
were not synonymous with those of the previous era, and the swift
|
|
maturity of the Northland involved much wrong. Malemute Kid was
|
|
aware of this, and he had Cal Galbraith's measure accurately. He
|
|
knew a hasty word was the father of much evil; besides, he was
|
|
minded to teach a great lesson and bring shame upon the man. So
|
|
Stanley Prince, the young mining expert, was called into the
|
|
conference the following night as was also Lucky Jack Harrington and
|
|
his violin. That same night, Bettles, who owed a great debt to
|
|
Malemute Kid, harnessed up Cal Galbraith's dogs, lashed Cal Galbraith,
|
|
Junior, to the sled, and slipped away in the dark for Stuart River.
|
|
II
|
|
|
|
'So; one- two- three, one- two- three. Now reverse! No, no! Start up
|
|
again, Jack. See- this way.' Prince executed the movement as one
|
|
should who has led the cotillion.
|
|
'Now; one- two- three, one- two- three. Reverse! Ah! that's
|
|
better. Try it again. I say, you know, you mustn't look at your
|
|
feet. One- two- three, one- two- three. Shorter steps! You are not
|
|
hanging to the gee-pole just now. Try it over. There! that's the
|
|
way. One- two- three, one- two- three.'
|
|
Round and round went Prince and Madeline in an interminable waltz.
|
|
The table and stools had been shoved over against the wall to increase
|
|
the room. Malemute Kid sat on the bunk, chin to knees, greatly
|
|
interested. Jack Harrington sat beside him, scraping away on his
|
|
violin and following the dancers.
|
|
It was a unique situation, the undertaking of these three men with
|
|
the woman. The most pathetic part, perhaps, was the businesslike way
|
|
in which they went about it. No athlete was ever trained more
|
|
rigidly for a coming contest, nor wolf-dog for the harness, than was
|
|
she. But they had good material, for Madeline, unlike most women of
|
|
her race, in her childhood had escaped the carrying of heavy burdens
|
|
and the toil of the trail. Besides, she was a clean-limbed, willowy
|
|
creature, possessed of much grace which had not hitherto been
|
|
realized. It was this grace which the men strove to bring out and
|
|
knock into shape.
|
|
'Trouble with her she learned to dance all wrong,' Prince remarked
|
|
to the bunk after having deposited his breathless pupil on the
|
|
table. 'She's quick at picking up; yet I could do better had she never
|
|
danced a step. But say, Kid, I can't understand this.' Prince imitated
|
|
a peculiar movement of the shoulders and head- a weakness Madeline
|
|
suffered from in walking.
|
|
'Lucky for her she was raised in the Mission,' Malemute Kid
|
|
answered. 'Packing, you know,- the head-strap. Other Indian women have
|
|
it bad, but she didn't do any packing till after she married, and then
|
|
only at first. Saw hard lines with that husband of hers. They went
|
|
through the Forty-Mile famine together.'
|
|
'But can we break it?'
|
|
'Don't know. Perhaps long walks with her trainers will make the
|
|
riffle. Anyway, they'll take it out some, won't they, Madeline?'
|
|
The girl nodded assent. If Malemute Kid, who knew all things, said
|
|
so, why it was so. That was all there was about it.
|
|
She had come over to them, anxious to begin again. Harrington
|
|
surveyed her in quest of her points much in the same manner men
|
|
usually do horses. It certainly was not disappointing, for he asked
|
|
with sudden interest, 'What did that beggarly uncle of yours get
|
|
anyway?'
|
|
'One rifle, one blanket, twenty bottles of hooch. Rifle broke.'
|
|
She said this last scornfully, as though disgusted at how low her
|
|
maiden-value had been rated.
|
|
She spoke fair English, with many peculiarities of her husband's
|
|
speech, but there was still perceptible the Indian accent, the
|
|
traditional groping after strange gutturals. Even this her instructors
|
|
had taken in hand, and with no small success, too.
|
|
At the next intermission, Prince discovered a new predicament.
|
|
'I say, Kid,' he said, 'we're wrong, all wrong. She can't learn in
|
|
moccasins. Put her feet into slippers, and then onto that waxed floor-
|
|
phew!'
|
|
Madeline raised a foot and regarded her shapeless house-moccasins
|
|
dubiously. In previous winters, both at Circle City and Forty-Mile,
|
|
she had danced many a night away with similar footgear, and there
|
|
had been nothing the matter. But now- well, if there was anything
|
|
wrong it was for Malemute Kid to know, not her.
|
|
But Malemute Kid did know, and he had a good eye for measures; so he
|
|
put on his cap and mittens and went down the hill to pay Mrs.
|
|
Eppingwell a call. Her husband, Clove Eppingwell, was prominent in the
|
|
community as one of the great Government officials. The Kid had
|
|
noted her slender little foot one night, at the Governor's Ball. And
|
|
as he also knew her to be as sensible as she was pretty, it was no
|
|
task to ask of her a certain small favor.
|
|
On his return, Madeline withdrew for a moment to the inner room.
|
|
When she reappeared Prince was startled.
|
|
'By Jove!' he gasped. 'Who'd a' thought it! The little witch! Why my
|
|
sister-'
|
|
'Is an English girl,' interrupted Malemute Kid, 'with an English
|
|
foot. This girl comes of a small-footed race. Moccasins just broadened
|
|
her feet healthily, while she did not misshape them by running with
|
|
the dogs in her childhood.'
|
|
But this explanation failed utterly to allay Prince's admiration.
|
|
Harrington's commercial instinct was touched, and as he looked upon
|
|
the exquisitely turned foot and ankle, there ran through his mind
|
|
the sordid list- 'One rifle, one blanket, twenty bottles of hooch.'
|
|
Madeline was the wife of a king, a king whose yellow treasure
|
|
could buy outright a score of fashion's puppets; yet in all her life
|
|
her feet had known no gear save red-tanned moosehide. At first she had
|
|
looked in awe at the tiny white-satin slippers; but she had quickly
|
|
understood the admiration which shone, manlike, in the eyes of the
|
|
men. Her face flushed with pride. For the moment she was drunken
|
|
with her woman's loveliness; then she murmured, with increased
|
|
scorn, 'And one rifle, broke!'
|
|
|
|
So the training went on. Every day Malemute Kid led the girl out
|
|
on long walks devoted to the correction of her carriage and the
|
|
shortening of her stride. There was little likelihood of her
|
|
identity being discovered, for Cal Galbraith and the rest of the
|
|
Old-Timers were like lost children among the many strangers who had
|
|
rushed into the land. Besides, the frost of the North has a bitter
|
|
tongue, and the tender women of the South, to shield their cheeks from
|
|
its biting caresses, were prone to the use of canvas masks. With faces
|
|
obscured and bodies lost in squirrel-skin parkas, a mother and
|
|
daughter, meeting on trail, would pass as strangers.
|
|
The coaching progressed rapidly. At first it had been slow, but
|
|
later a sudden acceleration had manifested itself. This began from the
|
|
moment Madeline tried on the white-satin slippers, and in so doing
|
|
found herself. The pride of her renegade father, apart from any
|
|
natural self-esteem she might possess, at that instant received its
|
|
birth. Hitherto, she had deemed herself a woman of an alien breed,
|
|
of inferior stock, purchased by her lord's favor. Her husband had
|
|
seemed to her a god, who had lifted her, through no essential
|
|
virtues on her part, to his own godlike level. But she had never
|
|
forgotten, even when Young Cal was born, that she was not of his
|
|
people. As he had been a god, so had his womenkind been goddesses. She
|
|
might have contrasted herself with them, but she had never compared.
|
|
It might have been that familiarity bred contempt; however, be that as
|
|
it may, she had ultimately come to understand these roving white
|
|
men, and to weigh them. True, her mind was dark to deliberate
|
|
analysis, but she yet possessed her woman's clarity of vision in
|
|
such matters. On the night of the slippers she had measured the
|
|
bold, open admiration of her three man-friends; and for the first time
|
|
comparison had suggested itself. It was only a foot and an ankle, but-
|
|
but comparison could not, in the nature of things, cease at that
|
|
point. She judged herself by their standards till the divinity of
|
|
her white sisters was shattered. After all, they were only women,
|
|
and why should she not exalt herself to their midst? In doing these
|
|
things she learned where she lacked and with the knowledge of her
|
|
weakness came her strength. And so mightily did she strive that her
|
|
three trainers often marveled late into the night over the eternal
|
|
mystery of woman.
|
|
In this way Thanksgiving Night drew near. At irregular intervals
|
|
Bettles sent word down from Stuart River regarding the welfare of
|
|
Young Cal. The time of their return was approaching. More than once
|
|
a casual caller, hearing dance-music and the rhythmic pulse of feet,
|
|
entered, only to find Harrington scraping away and the other two
|
|
beating time or arguing noisily over a mooted step. Madeline was never
|
|
in evidence, having precipitately fled to the inner room.
|
|
On one of these nights Cal Galbraith dropped in. Encouraging news
|
|
had just come down from Stuart River, and Madeline had surpassed
|
|
herself- not in walk alone, and carriage and grace, but in womanly
|
|
roguishness. They had indulged in sharp repartee and she had
|
|
defended herself brilliantly; and then, yielding to the intoxication
|
|
of the moment, and of her own power, she had bullied, and mastered,
|
|
and wheedled, and patronized them with most astonishing success. And
|
|
instinctively, involuntarily, they had bowed, not to her beauty, her
|
|
wisdom, her wit, but to that indefinable something in woman to which
|
|
man yields yet cannot name. The room was dizzy with sheer delight as
|
|
she and Prince whirled through the last dance of the evening.
|
|
Harrington was throwing in inconceivable flourishes, while Malemute
|
|
Kid, utterly abandoned, had seized the broom and was executing mad
|
|
gyrations on his own account.
|
|
At this instant the door shook with a heavy rap-rap, and their quick
|
|
glances noted the lifting of the latch. But they had survived
|
|
similar situations before. Harrington never broke a note. Madeline
|
|
shot through the waiting door to the inner room. The broom went
|
|
hurtling under the bunk, and by the time Cal Galbraith and Louis Savoy
|
|
got their heads in, Malemute Kid and Prince were in each other's arms,
|
|
wildly schottisching down the room.
|
|
As a rule, Indian women do not make a practice of fainting on
|
|
provocation, but Madeline came as near to it as she ever had in her
|
|
life. For an hour she crouched on the floor, listening to the heavy
|
|
voices of the men rumbling up and down in mimic thunder. Like familiar
|
|
chords of childhood melodies, every intonation, every trick of her
|
|
husband's voice swept in upon her, fluttering her heart and
|
|
weakening her knees till she lay half-fainting against the door. It
|
|
was well she could neither see nor hear when he took his departure.
|
|
'When do you expect to go back to Circle City?' Malemute Kid asked
|
|
simply.
|
|
'Haven't thought much about it,' he replied. 'Don't think till after
|
|
the ice breaks.'
|
|
'And Madeline?'
|
|
He flushed at the question, and there was a quick droop to his eyes.
|
|
Malemute Kid could have despised him for that, had he known men
|
|
less. As it was, his gorge rose against the wives and daughters who
|
|
had come into the land, and not satisfied with usurping the place of
|
|
the native women, had put unclean thoughts in the heads of the men and
|
|
made them ashamed.
