"To
Build a Fire"
Day had broken cold and grey, exceedingly cold and grey, when the man turned aside from the main Yukon trail and climbed
the high earth-bank, where a dim and little-travelled trail led eastward through the fat spruce timberland. It was a steep
bank, and he paused for breath at the top, excusing the act to himself by looking at his watch. It was nine o'clock. There
was no sun nor hint of sun, though there was not a cloud in the sky. It was a clear day, and yet there seemed an intangible
pall over the face of things, a subtle gloom that made the day dark, and that was due to the absence of sun. This fact did
not worry the man. He was used to the lack of sun. It had been days since he had seen the sun, and he knew that a few more
days must pass before that cheerful orb, due south, would just peep above the skyline and dip immediately from view.
The man flung a look back along the way he had come. The Yukon lay a mile wide and hidden under three feet of ice.
On top of this ice were as many feet of snow. It was all pure white, rolling in gentle undulations where the ice-jams of the
freeze-up had formed. North and south, as far as his eye could see, it was unbroken white, save for a dark hair-line that
curved and twisted from around the spruce-covered island to the south, and that curved and twisted away into the north, where
it disappeared behind another spruce-covered island. This dark hair-line was the trail--the main trail--that led south five
hundred miles to the Chilcoot Pass, Dyea, and salt water; and that led north seventy miles to Dawson, and still on to the
north a thousand miles to Nulato, and finally to St. Michael on Bering Sea, a thousand miles and half a thousand more.
But all this--the mysterious, far-reaching hairline trail, the absence of sun from the sky, the tremendous cold, and
the strangeness and weirdness of it all--made no impression on the man. It was not because he was long used to it. He was
a new-comer in the land, a chechaquo, and this was his first winter. The trouble with him was that he was without imagination.
He was quick and alert in the things of life, but only in the things, and not in the significances. Fifty degrees below zero
meant eighty odd degrees of frost. Such fact impressed him as being cold and uncomfortable, and that was all. It did not lead
him to meditate upon his frailty as a creature of temperature, and upon man's frailty in general, able only to live within
certain narrow limits of heat and cold; and from there on it did not lead him to the conjectural field of immortality and
man's place in the universe. Fifty degrees below zero stood for a bite of frost that hurt and that must be guarded against
by the use of mittens, ear-flaps, warm moccasins, and thick socks. Fifty degrees below zero was to him just precisely fifty
degrees below zero. That there should be anything more to it than that was a thought that never entered his head.
As he turned to go on, he spat speculatively. There was a sharp, explosive crackle that startled him. He spat again.
And again, in the air, before it could fall to the snow, the spittle crackled. He knew that at fifty below spittle crackled
on the snow, but this spittle had crackled in the air. Undoubtedly it was colder than fifty below--how much colder he did
not know. But the temperature did not matter. He was bound for the old claim on the left fork of Henderson Creek, where the
boys were already. They had come over across the divide from the Indian Creek country, while he had come the roundabout way
to take a look at the possibilities of getting out logs in the spring from the islands in the Yukon. He would be in to camp
by six o'clock; a bit after dark, it was true, but the boys would be there, a fire would be going, and a hot supper would
be ready. As for lunch, he pressed his hand against the protruding bundle under his jacket. It was also under his shirt, wrapped
up in a handkerchief and lying against the naked skin. It was the only way to keep the biscuits from freezing. He smiled agreeably
to himself as he thought of those biscuits, each cut open and sopped in bacon grease, and each enclosing a generous slice
of fried bacon.
He plunged in among the big spruce trees. The trail was faint. A foot of snow had fallen since the last sled had passed
over, and