|
|
'I guess she's all right,' the Circle City King answered hastily,
|
|
and in an apologetic manner. 'Tom Dixon's got charge of my
|
|
interests, you know, and he sees to it that she has everything she
|
|
wants.'
|
|
Malemute Kid laid hand upon his arm and hushed him suddenly. They
|
|
had stepped without. Overhead, the aurora, a gorgeous wanton, flaunted
|
|
miracles of color; beneath lay the sleeping town. Far below, a
|
|
solitary dog gave tongue. The King again began to speak, but the Kid
|
|
pressed his hand for silence. The sound multiplied. Dog after dog took
|
|
up the strain till the full-throated chorus swayed the night. To him
|
|
who hears for the first time this weird song, is told the first and
|
|
greatest secret of the Northland; to him who has heard it often, it is
|
|
the solemn knell of lost endeavor. It is the plaint of tortured souls,
|
|
for in it is invested the heritage of the North, the suffering of
|
|
countless generations- the warning and the requiem to the world's
|
|
estrays.
|
|
Cal Galbraith shivered slightly as it died away in half-caught sobs.
|
|
The Kid read his thoughts openly, and wandered back with him through
|
|
all the weary days of famine and disease; and with him was also the
|
|
patient Madeline, sharing his pains and perils, never doubting,
|
|
never complaining. His mind's retina vibrated to a score of
|
|
pictures, stern, clear-cut, and the hand of the past drew back with
|
|
heavy fingers on his heart. It was the psychological moment.
|
|
Malemute Kid was half-tempted to play his reserve card and win the
|
|
game; but the lesson was too mild as yet, and he let it pass. The next
|
|
instant they had gripped hands, and the King's beaded moccasins were
|
|
drawing protests from the outraged snow as he crunched down the hill.
|
|
Madeline in collapse was another woman to the mischievous creature
|
|
of an hour before, whose laughter had been so infectious and whose
|
|
heightened color and flashing eyes had made her teachers for the while
|
|
forget. Weak and nerveless, she sat in the chair just as she had
|
|
been dropped there by Prince and Harrington. Malemute Kid frowned.
|
|
This would never do. When the time of meeting her husband came to
|
|
hand, she must carry things off with high-handed imperiousness. It was
|
|
very necessary she should do it after the manner of white women,
|
|
else the victory would be no victory at all. So he talked to her,
|
|
sternly, without mincing of words, and initiated her into the
|
|
weaknesses of his own sex, till she came to understand what simpletons
|
|
men were after all, and why the word of their women was law.
|
|
A few days before Thanksgiving Night, Malemute Kid made another call
|
|
on Mrs. Eppingwell. She promptly overhauled her feminine fripperies,
|
|
paid a protracted visit to the dry-goods department of the P. C.
|
|
Company, and returned with the Kid to make Madeline's acquaintance.
|
|
After that came a period such as the cabin had never seen before,
|
|
and what with cutting, and fitting, and basting, and stitching, and
|
|
numerous other wonderful and unknowable things, the male
|
|
conspirators were more often banished the premises than not. At such
|
|
times the Opera House opened its double storm-doors to them. So
|
|
often did they put their heads together, and so deeply did they
|
|
drink to curious toasts, that the loungers scented unknown creeks of
|
|
incalculable richness, and it is known that several che-cha-quas and
|
|
at least one Old-Timer kept their stampeding packs stored behind the
|
|
bar, ready to hit the trail at a moment's notice.
|
|
Mrs. Eppingwell was a woman of capacity; so, when she turned
|
|
Madeline over to her trainers on Thanksgiving Night she was so
|
|
transformed that they were almost afraid of her. Prince wrapped a
|
|
Hudson Bay blanket about her with a mock reverence more real than
|
|
feigned, while Malemute Kid, whose arm she had taken, found it a
|
|
severe trial to resume his wonted mentorship. Harrington, with the
|
|
list of purchases still running through his head, dragged along in the
|
|
rear, nor opened his mouth once all the way down into the town. When
|
|
they came to the back door of the Opera House they took the blanket
|
|
from Madeline's shoulders and spread it on the snow. Slipping out of
|
|
Prince's moccasins, she stepped upon it in new satin slippers. The
|
|
masquerade was at its height. She hesitated, but they jerked open
|
|
the door and shoved her in. Then they ran around to come in by the
|
|
front entrance.
|
|
III
|
|
III
|
|
|
|
'Where is Freda?' the Old-Timers questioned, while the
|
|
che-cha-quas were equally energetic in asking who Freda was. The
|
|
ballroom buzzed with her name. It was on everybody's lips. Grizzled
|
|
'sour-dough boys,' day-laborers at the mines but proud of their
|
|
degree, either patronized the spruce-looking tenderfeet and lied
|
|
eloquently- the 'sour-dough boys' being specially created to toy
|
|
with truth- or gave them savage looks of indignation because of
|
|
their ignorance. Perhaps forty kings of the Upper and Lower
|
|
Countries were on the floor, each deeming himself hot on the trail and
|
|
sturdily backing his judgment with the yellow dust of the realm. An
|
|
assistant was sent to the man at the scales, upon whom had fallen
|
|
the burden of weighing up the sacks, while several of the gamblers,
|
|
with the rules of chance at their finger-ends, made up alluring
|
|
books on the field and favorites.
|
|
Which was Freda? Time and again the 'Greek Dancer' was thought to
|
|
have been discovered, but each discovery brought panic to the
|
|
betting ring and a frantic registering of new wagers by those who
|
|
wished to hedge. Malemute Kid took an interest in the hunt, his advent
|
|
being hailed uproariously by the revelers, who knew him to a man.
|
|
The Kid had a good eye for the trick of a step, and ear for the lilt
|
|
of a voice, and his private choice was a marvelous creature who
|
|
scintillated as the 'Aurora Borealis.' But the Greek dancer was too
|
|
subtle for even his penetration. The majority of the gold-hunters
|
|
seemed to have centered their verdict on the 'Russian Princess,' who
|
|
was the most graceful in the room, and hence could be no other than
|
|
Freda Moloof.
|
|
During a quadrille a roar of satisfaction went up. She was
|
|
discovered. At previous balls, in the figure, 'all hands round,' Freda
|
|
had displayed an inimitable step and variation peculiarly her own.
|
|
As the figure was called, the 'Russian Princess' gave the unique
|
|
rhythm to limb and body. A chorus of I-told-you-so's shook the squared
|
|
roof-beams, when lo! it was noticed that 'Aurora Borealis' and another
|
|
masque, the 'Spirit of the Pole,' were performing the same trick
|
|
equally well. And when two twin 'Sun-Dogs' and a 'Frost Queen'
|
|
followed suit, a second assistant was dispatched to the aid of the man
|
|
at the scales.
|
|
Bettles came off trail in the midst of the excitement, descending
|
|
upon them in a hurricane of frost. His rimed brows turned to cataracts
|
|
as he whirled about; his mustache, still frozen, seemed gemmed with
|
|
diamonds and turned the light in varicolored rays; while the flying
|
|
feet slipped on the chunks of ice which rattled from his moccasins and
|
|
German socks. A Northland dance is quite an informal affair, the men
|
|
of the creeks and trails having lost whatever fastidiousness they
|
|
might have at one time possessed; and only in the high official
|
|
circles are conventions at all observed. Here, caste carried no
|
|
significance. Millionaires and paupers, dog-drivers and mounted
|
|
policemen joined hands with 'ladies in the center,' and swept around
|
|
the circle performing most remarkable capers. Primitive in their
|
|
pleasure, boisterous and rough, they displayed no rudeness, but rather
|
|
a crude chivalry more genuine than the most polished courtesy.
|
|
In his quest for the 'Greek Dancer,' Cal Galbraith managed to get
|
|
into the same set with the 'Russian Princess,' toward whom popular
|
|
suspicion had turned. But by the time he had guided her through one
|
|
dance, he was willing not only to stake his millions that she was
|
|
not Freda, but that he had had his arm about her waist before. When or
|
|
where he could not tell, but the puzzling sense of familiarity so
|
|
wrought upon him that he turned his attention to the discovery of
|
|
her identity. Malemute Kid might have aided him instead of
|
|
occasionally taking the Princess for a few turns and talking earnestly
|
|
to her in low tones. But it was Jack Harrington who paid the
|
|
'Russian Princess' the most assiduous court. Once he drew Cal
|
|
Galbraith aside and hazarded wild guesses as to who she was, and
|
|
explained to him that he was going in to win. That rankled the
|
|
Circle City King, for man is not by nature monogamic, and he forgot
|
|
both Madeline and Freda in the new quest.
|
|
It was soon noised about that the 'Russian Princess' was not Freda
|
|
Moloof. Interest deepened. Here was a fresh enigma. They knew Freda
|
|
though they could not find her, but here was somebody they had found
|
|
and did not know. Even the women could not place her, and they knew
|
|
every good dancer in the camp. Many took her for one of the official
|
|
clique, indulging in a silly escapade. Not a few asserted she would
|
|
disappear before the unmasking. Others were equally positive that
|
|
she was the woman-reporter of the Kansas City Star, come to write them
|
|
up at ninety dollars per column. And the men at the scales worked
|
|
busily.
|
|
At one o'clock every couple took to the floor. The unmasking began
|
|
amid laughter and delight, like that of carefree children. There was
|
|
no end of Oh's and Ah's as mask after mask was lifted. The
|
|
scintillating 'Aurora Borealis' became the brawny negress whose income
|
|
from washing the community's clothes ran at about five hundred a
|
|
month. The twin 'Sun-Dogs' discovered mustaches on their upper lips,
|
|
and were recognized as brother Fraction-Kings of El Dorado. In one
|
|
of the most prominent sets, and the slowest in uncovering, was Cal
|
|
Galbraith with the 'Spirit of the Pole.' Opposite him was Jack
|
|
Harrington and the 'Russian Princess.' The rest had discovered
|
|
themselves, yet the 'Greek Dancer' was still missing. All eyes were
|
|
upon the group. Cal Galbraith, in response to their cries, lifted
|
|
his partner's mask. Freda's wonderful face and brilliant eyes
|
|
flashed out upon them. A roar went up, to be squelched suddenly in the
|
|
new and absorbing mystery of the 'Russian Princess.' Her face was
|
|
still hidden, and Jack Harrington was struggling with her. The dancers
|
|
tittered on the tiptoes of expectancy. He crushed her dainty costume
|
|
roughly, and then- and then the revelers exploded. The joke was on
|
|
them. They had danced all night with a tabooed native woman.
|
|
But those that knew, and they were many, ceased abruptly, and a hush
|
|
fell upon the room. Cal Galbraith crossed over with great strides,
|
|
angrily, and spoke to Madeline in polyglot Chinook. But she retained
|
|
her composure, apparently oblivious to the fact that she was the
|
|
cynosure of all eyes, and answered him in English. She showed
|
|
neither fright nor anger, and Malemute Kid chuckled at her well-bred
|
|
equanimity. The King felt baffled, defeated; his common Siwash wife
|
|
had passed beyond him.
|
|
'Come!' he said finally. 'Come on home.'
|
|
'I beg pardon,' she replied; 'I have agreed to go to supper with Mr.
|
|
Harrington. Besides, there's no end of dances promised.'
|
|
Harrington extended his arm to lead her away. He evinced not the
|
|
slightest disinclination toward showing his back, but Malemute Kid had
|
|
by this time edged in closer. The Circle City King was stunned.
|
|
Twice his hand dropped to his belt, and twice the Kid gathered himself
|
|
to spring; but the retreating couple passed through the supper-room
|
|
door where canned oysters were spread at five dollars the plate. The
|
|
crowd sighed audibly, broke up into couples, and followed them.
|
|
Freda pouted and went in with Cal Galbraith; but she had a good
|
|
heart and a sure tongue, and she spoiled his oysters for him. What she
|
|
said is of no importance, but his face went red and white at
|
|
intervals, and he swore repeatedly and savagely at himself.
|
|
The supper-room was filled with a pandemonium of voices, which
|
|
ceased suddenly as Cal Galbraith stepped over to his wife's table.
|
|
Since the unmasking considerable weights of dust had been placed as to
|
|
the outcome. Everybody watched with breathless interest.
|
|
Harrington's blue eyes were steady, but under the overhanging
|
|
tablecloth a Smith & Wesson balanced on his knee. Madeline looked
|
|
up, casually, with little interest.
|
|
'May- may I have the next round dance with you?' the King stuttered.
|
|
The wife of the King glanced at her card and inclined her head.
|
|
AN ODYSSEY OF THE NORTH.
|
|
|
|
THE SLEDS WERE SINGING their eternal lament to the creaking of the
|
|
harness and the tinkling bells of the leaders; but the men and dogs
|
|
were tired and made no sound. The trail was heavy with new-fallen
|
|
snow, and they had come far, and the runners, burdened with flint-like
|
|
quarters of frozen moose, clung tenaciously to the unpacked surface
|
|
and held back with a stubbornness almost human. Darkness was coming
|
|
on, but there was no camp to pitch that night. The snow fell gently
|
|
through the pulseless air, not in flakes, but in tiny frost crystals
|
|
of delicate design. It was very warm- barely ten below zero- and the
|
|
men did not mind. Meyers and Bettles had raised their ear flaps, while
|
|
Malemute Kid had even taken off his mittens.
|
|
The dogs had been fagged out early in the after noon, but they now
|
|
began to show new vigor. Among the more astute there was a certain
|
|
restlessness- an impatience at the restraint of the traces, an
|
|
indecisive quickness of movement, a sniffing of snouts and pricking of
|
|
ears. These became incensed at their more phlegmatic brothers,
|
|
urging them on with numerous sly nips on their hinder quarters. Those,
|
|
thus chidden, also contracted and helped spread the contagion. At last
|
|
the leader of the foremost sled uttered a sharp whine of satisfaction,
|
|
crouching lower in the snow and throwing himself against the collar.
|
|
The rest followed suit. There was an ingathering of back hands, a
|
|
tightening of traces; the sleds leaped forward, and the men clung to
|
|
the gee poles, violently accelerating the uplift of their feet that
|
|
they might escape going under the runners. The weariness of the day
|
|
fell from them, and they whooped encouragement to the dogs. The
|
|
animals responded with joyous yelps. They were swinging through the
|
|
gathering darkness at a rattling gallop.
|
|
'Gee! Gee!' the men cried, each in turn, as their sleds abruptly
|
|
left the main trail, heeling over on single runners like luggers on
|
|
the wind.
|
|
Then came a hundred yards' dash to the lighted parchment window,
|
|
which told its own story of the home cabin, the roaring Yukon stove,
|
|
and the steaming pots of tea. But the home cabin had been invaded.
|
|
Threescore huskies chorused defiance, and as many furry forms
|
|
precipitated themselves upon the dogs which drew the first sled. The
|
|
door was flung open, and a man, clad in the scarlet tunic of the
|
|
Northwest Police, waded knee-deep among the furious brutes, calmly and
|
|
impartially dispensing soothing justice with the butt end of a dog
|
|
whip. After that the men shook hands; and in this wise was Malemute
|
|
Kid welcomed to his own cabin by a stranger.
|
|
Stanley Prince, who should have welcomed him, and who was
|
|
responsible for the Yukon stove and hot tea aforementioned, was busy
|
|
with his guests. There were a dozen or so of them, as nondescript a
|
|
crowd as ever served the Queen in the enforcement of her laws or the
|
|
delivery of her mails. They were of many breeds, but their common life
|
|
had formed of them a certain type- a lean and wiry type, with
|
|
trail-hardened muscles, and sun-browned faces, and untroubled souls
|
|
which gazed frankly forth, clear-eyed and steady. They drove the
|
|
dogs of the Queen, wrought fear in the hearts of her enemies, ate of
|
|
her meager fare, and were happy. They had seen life, and done deeds,
|
|
and lived romances; but they did not know it.
|
|
And they were very much at home. Two of them were sprawled upon
|
|
Malemute Kid's bunk, singing chansons which their French forebears
|
|
sang in the days when first they entered the Northwest land and
|
|
mated with its Indian women. Bettles' bunk had suffered a similar
|
|
invasion, and three or four lusty voyageurs worked their toes among
|
|
its blankets as they listened to the tale of one who had served on the
|
|
boat brigade with Wolseley when he fought his way to Khartoum. And
|
|
when he tired, a cowboy told of courts and kings and lords and
|
|
ladies he had seen when Buffalo Bill toured the capitals of Europe. In
|
|
a corner two half-breeds, ancient comrades in a lost campaign,
|
|
mended harnesses and talked of the days when the Northwest flamed with
|
|
insurrection and Louis Riel was king.
|
|
Rough jests and rougher jokes went up and down, and great hazards by
|
|
trail and river were spoken of in the light of commonplaces, only to
|
|
be recalled by virtue of some grain of humor or ludicrous happening.
|
|
Prince was led away by these uncrowned heroes who had seen history
|
|
made, who regarded the great and the romantic as but the ordinary
|
|
and the incidental in the routine of life. He passed his precious
|
|
tobacco among them with lavish disregard, and rusty chains of
|
|
reminiscence were loosened, and forgotten odysseys resurrected for his
|
|
especial benefit.
|
|
When conversation dropped and the travelers filled the last pipes
|
|
and lashed their tight-rolled sleeping furs. Prince fell back upon his
|
|
comrade for further information.
|
|
'Well, you know what the cowboy is,' Malemute Kid answered,
|
|
beginning to unlace his moccasins; 'and it's not hard to guess the
|
|
British blood in his bed partner. As for the rest, they're all
|
|
children of the coureurs du bois, mingled with God knows how many
|
|
other bloods. The two turning in by the door are the regulation
|
|
'breeds' or Boisbrules. That lad with the worsted breech scarf- notice
|
|
his eyebrows and the turn of his jaw- shows a Scotchman wept in his
|
|
mother's smoky tepee. And that handsome looking fellow putting the
|
|
capote under his head is a French half-breed- you heard him talking;
|
|
he doesn't like the two Indians turning in next to him. You see,
|
|
when the 'breeds' rose under the Riel the full-bloods kept the
|
|
peace, and they've not lost much love for one another since.'
|
|
'But I say, what's that glum-looking fellow by the stove? I'll swear
|
|
he can't talk English. He hasn't opened his mouth all night.'
|
|
'You're wrong. He knows English well enough. Did you follow his eyes
|
|
when he listened? I did. But he's neither kith nor kin to the
|
|
others. When they talked their own patois you could see he didn't
|
|
understand. I've been wondering myself what he is. Let's find out.'
|
|
'Fire a couple of sticks into the stove!' Malemute Kid commanded,
|
|
raising his voice and looking squarely at the man in question.
|
|
He obeyed at once.
|
|
'Had discipline knocked into him somewhere.' Prince commented in a
|
|
low tone.
|
|
Malemute Kid nodded, took off his socks, and picked his way among
|
|
recumbent men to the stove. There he hung his damp footgear among a
|
|
score or so of mates.
|
|
'When do you expect to get to Dawson?' he asked tentatively.
|
|
The man studied him a moment before replying. 'They say seventy-five
|
|
mile. So? Maybe two days.'
|
|
The very slightest accent was perceptible, while there was no
|
|
awkward hesitancy or groping for words.
|
|
'Been in the country before?'
|
|
'No.'
|
|
'Northwest Territory?'
|
|
'Yes.'
|
|
'Born there?'
|
|
'No.'
|
|
'Well, where the devil were you born? You're none of these.'
|
|
Malemute Kid swept his hand over the dog drivers, even including the
|
|
two policemen who had turned into Prince's bunk. 'Where did you come
|
|
from? I've seen faces like yours before, though I can't remember
|
|
just where.'
|
|
'I know you,' he irrelevantly replied, at once turning the drift
|
|
of Malemute Kid's questions.
|
|
'Where? Ever see me?'
|
|
'No; your partner, him priest, Pastilik, long time ago. Him ask me
|
|
if I see you, Malemute Kid. Him give me grub. I no stop long. You hear
|
|
him speak 'bout me?'
|
|
'Oh! you're the fellow that traded the otter skins for the dogs?'
|
|
The man nodded, knocked out his pipe, and signified his
|
|
disinclination for conversation by rolling up in his furs. Malemute
|
|
Kid blew out the slush lamp and crawled under the blankets with
|
|
Prince.
|
|
'Well, what is he?'
|
|
'Don't know- turned me off, somehow, and then shut up like a clam.
|
|
But he's a fellow to whet your curiosity. I've heard of him. All the
|
|
coast wondered about him eight years ago. Sort of mysterious, you
|
|
know. He came down out of the North in the dead of winter, many a
|
|
thousand miles from here, skirting Bering Sea and traveling as
|
|
though the devil were after him. No one ever learned where he came
|
|
from, but he must have come far. He was badly travel-worn when he
|
|
got food from the Swedish missionary on Golovin Bay and asked the
|
|
way south. We heard of all this afterward. Then he abandoned the shore
|
|
line, heading right across Norton Sound. Terrible weather,
|
|
snowstorms and high winds, but he pulled through where a thousand
|
|
other men would have died, missing St. Michaels and making the land at
|
|
Pastilik. He'd lost all but two dogs, and was nearly gone with
|
|
starvation.
|
|
'He was so anxious to go on that Father Roubeau fitted him out
|
|
with grub; but he couldn't let him have any dogs, for he was only
|
|
waiting my arrival, to go on a trip himself. Mr. Ulysses knew too much
|
|
to start on without animals, and fretted around for several days. He
|
|
had on his sled a bunch of beautifully cured otter skins, sea
|
|
otters, you know, worth their weight in gold. There was also at
|
|
Pastilik an old Shylock of a Russian trader, who had dogs to kill.
|
|
Well, they didn't dicker very long, but when the Strange One headed
|
|
south again, it was in the rear of a spanking dog team. Mr. Shylock,
|
|
by the way, had the otter skins. I saw them, and they were
|
|
magnificent. We figured it up and found the dogs brought him at
|
|
least five hundred apiece. And it wasn't as if the Strange One
|
|
didn't know the value of sea otter; he was an Indian of some sort, and
|
|
what little he talked showed he'd been among white men.
|
|
'After the ice passed out of the sea, word came up from Nunivak
|
|
Island that he'd gone in there for grub. Then he dropped from sight,
|
|
and this is the first heard of him in eight years. Now where did he
|
|
come from? and what was he doing there? and why did he come from
|
|
there? He's Indian, he's been nobody knows where, and he's had
|
|
discipline, which is unusual for an Indian. Another mystery of the
|
|
North for you to solve, Prince.'
|
|
'Thanks awfully, but I've got too many on hand as it is,' he
|
|
replied.
|
|
Malemute Kid was already breathing heavily; but the young mining
|
|
engineer gazed straight up through the thick darkness, waiting for the
|
|
strange orgasm which stirred his blood to die away. And when he did
|
|
sleep, his brain worked on, and for the nonce he, too, wandered
|
|
through the white unknown, struggled with the dogs on endless
|
|
trails, and saw men live, and toil, and die like men.
|
|
|
|
The next morning, hours before daylight, the dog drivers and
|
|
policemen pulled out for Dawson. But the powers that saw to Her
|
|
Majesty's interests and ruled the destinies of her lesser creatures
|
|
gave the mailmen little rest, for a week later they appeared at Stuart
|
|
River, heavily burdened with letters for Salt Water. However, their
|
|
dogs had been replaced by fresh ones; but, then, they were dogs.
|
|
The men had expected some sort of a layover in which to rest up;
|
|
besides, this Klondike was a new section of the Northland, and they
|
|
had wished to see a little something of the Golden City where dust
|
|
flowed like water and dance halls rang with never-ending revelry.
|
|
But they dried their socks and smoked their evening pipes with much
|
|
the same gusto as on their former visit, though one or two bold
|
|
spirits speculated on desertion and the possibility of crossing the
|
|
unexplored Rockies to the east, and thence, by the Mackenzie Valley,
|
|
of gaining their old stamping grounds in the Chippewyan country. Two
|
|
or three even decided to return to their homes by that route when
|
|
their terms of service had expired, and they began to lay plans
|
|
forthwith, looking forward to the hazardous undertaking in much the
|
|
same way a city-bred man would to a day's holiday in the woods.
|
|
He of the Otter Skins seemed very restless, though he took little
|
|
interest in the discussion, and at last he drew Malemute Kid to one
|
|
side and talked for some time in low tones. Prince cast curious eyes
|
|
in their direction, and the mystery deepened when they put on caps and
|
|
mittens and went outside. When they returned, Malemute Kid placed
|
|
his gold scales on the table, weighed out the matter of sixty
|
|
ounces, and transferred them to the Strange One's sack. Then the chief
|
|
of the dog drivers joined the conclave, and certain business was
|
|
transacted with him. The next day the gang went on upriver, but He
|
|
of the Otter Skins took several pounds of grub and turned his steps
|
|
back toward Dawson.
|
|
'Didn't know what to make of it,' said Malemute Kid in response to
|
|
Prince's queries; 'but the poor beggar wanted to be quit of the
|
|
service for some reason or other- at least it seemed a most
|
|
important one to him, though he wouldn't let on what. You see, it's
|
|
just like the army: he signed for two years, and the only way to get
|
|
free was to buy himself out. He couldn't desert and then stay here,
|
|
and he was just wild to remain in the country. Made up his mind when
|
|
he got to Dawson, he said; but no one knew him, hadn't a cent, and I
|
|
was the only one he'd spoken two words with. So he talked it over with
|
|
the lieutenant-governor, and made arrangements in case he could get
|
|
the money from me- loan, you know. Said he'd pay back in the year,
|
|
and, if I wanted, would put me onto something rich. Never'd seen it,
|
|
but he knew it was rich.
|
|
'And talk! why, when he got me outside he was ready to weep.
|
|
Begged and pleaded; got down in the snow to me till I hauled him out
|
|
of it. Palavered around like a crazy man. Swore he's worked to this
|
|
very end for years and years, and couldn't bear to be disappointed
|
|
now. Asked him what end, but he wouldn't say. Said they might keep him
|
|
on the other half of the trail and he wouldn't get to Dawson in two
|
|
years, and then it would be too late. Never saw a man take on so in my
|
|
life. And when I said I'd let him have it, had to yank him out of
|
|
the snow again. Told him to consider it in the light of a grubstake.
|
|
Think he'd have it? No sir! Swore he'd give me all he found, make me
|
|
rich beyond the dreams of avarice, and all such stuff. Now a man who
|
|
puts his life and time against a grubstake ordinarily finds it hard
|
|
enough to turn over half of what he finds. Something behind all
|
|
this, Prince; just you make a note of it. We'll hear of him if he
|
|
stays in the country-'
|
|
'And if he doesn't?'
|
|
'Then my good nature gets a shock, and I'm sixty some odd ounces
|
|
out.'
|
|
|
|
The cold weather had come on with the long nights, and the sun had
|
|
begun to play his ancient game of peekaboo along the southern snow
|
|
line ere aught was heard of Malemute Kid's grubstake. And then, one
|
|
bleak morning in early January, a heavily laden dog train pulled
|
|
into his cabin below Stuart River. He of the Otter Skins was there,
|
|
and with him walked a man such as the gods have almost forgotten how
|
|
to fashion. Men never talked of luck and pluck and five-hundred-dollar
|
|
dirt without bringing in the name of Axel Gunderson; nor could tales
|
|
of nerve or strength or daring pass up and down the campfire without
|
|
the summoning of his presence. And when the conversation flagged, it
|
|
blazed anew at mention of the woman who shared his fortunes.
|
|
As has been noted, in the making of Axel Gunderson the gods had
|
|
remembered their old-time cunning and cast him after the manner of men
|
|
who were born when the world was young. Full seven feet he towered
|
|
in his picturesque costume which marked a king of Eldorado. His chest,
|
|
neck, and limbs were those of a giant. To bear his three hundred
|
|
pounds of bone and muscle, his snowshoes were greater by a generous
|
|
yard than those of other men. Rough-hewn, with rugged brow and massive
|
|
jaw and unflinching eyes of palest blue, his face told the tale of one
|
|
who knew but the law of might. Of the yellow of ripe corn silk, his
|
|
frost-incrusted hair swept like day across the night and fell far down
|
|
his coat of bearskin. A vague tradition of the sea seemed to cling
|
|
about him as he swung down the narrow trail in advance of the dogs;
|
|
and he brought the butt of his dog whip against Malemute Kid's door as
|
|
a Norse sea rover, on southern foray, might thunder for admittance
|
|
at the castle gate.
|
|
Prince bared his womanly arms and kneaded sour-dough bread, casting,
|
|
as he did so, many a glance at the three guests- three guests the like
|
|
of which might never come under a man's roof in a lifetime. The
|
|
Strange One, whom Malemute Kid had surnamed Ulysses, still
|
|
fascinated him; but his interest chiefly gravitated between Axel
|
|
Gunderson and Axel Gunderson's wife. She felt the day's journey, for
|
|
she had softened in comfortable cabins during the many days since
|
|
her husband mastered the wealth of frozen pay streaks, and she was
|
|
tired. She rested against his great breast like a slender flower
|
|
against a wall, replying lazily to Malemute Kid's good-natured banter,
|
|
and stirring Prince's blood strangely with an occasional sweep of
|
|
her deep, dark eyes. For Prince was a man, and healthy, and had seen
|
|
few women in many months. And she was older than he, and an Indian
|
|
besides. But she was different from all native wives he had met: she
|
|
had traveled- had been in his country among others, he gathered from
|
|
the conversation; and she knew most of the things the women of his own
|
|
race knew, and much more that it was not in the nature of things for
|
|
them to know. She could make a meal of sun-dried fish or a bed in
|
|
the snow; yet she teased them with tantalizing details of
|
|
many-course dinners, and caused strange internal dissensions to
|
|
arise at the mention of various quondam dishes which they had
|
|
well-nigh forgotten. She knew the ways of the moose, the bear, and the
|
|
little blue fox, and of the wild amphibians of the Northern seas;
|
|
she was skilled in the lore of the woods, and the streams, and the
|
|
tale writ by man and bird and beast upon the delicate snow crust was
|
|
to her an open book; yet Prince caught the appreciative twinkle in her
|
|
eye as she read the Rules of the Camp. These rules had been fathered
|
|
by the Unquenchable Bettles at a time when his blood ran high, and
|
|
were remarkable for the terse simplicity of their humor. Prince always
|
|
turned them to the wall before the arrival of ladies; but who could
|
|
suspect that this native wife- Well, it was too late now.
|
|
This, then, was the wife of Axel Gunderson, a woman whose name and
|
|
fame had traveled with her husband's, hand in hand, through all the
|
|
Northland. At table, Malemute Kid baited her with the assurance of
|
|
an old friend, and Prince shook off the shyness of first
|
|
acquaintance and joined in. But she held her own in the unequal
|
|
contest, while her husband, slower in wit, ventured naught but
|
|
applause. And he was very proud of her; his every look and action
|
|
revealed the magnitude of the place she occupied in his life. He of
|
|
the Otter Skins ate in silence, forgotten in the merry battle; and
|
|
long ere the others were done he pushed back from the table and went
|
|
out among the dogs. Yet all too soon his fellow travelers drew on
|
|
their mittens and parkas and followed him.
|
|
There had been no snow for many days, and the sleds slipped along
|
|
the hard-packed Yukon trail as easily as if it had been glare ice.
|
|
Ulysses led the first sled; with the second came Prince and Axel
|
|
Gunderson's wife; while Malemute Kid and the yellow-haired giant
|
|
brought up the third.
|
|
'It's only a hunch, Kid,' he said, 'but I think it's straight.
|
|
He's never been there, but he tells a good story, and shows a map I
|
|
heard of when I was in the Kootenay country years ago. I'd like to
|
|
have you go along; but he's a strange one, and swore point-blank to
|
|
throw it up if anyone was brought in. But when I come back you'll
|
|
get first tip, and I'll stake you next to me, and give you a half
|
|
share in the town site besides.'
|
|
'No! no!' he cried, as the other strove to interrupt. 'I'm running
|
|
this, and before I'm done it'll need two heads. If it's all right,
|
|
why, it'll be a second Cripple Creek, man; do you hear?- a second
|
|
Cripple Creek! It's quartz, you know, not placer; and if we work it
|
|
right we'll corral the whole thing- millions upon millions. I've heard
|
|
of the place before, and so have you. We'll build a town- thousands of
|
|
workmen- good waterways- steamship lines- big carrying trade-
|
|
light-draught steamers for head reaches- survey a railroad, perhaps-
|
|
sawmills- electric-light plant- do our own banking- commercial
|
|
company- syndicate- Say! Just you hold your hush till I get back!'
|
|
The sleds came to a halt where the trail crossed the mouth of Stuart
|
|
River. An unbroken sea of frost, its wide expanse stretched away
|
|
into the unknown east. The snowshoes were withdrawn from the
|
|
lashings of the sleds. Axel Gunderson shook hands and stepped to the
|
|
fore, his great webbed shoes sinking a fair half yard into the
|
|
feathery surface and packing the snow so the dogs should not wallow.
|
|
His wife fell in behind the last sled, betraying long practice in
|
|
the art of handling the awkward footgear, The stillness was broken
|
|
with cheery farewells; the dogs whined; and He of the Otter Skins
|
|
talked with his whip to a recalcitrant wheeler.
|
|
An hour later the train had taken on the likeness of a black
|
|
pencil crawling in a long, straight line across a mighty sheet of
|
|
foolscap.
|
|
II
|
|
|
|
One night, many weeks later, Malemute Kid and Prince fell to solving
|
|
chess problems from the torn page of an ancient magazine. The Kid
|
|
had just returned from his Bonanza properties and was resting up
|
|
preparatory to a long moose hunt. Prince, too, had been on creek and
|
|
trail nearly all winter, and had grown hungry for a blissful week of
|
|
cabin life.
|
|
'Interpose the black knight, and force the king. No, that won't
|
|
do. See, the next move-'
|
|
'Why advance the pawn two squares? Bound to take it in transit,
|
|
and with the bishop out of the way-'
|
|
'But hold on! That leaves a hole, and-'
|
|
'No; it's protected. Go ahead! You'll see it works.'
|
|
It was very interesting. Somebody knocked at the door a second
|
|
time before Malemute Kid said, 'Come in.' The door swung open.
|
|
Something staggered in. Prince caught one square look and sprang to
|
|
his feet. The horror in his eyes caused Malemute Kid to whirl about;
|
|
and he, too, was startled, though he had seen bad things before. The
|
|
thing tottered blindly toward them. Prince edged away till he
|
|
reached the nail from which hung his Smith & Wesson.
|
|
'My God! what is it?' he whispered to Malemute Kid.
|
|
'Don't know. Looks like a case of freezing and no grub,' replied the
|
|
Kid, sliding away in the opposite direction. 'Watch out! It may be
|
|
mad,' he warned, coming back from closing the door.
|
|
The thing advanced to the table. The bright flame of the slush
|
|
lamp caught its eye. It was amused, and gave voice to eldritch cackles
|
|
which betokened mirth. Then, suddenly, he- for it was a man- swayed
|
|
back, with a hitch to his skin trousers, and began to sing a
|
|
chantey, such as men lift when they swing around the capstan circle
|
|
and the sea snorts in their ears:
|
|
|
|
Yan-kee ship come down de ri-ib-er,
|
|
Pull! my bully boys! Pull!
|
|
D'yeh want- to know de captain ru-uns her?
|
|
Pull! my bully boys! Pull!
|
|
Jon-a-than Jones ob South Caho-li-in-a,
|
|
Pull! my bully-
|
|
|
|
He broke off abruptly, tottered with a wolfish snarl to the meat
|
|
shelf, and before they could intercept was tearing with his teeth at a
|
|
chunk of raw bacon. The struggle was fierce between him and Malemute
|
|
Kid; but his mad strength left him as suddenly as it had come, and
|
|
he weakly surrendered the spoil. Between them they got him upon a
|
|
stool, where he sprawled with half his body across the table. A
|
|
small dose of whiskey strengthened him, so that he could dip a spoon
|
|
into the sugar caddy which Malemute Kid placed before him. After his
|
|
appetite had been somewhat cloyed, Prince, shuddering as he did so,
|
|
passed him a mug of weak beef tea.
|
|
The creature's eyes were alight with a somber frenzy, which blazed
|
|
and waned with every mouthful. There was very little skin to the face.
|
|
The face, for that matter, sunken and emaciated, bore little
|
|
likeness to human countenance. Frost after frost had bitten deeply,
|
|
each depositing its stratum of scab upon the half-healed scar that
|
|
went before. This dry, hard surface was of a bloody-black color,
|
|
serrated by grievous cracks wherein the raw red flesh peeped forth.
|
|
His skin garments were dirty and in tatters, and the fur of one side
|
|
was singed and burned away, showing where he had lain upon his fire.
|
|
Malemute Kid pointed to where the sun-tanned hide had been cut away,
|
|
strip by strip- the grim signature of famine.
|
|
'Who- are- you?' slowly and distinctly enunciated the Kid.
|
|
The man paid no heed.
|
|
'Where do you come from?'
|
|
'Yan-kee ship come down de ri-ib-er,' was the quavering response.
|
|
'Don't doubt the beggar came down the river,' the Kid said,
|
|
shaking him in an endeavor to start a more lucid flow of talk.
|
|
But the man shrieked at the contact, clapping a hand to his side
|
|
in evident pain. He rose slowly to his feet, half leaning on the
|
|
table.
|
|
'She laughed at me- so- with the hate in her eye; and she- would-
|
|
not- come.'
|
|
His voice died away, and he was sinking back when Malemute Kid
|
|
gripped him by the wrist and shouted, 'Who? Who would not come?'
|
|
'She, Unga. She laughed, and struck at me, so, and so. And then-'
|
|
'Yes?'
|
|
'And then-'
|
|
'And then what?'
|
|
'And then he lay very still in the snow a long time. He is- still
|
|
in- the- snow.'
|
|
The two men looked at each other helplessly.
|
|
'Who is in the snow?'
|
|
'She, Unga. She looked at me with the hate in her eye, and then-'
|
|
'Yes, yes.'
|
|
'And then she took the knife, so; and once, twice- she was weak. I
|
|
traveled very slow. And there is much gold in that place, very much
|
|
gold.'
|
|
'Where is Unga?' For all Malemute Kid knew, she might be dying a
|
|
mile away. He shook the man savagely, repeating again and again,
|
|
'Where is Unga? Who is Unga?'
|
|
'She- is- in- the- snow.'
|
|
'Go on!' The Kid was pressing his wrist cruelly.
|
|
'So- I- would- be- in- the snow- but- I- had- a- debt- to- pay.
|
|
It- was- heavy- I- had- a- debt- to- pay- a- debt- to- pay I- had-'
|
|
The faltering monosyllables ceased as he fumbled in his pouch and drew
|
|
forth a buckskin sack. 'A- debt- to- pay- five- pounds- of- gold-
|
|
grub- stake- Mal- e- mute- Kid- I-' The exhausted head dropped upon
|
|
the table; nor could Malemute Kid rouse it again.
|
|
'It's Ulysses,' he said quietly, tossing the bag of dust on the
|
|
table. 'Guess it's all day with Axel Gunderson and the woman. Come on,
|
|
let's get him between the blankets. He's Indian; he'll pull through
|
|
and tell a tale besides.'
|
|
As they cut his garments from him, near his right breast could be
|
|
seen two unhealed, hard-lipped knife thrusts.
|
|
III
|
|
III
|
|
|
|
'I will talk of the things which were in my own way; but you will
|
|
understand. I will begin at the beginning, and tell of myself and
|
|
the woman, and, after that, of the man.'
|
|
He of the Otter Skins drew over to the stove as do men who have been
|
|
deprived of fire and are afraid the Promethean gift may vanish at
|
|
any moment. Malemute Kid picked up the slush lamp and placed it so its
|
|
light might fall upon the face of the narrator. Prince slid his body
|
|
over the edge of the bunk and joined them.
|
|
'I am Naass, a chief, and the son of a chief, born between a
|
|
sunset and a rising, on the dark seas, in my father's oomiak. All of a
|
|
night the men toiled at the paddles, and the women cast out the
|
|
waves which threw in upon us, and we fought with the storm. The salt
|
|
spray froze upon my mother's breast till her breath passed with the
|
|
passing of the tide. But I- I raised my voice with the wind and the
|
|
storm, and lived.
|
|
'We dwelt in Akatan-'
|
|
'Where?' asked Malemute Kid.
|
|
'Akatan, which is in the Aleutians; Akatan, beyond Chignik, beyond
|
|
Kardalak, beyond Unimak. As I say, we dwelt in Akatan, which lies in
|
|
the midst of the sea on the edge of the world. We farmed the salt seas
|
|
for the fish, the seal, and the otter; and our homes shouldered
|
|
about one another on the rocky strip between the rim of the forest and
|
|
the yellow beach where our kayaks lay. We were not many, and the world
|
|
was very small. There were strange lands to the east- islands like
|
|
Akatan; so we thought all the world was islands and did not mind.
|
|
'I was different from my people. In the sands of the beach were
|
|
the crooked timbers and wave-warped planks of a boat such as my people
|
|
never built; and I remember on the point of the island which
|
|
overlooked the ocean three ways there stood a pine tree which never
|
|
grew there, smooth and straight and tall. It is said the two men
|
|
came to that spot, turn about, through many days, and watched with the
|
|
passing of the light. These two men came from out of the sea in the
|
|
boat which lay in pieces on the beach. And they were white like you,
|
|
and weak as the little children when the seal have gone away and the
|
|
hunters come home empty. I know of these things from the old men and
|
|
the old women, who got them from their fathers and mothers before
|
|
them. These strange white men did not take kindly to our ways at
|
|
first, but they grew strong, what of the fish and the oil, and fierce.
|
|
And they built them each his own house, and took the pick of our
|
|
women, and in time children came. Thus he was born who was to become
|
|
the father of my father's father.
|
|
'As I said, I was different from my people, for I carried the
|
|
strong, strange blood of this white man who came out of the sea. It is
|
|
said we had other laws in the days before these men; but they were
|
|
fierce and quarrelsome, and fought with our men till there were no
|
|
more left who dared to fight. Then they made themselves chiefs, and
|
|
took away our old laws, and gave us new ones, insomuch that the man
|
|
was the son of his father, and not his mother, as our way had been.
|
|
They also ruled that the son, first-born, should have all things which
|
|
were his father's before him, and that the brothers and sisters should
|
|
shift for themselves. And they gave us other laws. They showed us
|
|
new ways in the catching of fish and the killing of bear which were
|
|
thick in the woods; and they taught us to lay by bigger stores for the
|
|
time of famine. And these things were good.
|
|
'But when they had become chiefs, and there were no more men to face
|
|
their anger, they fought, these strange white men, each with the
|
|
other. And the one whose blood I carry drove his seal spear the length
|
|
of an arm through the other's body. Their children took up the
|
|
fight, and their children's children; and there was great hatred
|
|
between them, and black doings, even to my time, so that in each
|
|
family but one lived to pass down the blood of them that went
|
|
before. Of my blood I was alone; of the other man's there was but a
|
|
girl. Unga, who lived with her mother. Her father and my father did
|
|
not come back from the fishing one night; but afterward they washed up
|
|
to the beach on the big tides, and they held very close to each other.
|
|
'The people wondered, because of the hatred between the houses,
|
|
and the old men shook their heads and said the fight would go on
|
|
when children were born to her and children to me. They told me this
|
|
as a boy, till I came to believe, and to look upon Unga as a foe,
|
|
who was to be the mother of children which were to fight with mine.
|
|
I thought of these things day by day, and when I grew to a stripling I
|
|
came to ask why this should be so. And they answered, "We do not know,
|
|
but that in such way your fathers did." And I marveled that those
|
|
which were to come should fight the battles of those that were gone,
|
|
and in it I could see no right. But the people said it must be, and
|
|
I was only a stripling.
|
|
'And they said I must hurry, that my blood might be the older and
|
|
grow strong before hers. This was easy, for I was head man, and the
|
|
people looked up to me because of the deeds and the laws of my
|
|
fathers, and the wealth which was mine. Any maiden would come to me,
|
|
but I found none to my liking. And the old men and the mothers of
|
|
maidens told me to hurry, for even then were the hunters bidding
|
|
high to the mother of Unga; and should her children grow strong before
|
|
mine, mine would surely die.
|
|
'Nor did I find a maiden till one night coming back from the
|
|
fishing. The sunlight was lying, so, low and full in the eyes, the
|
|
wind free, and the kayacks racing with the white seas. Of a sudden the
|
|
kayak of Unga came driving past me, and she looked upon me, so, with
|
|
her black hair flying like a cloud of night and the spray wet on her
|
|
cheek. As I say, the sunlight was full in the eyes, and I was a
|
|
stripling; but somehow it was all clear, and I knew it to be the
|
|
call of kind to kind. As she whipped ahead she looked back within
|
|
the space of two strokes- looked as only the woman Unga could look-
|
|
and again I knew it as the call of kind. The people shouted as we
|
|
ripped past the lazy oomiaks and left them far behind. But she was
|
|
quick at the paddle, and my heart was like the belly of a sail, and
|
|
I did not gain. The wind freshened, the sea whitened, and, leaping
|
|
like the seals on the windward breech, we roared down the golden
|
|
pathway of the sun.'
|
|
Naass was crouched half out of his stool, in the attitude of one
|
|
driving a paddle, as he ran the race anew. Somewhere across the
|
|
stove he beheld the tossing kayak and the flying hair of Unga. The
|
|
voice of the wind was in his ears, and its salt beat fresh upon his
|
|
nostrils.
|
|
'But she made the shore, and ran up the sand, laughing, to the house
|
|
of her mother. And a great thought came to me that night- a thought
|
|
worthy of him that was chief over all the people of Akatan. So, when
|
|
the moon was up, I went down to the house of her mother, and looked
|
|
upon the goods of Yash-Noosh, which were piled by the door- the
|
|
goods of Yash-Noosh, a strong hunter who had it in mind to be the
|
|
father of the children of Unga. Other young men had piled their
|
|
goods there and taken them away again; and each young man had made a
|
|
pile greater than the one before.
|
|
'And I laughed to the moon and the stars, and went to my own house
|
|
where my wealth was stored. And many trips I made, till my pile was
|
|
greater by the fingers of one hand than the pile of Yash-Noosh.
|
|
There were fish, dried in the sun and smoked; and forty hides of the
|
|
hair seal, and half as many of the fur, and each hide was tied at
|
|
the mouth and big bellied with oil; and ten skins of bear which I
|
|
killed in the woods when they came out in the spring. And there were
|
|
beads and blankets and scarlet cloths, such as I got in trade from the
|
|
people who lived to the east, and who got them in trade from the
|
|
people who lived still beyond in the east. And I looked upon the
|
|
pile of Yash-Noosh and laughed, for I was head man in Akatan, and my
|
|
wealth was greater than the wealth of all my young men, and my fathers
|
|
had done deeds, and given laws, and put their names for all time in
|
|
the mouths of the people.
|
|
'So, when the morning came, I went down to the beach, casting out of
|
|
the corner of my eye at the house of the mother of Unga. My offer
|
|
yet stood untouched. And the women smiled, and said sly things one
|
|
to the other. I wondered, for never had such a price been offered; and
|
|
that night I added more to the pile, and put beside it a kayak of
|
|
well-tanned skins which never yet had swam in the sea. But in the
|
|
day it was yet there, open to the laughter of all men. The mother of
|
|
Unga was crafty, and I grew angry at the shame in which I stood before
|
|
my people. So that night I added till it became a great pile, and I
|
|
hauled up my oomiak, which was of the value of twenty kayaks. And in
|
|
the morning there was no pile.
|
|
'Then made I preparation for the wedding, and the people that
|
|
lived even to the east came for the food of the feast and the potlatch
|
|
token. Unga was older than I by the age of four suns in the way we
|
|
reckoned the years. I was only a stripling; but then I was a chief,
|
|
and the son of a chief, and it did not matter.
|
|
'But a ship shoved her sails above the floor of the ocean, and
|
|
grew larger with the breath of the wind. From her scuppers she ran
|
|
clear water, and the men were in haste and worked hard at the pumps.
|
|
On the bow stood a mighty man, watching the depth of the water and
|
|
giving commands with a voice of thunder. His eyes were of the pale
|
|
blue of the deep waters, and his head was maned like that of a sea
|
|
lion. And his hair was yellow, like the straw of a southern harvest or
|
|
the manila rope yarns which sailormen plait.
|
|
'Of late years we had seen ships from afar, but this was the first
|
|
to come to the beach of Akatan. The feast was broken, and the women
|
|
and children fled to the houses, while we men strung our bows and
|
|
waited with spears in hand. But when the ship's forefoot smelled the
|
|
beach the strange men took no notice of us, being busy with their
|
|
own work. With the falling of the tide they careened the schooner
|
|
and patched a great hole in her bottom. So the women crept back, and
|
|
the feast went on.
|
|
'When the tide rose, the sea wanderers kedged the schooner to deep
|
|
water and then came among us. They bore presents and were friendly; so
|
|
I made room for them, and out of the largeness of my heart gave them
|
|
tokens such as I gave all the guests, for it was my wedding day, and I
|
|
was head man in Akatan. And he with the mane of the sea lion was
|
|
there, so tall and strong that one looked to see the earth shake
|
|
with the fall of his feet. He looked much and straight at Unga, with
|
|
his arms folded, so, and stayed till the sun went away and the stars
|
|
came out. Then he went down to his ship. After that I took Unga by the
|
|
hand and led her to my own house. And there was singing and great
|
|
laughter, and the women said sly things, after the manner of women
|
|
at such times. But we did not care. Then the people left us alone
|
|
and went home.
|
|
'The last noise had not died away when the chief of the sea
|
|
wanderers came in by the door. And he had with him black bottles, from
|
|
which we drank and made merry. You see, I was only a stripling, and
|
|
had lived all my days on the edge of the world. So my blood became
|
|
as fire, and my heart as light as the froth that flies from the surf
|
|
to the cliff. Unga sat silent among the skins in the corner, her
|
|
eyes wide, for she seemed to fear. And he with the mane of the sea
|
|
lion looked upon her straight and long. Then his men came in with
|
|
bundles of goods, and he piled before me wealth such as was not in all
|
|
Akatan. There were guns, both large and small, and powder and shot and
|
|
shell, and bright axes and knives of steel, and cunning tools, and
|
|
strange things the like of which I had never seen. When he showed me
|
|
by sign that it was all mine, I thought him a great man to be so free;
|
|
but he showed me also that Unga was to go away with him in his ship.
|
|
Do you understand?- that Unga was to go away with him in his ship. The
|
|
blood of my fathers flamed hot on the sudden, and I made to drive
|
|
him through with my spear. But the spirit of the bottles had stolen
|
|
the life from my arm, and he took me by the neck, so, and knocked my
|
|
head against the wall of the house. And I was made weak like a newborn
|
|
child, and my legs would no more stand under me. Unga screamed, and
|
|
she laid hold of the things of the house with her hands, till they
|
|
fell all about us as he dragged her to the door. Then he took her in
|
|
his great arms, and when she tore at his yellow hair laughed with a
|
|
sound like that of the big bull seal in the rut.
|
|
'I crawled to the beach and called upon my people, but they were
|
|
afraid. Only Yash-Noosh was a man, and they struck him on the head
|
|
with an oar, till he lay with his face in the sand and did not move.
|
|
And they raised the sails to the sound of their songs, and the ship
|
|
went away on the wind.
|
|
'The people said it was good, for there would be no more war of
|
|
the bloods in Akatan; but I said never a word, waiting till the time
|
|
of the full moon, when I put fish and oil in my kayak and went away to
|
|
the east. I saw many islands and many people, and I, who had lived
|
|
on the edge, saw that the world was very large. I talked by signs; but
|
|
they had not seen a schooner nor a man with the mane of a sea lion,
|
|
and they pointed always to the east. And I slept in queer places,
|
|
and ate odd things, and met strange faces. Many laughed, for they
|
|
thought me light of head; but sometimes old men turned my face to
|
|
the light and blessed me, and the eyes of the young women grew soft as
|
|
they asked me of the strange ship, and Unga, and the men of the sea.
|
|
'And in this manner, through rough seas and great storms, I came
|
|
to Unalaska. There were two schooners there, but neither was the one I
|
|
sought. So I passed on to the east, with the world growing ever
|
|
larger, and in the island of Unamok there was no word of the ship, nor
|
|
in Kadiak, nor in Atognak. And so I came one day to a rocky land,
|
|
where men dug great holes in the mountain. And there was a schooner,
|
|
but not my schooner, and men loaded upon it the rocks which they
|
|
dug. This I thought childish, for all the world was made of rocks; but
|
|
they gave me food and set me to work. When the schooner was deep in
|
|
the water, the captain gave me money and told me to go; but I asked
|
|
which way he went, and he pointed south. I made signs that I would
|
|
go with him, and he laughed at first, but then, being short of men,
|
|
took me to help work the ship. So I came to talk after their manner,
|
|
and to heave on ropes, and to reef the stiff sails in sudden
|
|
squalls, and to take my turn at the wheel. But it was not strange, for
|
|
the blood of my fathers was the blood of the men of the sea.
|
|
'I had thought it an easy task to find him I sought, once I got
|
|
among his own people; and when we raised the land one day, and
|
|
passed between a gateway of the sea to a port, I looked for perhaps as
|
|
many schooners as there were fingers to my hands. But the ships lay
|
|
against the wharves for miles, packed like so many little fish; and
|
|
when I went among them to ask for a man with the mane of a sea lion,
|
|
they laughed, and answered me in the tongues of many peoples. And I
|
|
found that they hailed from the uttermost parts of the earth.
|
|
'And I went into the city to look upon the face of every man. But
|
|
they were like the cod when they run thick on the banks, and I could
|
|
not count them. And the noise smote upon me till I could not hear, and
|
|
my head was dizzy with much movement. So I went on and on, through the
|
|
lands which sang in the warm sunshine; where the harvests lay rich
|
|
on the plains; and where great cities were fat with men that lived
|
|
like women, with false words in their mouths and their hearts black
|
|
with the lust of gold. And all the while my people of Akatan hunted
|
|
and fished, and were happy in the thought that the world was small.
|
|
'But the look in the eyes of Unga coming home from the fishing was
|
|
with me always, and I knew I would find her when the time was met. She
|
|
walked down quiet lanes in the dusk of the evening, or led me chases
|
|
across the thick fields wet with the morning dew, and there was a
|
|
promise in her eyes such as only the woman Unga could give.
|
|
'So I wandered through a thousand cities. Some were gentle and
|
|
gave me food, and others laughed, and still others cursed; but I
|
|
kept my tongue between my teeth, and went strange ways and saw strange
|
|
sights. Sometimes I, who was a chief and the son of a chief, toiled
|
|
for men- men rough of speech and hard as iron, who wrung gold from the
|
|
sweat and sorrow of their fellow men. Yet no word did I get of my
|
|
quest till I came back to the sea like a homing seal to the rookeries.
|
|
But this was at another port, in another country which lay to the
|
|
north. And there I heard dim tales of the yellow-haired sea
|
|
wanderer, and I learned that he was a hunter of seals, and that even
|
|
then he was abroad on the ocean.
|
|
'So I shipped on a seal schooner with the lazy Siwashes, and
|
|
followed his trackless trail to the north where the hunt was then
|
|
warm. And we were away weary months, and spoke many of the fleet,
|
|
and heard much of the wild doings of him I sought; but never once
|
|
did we raise him above the sea. We went north, even to the
|
|
Pribilofs, and killed the seals in herds on the beach, and brought
|
|
their warm bodies aboard till our scuppers ran grease and blood and no
|
|
man could stand upon the deck. Then were we chased by a ship of slow
|
|
steam, which fired upon us with great guns. But we put sail till the
|
|
sea was over our decks and washed them clean, and lost ourselves in
|
|
a fog.
|
|
'It is said, at this time, while we fled with fear at our hearts,
|
|
that the yellow-haired sea wanderer put in to the Pribilofs, right
|
|
to the factory, and while the part of his men held the servants of the
|
|
company, the rest loaded ten thousand green skins from the salt
|
|
houses. I say it is said, but I believe; for in the voyages I made
|
|
on the coast with never a meeting the northern seas rang with his
|
|
wildness and daring, till the three nations which have lands there
|
|
sought him with their ships. And I heard of Unga, for the captains
|
|
sang loud in her praise, and she was always with him. She had
|
|
learned the ways of his people, they said, and was happy. But I knew
|
|
better- knew that her heart harked back to her own people by the
|
|
yellow beach of Akatan.
|
|
'So, after a long time, I went back to the port which is by a
|
|
gateway of the sea, and there I learned that he had gone across the
|
|
girth of the great ocean to hunt for the seal to the east of the
|
|
warm land which runs south from the Russian seas. And I, who was
|
|
become a sailorman, shipped with men of his own race, and went after
|
|
him in the hunt of the seal. And there were few ships off that new
|
|
land; but we hung on the flank of the seal pack and harried it north
|
|
through all the spring of the year. And when the cows were heavy
|
|
with pup and crossed the Russian line, our men grumbled and were
|
|
afraid. For there was much fog, and every day men were lost in the
|
|
boats. They would not work, so the captain turned the ship back toward
|
|
the way it came. But I knew the yellow-haired sea wanderer was
|
|
unafraid, and would hang by the pack, even to the Russian Isles, where
|
|
few men go. So I took a boat, in the black of night, when the
|
|
lookout dozed on the fo'c'slehead, and went alone to the warm, long
|
|
land. And I journeyed south to meet the men by Yeddo Bay, who are wild
|
|
and unafraid. And the Yoshiwara girls were small, and bright like
|
|
steel, and good to look upon; but I could not stop, for I knew that
|
|
Unga rolled on the tossing floor by the rookeries of the north.
|
|
'The men by Yeddo Bay had met from the ends of the earth, and had
|
|
neither gods nor homes, sailing under the flag of the Japanese. And
|
|
with them I went to the rich beaches of Copper Island, where our
|
|
salt piles became high with skins. And in that silent sea we saw no
|
|
man till we were ready to come away. Then one day the fog lifted on
|
|
the edge of a heavy wind, and there jammed down upon us a schooner,
|
|
with close in her wake the cloudy funnels of a Russian man-of-war.
|
|
We fled away on the beam of the wind, with the schooner jamming
|
|
still closer and plunging ahead three feet to our two. And upon her
|
|
poop was the man with the mane of the sea lion, pressing the rails
|
|
under with the canvas and laughing in his strength of life. And Unga
|
|
was there- I knew her on the moment- but he sent her below when the
|
|
cannons began to talk across the sea. As I say, with three feet to our
|
|
two, till we saw the rudder lift green at every jump- and I swinging
|
|
on to the wheel and cursing, with my back to the Russian shot. For
|
|
we knew he had it in mind to run before us, that he might get away
|
|
while we were caught. And they knocked our masts out of us till we
|
|
dragged into the wind like a wounded gull; but he went on over the
|
|
edge of the sky line- he and Unga.
|
|
'What could we? The fresh hides spoke for themselves. So they took
|
|
us to a Russian port, and after that to a lone country, where they set
|
|
us to work in the mines to dig salt. And some died, and- and some
|
|
did not die.'
|
|
Naass swept the blanket from his shoulders, disclosing the gnarled
|
|
and twisted flesh, marked with the unmistakable striations of the
|
|
knout. Prince hastily covered him, for it was not nice to look upon.
|
|
'We were there a weary time and sometimes men got away to the south,
|
|
but they always came back. So, when we who hailed from Yeddo Bay
|
|
rose in the night and took the guns from the guards, we went to the
|
|
north. And the land was very large, with plains, soggy with water, and
|
|
great forests. And the cold came, with much snow on the ground, and no
|
|
man knew the way. Weary months we journeyed through the endless
|
|
forest- I do not remember, now, for there was little food and often we
|
|
lay down to die. But at last we came to the cold sea, and but three
|
|
were left to look upon it. One had shipped from Yeddo as captain,
|
|
and he knew in his head the lay of the great lands, and of the place
|
|
where men may cross from one to the other on the ice. And he led us- I
|
|
do not know, it was so long- till there were but two. When we came
|
|
to that place we found five of the strange people which live in that
|
|
country, and they had dogs and skins, and we were very poor. We fought
|
|
in the snow till they died, and the captain died, and the dogs and
|
|
skins were mine. Then I crossed on the ice, which was broken, and once
|
|
I drifted till a gale from the west put me upon the shore. And after
|
|
that, Golovin Bay, Pastilik, and the priest. Then south, south, to the
|
|
warm sunlands where first I wandered.
|
|
'But the sea was no longer fruitful, and those who went upon it
|
|
after the seal went to little profit and great risk. The fleets
|
|
scattered, and the captains and the men had no word of those I sought.
|
|
So I turned away from the ocean which never rests, and went among
|
|
the lands, where the trees, the houses, and the mountains sit always
|
|
in one place and do not move. I journeyed far, and came to learn
|
|
many things, even to the way of reading and writing from books. It was
|
|
well I should do this, for it came upon me that Unga must know these
|
|
things, and that someday, when the time was met- we- you understand,
|
|
when the time was met.
|
|
'So I drifted, like those little fish which raise a sail to the wind
|
|
but cannot steer. But my eyes and my ears were open always, and I went
|
|
among men who traveled much, for I knew they had but to see those I
|
|
sought to remember. At last there came a man, fresh from the
|
|
mountains, with pieces of rock in which the free gold stood to the
|
|
size of peas, and he had heard, he had met, he knew them. They were
|
|
rich, he said, and lived in the place where they drew the gold from
|
|
the ground.
|
|
'It was in a wild country, and very far away; but in time I came
|
|
to the camp, hidden between the mountains, where men worked night
|
|
and day, out of the sight of the sun. Yet the time was not come. I
|
|
listened to the talk of the people. He had gone away- they had gone
|
|
away- to England, it was said, in the matter of bringing men with much
|
|
money together to form companies. I saw the house they had lived in;
|
|
more like a palace, such as one sees in the old countries. In the
|
|
nighttime I crept in through a window that I might see in what
|
|
manner he treated her. I went from room to room, and in such way
|
|
thought kings and queens must live, it was all so very good. And
|
|
they all said he treated her like a queen, and many marveled as to
|
|
what breed of woman she was for there was other blood in her veins,
|
|
and she was different from the women of Akatan, and no one knew her
|
|
for what she was. Aye, she was a queen; but I was a chief, and the son
|
|
of a chief, and I had paid for her an untold price of skin and boat
|
|
and bead.
|
|
'But why so many words? I was a sailorman, and knew the way of the
|
|
ships on the seas. I followed to England, and then to other countries.
|
|
Sometimes I heard of them by word of mouth, sometimes I read of them
|
|
in the papers; yet never once could I come by them, for they had
|
|
much money, and traveled fast, while I was a poor man. Then came
|
|
trouble upon them, and their wealth slipped away one day like a curl
|
|
of smoke. The papers were full of it at the time; but after that
|
|
nothing was said, and I knew they had gone back where more gold
|
|
could be got from the ground.
|
|
'They had dropped out of the world, being now poor, and so I
|
|
wandered from camp to camp, even north to the Kootenay country,
|
|
where I picked up the cold scent. They had come and gone, some said
|
|
this way, and some that, and still others that they had gone to the
|
|
country of the Yukon. And I went this way, and I went that, ever
|
|
journeying from place to place, till it seemed I must grow weary of
|
|
the world which was so large. But in the Kootenay I traveled a bad
|
|
trail, and a long trail, with a breed of the Northwest, who saw fit to
|
|
die when the famine pinched. He had been to the Yukon by an unknown
|
|
way over the mountains, and when he knew his time was near gave me the
|
|
map and the secret of a place where he swore by his gods there was
|
|
much gold.
|
|
'After that all the world began to flock into the north. I was a
|
|
poor man; I sold myself to be a driver of dogs. The rest you know. I
|
|
met him and her in Dawson. She did not know me, for I was only a
|
|
stripling, and her life had been large, so she had no time to remember
|
|
the one who had paid for her an untold price.
|
|
'So? You bought me from my term of service. I went back to bring
|
|
things about in my own way, for I had waited long, and now that I
|
|
had my hand upon him was in no hurry. As I say, I had it in mind to do
|
|
my own way, for I read back in my life, through all I had seen and
|
|
suffered, and remembered the cold and hunger of the endless forest
|
|
by the Russian seas. As you know, I led him into the east- him and
|
|
Unga- into the east where many have gone and few returned. I led
|
|
them to the spot where the bones and the curses of men lie with the
|
|
gold which they may not have.
|
|
'The way was long and the trail unpacked. Our dogs were many and ate
|
|
much; nor could our sleds carry till the break of spring. We must come
|
|
back before the river ran free. So here and there we cached grub, that
|
|
our sleds might be lightened and there be no chance of famine on the
|
|
back trip. At the McQuestion there were three men, and near them we
|
|
built a cache, as also did we at the Mayo, where was a hunting camp of
|
|
a dozen Pellys which had crossed the divide from the south. After
|
|
that, as we went on into the east, we saw no men; only the sleeping
|
|
river, the moveless forest, and the White Silence of the North. As I
|
|
say, the way was long and the trail unpacked. Sometimes, in a day's
|
|
toil, we made no more than eight miles, or ten, and at night we
|
|
slept like dead men. And never once did they dream that I was Naass,
|
|
head man of Akatan, the righter of wrongs.
|
|
'We now made smaller caches, and in the nighttime it was a small
|
|
matter to go back on the trail we had broken and change them in such
|
|
way that one might deem the wolverines the thieves. Again there be
|
|
places where there is a fall to the river, and the water is unruly,
|
|
and the ice makes above and is eaten away beneath. In such a spot
|
|
the sled I drove broke through, and the dogs; and to him and Unga it
|
|
was ill luck, but no more. And there was much grub on that sled, and
|
|
the dogs the strongest. But he laughed, for he was strong of life, and
|
|
gave the dogs that were left little grub till we cut them from the
|
|
harnesses one by one and fed them to their mates. We would go home
|
|
light, he said, traveling and eating from cache to cache, with neither
|
|
dogs nor sleds; which was true, for our grub was very short, and the
|
|
last dog died in the traces the night we came to the gold and the
|
|
bones and the curses of men.
|
|
'To reach that place- and the map spoke true- in the heart of the
|
|
great mountains, we cut ice steps against the wall of a divide. One
|
|
looked for a valley beyond, but there was no valley; the snow spread
|
|
away, level as the great harvest plains, and here and there about us
|
|
mighty mountains shoved their white heads among the stars. And
|
|
midway on that strange plain which should have been a valley the earth
|
|
and the snow fell away, straight down toward the heart of the world.
|
|
Had we not been sailormen our heads would have swung round with the
|
|
sight, but we stood on the dizzy edge that we might see a way to get
|
|
down. And on one side, and one side only, the wall had fallen away
|
|
till it was like the slope of the decks in a topsail breeze. I do
|
|
not know why this thing should be so, but it was so. "It is the
|
|
mouth of hell," he said; "let us go down." And we went down.
|
|
'And on the bottom there was a cabin, built by some man, of logs
|
|
which he had cast down from above. It was a very old cabin, for men
|
|
had died there alone at different times, and on pieces of birch bark
|
|
which were there we read their last words and their curses. One had
|
|
died of scurvy; another's partner had robbed him of his last grub
|
|
and powder and stolen away; a third had been mauled by a baldface
|
|
grizzly; a fourth had hunted for game and starved- and so it went, and
|
|
they had been loath to leave the gold, and had died by the side of
|
|
it in one way or another. And the worthless gold they had gathered
|
|
yellowed the floor of the cabin like in a dream.
|
|
'But his soul was steady, and his head clear, this man I had led
|
|
thus far. "We have nothing to eat," he said, "and we will only look
|
|
upon this gold, and see whence it comes and how much there be. Then we
|
|
will go away quick, before it gets into our eyes and steals away our
|
|
judgment. And in this way we may return in the end, with more grub,
|
|
and possess it all." So we looked upon the great vein, which cut the
|
|
wall of the pit as a true vein should, and we measured it, and
|
|
traced it from above and below, and drove the stakes of the claims and
|
|
blazed the trees in token of our rights. Then, our knees shaking
|
|
with lack of food, and a sickness in our bellies, and our hearts
|
|
chugging close to our mouths, we climbed the mighty wall for the
|
|
last time and turned our faces to the back trip.
|
|
'The last stretch we dragged Unga between us, and we fell often, but
|
|
in the end we made the cache. And lo, there was no grub. It was well
|
|
done, for he thought it the wolverines, and damned them and his gods
|
|
in one breath. But Unga was brave, and smiled, and put her hand in
|
|
his, till I turned away that I might hold myself. "We will rest by the
|
|
fire," she said, "till morning, and we will gather strength from our
|
|
moccasins." So we cut the tops of our moccasins in strips, and
|
|
boiled them half of the night, that we might chew them and swallow
|
|
them. And in the morning we talked of our chance. The next cache was
|
|
five days' journey; we could not make it. We must find game.
|
|
'"We will go forth and hunt," he said.
|
|
'"Yes," said I, "we will go forth and hunt."
|
|
'And he ruled that Unga stay by the fire and save her strength.
|
|
And we went forth, he in quest of the moose and I to the cache I had
|
|
changed. But I ate little, so they might not see in me much
|
|
strength. And in the night he fell many times as he drew into camp.
|
|
And I, too, made to suffer great weakness, stumbling over my snowshoes
|
|
as though each step might be my last. And we gathered strength from
|
|
our moccasins.
|
|
'He was a great man. His soul lifted his body to the last; nor did
|
|
he cry aloud, save for the sake of Unga. On the second day I
|
|
followed him, that I might not miss the end. And he lay down to rest
|
|
often. That night he was near gone; but in the morning he swore weakly
|
|
and went forth again. He was like a drunken man, and I looked many
|
|
times for him to give up, but his was the strength of the strong,
|
|
and his soul the soul of a giant, for he lifted his body through all
|
|
the weary day. And he shot two ptarmigan, but would not eat them. He
|
|
needed no fire; they meant life; but his thought was for Unga, and
|
|
he turned toward camp. He no longer walked, but crawled on hand and
|
|
knee through the snow. I came to him, and read death in his eyes. Even
|
|
then it was not too late to eat of the ptarmigan. He cast away his
|
|
rifle and carried the birds in his mouth like a dog. I walked by his
|
|
side, upright. And he looked at me during the moments he rested, and
|
|
wondered that I was so strong. I could see it, though he no longer
|
|
spoke; and when his lips moved, they moved without sound. As I say, he
|
|
was a great man, and my heart spoke for softness; but I read back in
|
|
my life, and remembered the cold and hunger of the endless forest by
|
|
the Russian seas. Besides, Unga was mine, and I had paid for her an
|
|
untold price of skin and boat and bead.
|
|
'And in this manner we came through the white forest, with the
|
|
silence heavy upon us like a damp sea mist. And the ghosts of the past
|
|
were in the air and all about us; and I saw the yellow beach of
|
|
Akatan, and the kayaks racing home from the fishing, and the houses on
|
|
the rim of the forest. And the men who had made themselves chiefs were
|
|
there, the lawgivers whose blood I bore and whose blood I had wedded
|
|
in Unga. Aye, and Yash-Noosh walked with me, the wet sand in his hair,
|
|
and his war spear, broken as he fell upon it, still in his hand. And I
|
|
knew the time was meet, and saw in the eyes of Unga the promise.
|
|
'As I say, we came thus through the forest, till the smell of the
|
|
camp smoke was in our nostrils. And I bent above him, and tore the
|
|
ptarmigan from his teeth. He turned on his side and rested, the wonder
|
|
mounting in his eyes, and the hand which was under slipping slow
|
|
toward the knife at his hip. But I took it from him, smiling close
|
|
in his face. Even then he did not understand. So I made to drink
|
|
from black bottles, and to build high upon the snow a pile- of
|
|
goods, and to live again the things which had happened on the night of
|
|
my marriage. I spoke no word, but he understood. Yet was he
|
|
unafraid. There was a sneer to his lips, and cold anger, and he
|
|
gathered new strength with the knowledge. It was not far, but the snow
|
|
was deep, and he dragged himself very slow. Once he lay so long I
|
|
turned him over and gazed into his eyes. And sometimes he looked
|
|
forth, and sometimes death. And when I loosed him he struggled on
|
|
again. In this way we came to the fire. Unga was at his side on the
|
|
instant. His lips moved without sound; then he pointed at me, that
|
|
Unga might understand. And after that he lay in the snow, very
|
|
still, for a long while. Even now is he there in the snow.
|
|
'I said no word till I had cooked the ptarmigan. Then I spoke to
|
|
her, in her own tongue, which she had not heard in many years. She
|
|
straightened herself, so, and her eyes were wonder-wide, and she asked
|
|
who I was, and where I had learned that speech.
|
|
'"I am Naass," I said.
|
|
'"You?" she said. "You?" And she crept close that she might look
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upon me.
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'"Yes," I answered; "I am Naass, head man of Akatan, the last of the
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blood, as you are the last of the blood."
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'And she laughed. By all the things I have seen and the deeds I have
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done may I never hear such a laugh again. It put the chill to my soul,
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sitting there in the White Silence, alone with death and this woman
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who laughed.
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'"Come!" I said, for I thought she wandered. "Eat of the food and
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let us be gone. It is a far fetch from here to Akatan."
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'But she shoved her face in his yellow mane, and laughed till it
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seemed the heavens must fall about our ears. I had thought she would
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|
be overjoyed at the sight of me, and eager to go back to the memory of
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old times, but this seemed a strange form to take.
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|
'"Come!' I cried, taking her strong by the hand. "The way is long
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|
and dark. Let us hurry!'
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|
'"Where?" she asked, sitting up, and ceasing from her strange mirth.
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|
'"To Akatan," I answered, intent on the light to grow on her face at
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the thought. But it became like his, with a sneer to the lips, and
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|
cold anger.
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|
'"Yes,' she said; "we will go, hand in hand, to Akatan, you and I.
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|
And we will live in the dirty huts, and eat of the fish and oil, and
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bring forth a spawn- a spawn to be proud of all the days of our
|
|
life. We will forget the world and be happy, very happy. It is good,
|
|
most good. Come! Let us hurry. Let us go back to Akatan."
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|
'And she ran her hand through his yellow hair, and smiled in a way
|
|
which was not good. And there was no promise in her eyes.
|
|
'I sat silent, and marveled at the strangeness of woman. I went back
|
|
to the night when he dragged her from me and she screamed and tore
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|
at his hair- at his hair which now she played with and would not
|
|
leave. Then I remembered the price and the long years of waiting;
|
|
and I gripped her close, and dragged her away as he had done. And
|
|
she held back, even as on that night, and fought like a she-cat for
|
|
its whelp. And when the fire was between us and the man. I loosed her,
|
|
and she sat and listened. And I told her of all that lay between, of
|
|
all that had happened to me on strange seas, of all that I had done in
|
|
strange lands; of my weary quest, and the hungry years, and the
|
|
promise which had been mine from the first. Aye, I told all, even to
|
|
what had passed that day between the man and me, and in the days yet
|
|
young. And as I spoke I saw the promise grow in her eyes, full and
|
|
large like the break of dawn. And I read pity there, the tenderness of
|
|
woman, the love, the heart and the soul of Unga. And I was a stripling
|
|
again, for the look was the look of Unga as she ran up the beach,
|
|
laughing, to the home of her mother. The stern unrest was gone, and
|
|
the hunger, and the weary waiting. The time was met. I felt the call
|
|
of her breast, and it seemed there I must pillow my head and forget.
|
|
She opened her arms to me, and I came against her. Then, sudden, the
|
|
hate flamed in her eye, her hand was at my hip. And once, twice, she
|
|
passed the knife.
|
|
'"Dog!" she sneered, as she flung me into the snow. "Swine!" And
|
|
then she laughed till the silence cracked, and went back to her dead.
|
|
'As I say, once she passed the knife, and twice; but she was weak
|
|
with hunger, and it was not meant that I should die. Yet was I
|
|
minded to stay in that place, and to close my eyes in the last long
|
|
sleep with those whose lives had crossed with mine and led my feet
|
|
on unknown trails. But there lay a debt upon me which would not let me
|
|
rest.
|
|
'And the way was long, the cold bitter, and there was little grub.
|
|
The Pellys had found no moose, and had robbed my cache. And so had the
|
|
three white men, but they lay thin and dead in their cabins as I
|
|
passed. After that I do not remember, till I came here, and found food
|
|
and fire- much fire.'
|
|
As he finished, he crouched closely, even jealously, over the stove.
|
|
For a long while the slush-lamp shadows played tragedies upon the
|
|
wall.
|
|
'But Unga!' cried Prince, the vision still strong upon him.
|
|
'Unga? She would not eat of the ptarmigan. She lay with her arms
|
|
about his neck, her face deep in his yellow hair. I drew the fire
|
|
close, that she might not feel the frost, but she crept to the other
|
|
side. And I built a fire there; yet it was little good, for she
|
|
would not eat. And in this manner they still lie up there in the
|
|
snow.'
|
|
'And you?' asked Malemute Kid.
|
|
'I do not know; but Akatan is small, and I have little wish to go
|
|
back and live on the edge of the world. Yet is there small use in
|
|
life. I can go to Constantine, and he will put irons upon me, and
|
|
one day they will tie a piece of rope, so, and I will sleep good. Yet-
|
|
no; I do not know.'
|
|
'But, Kid,' protested Prince, 'this is murder!'
|
|
'Hush!' commanded Malemute Kid. 'There be things greater than our
|
|
wisdom, beyond our justice. The right and the wrong of this we
|
|
cannot say, and it is not for us to judge.'
|
|
Naass drew yet closer to the fire. There was a great silence, and in
|
|
each man's eyes many pictures came and went.
|
|
|
|
THE END
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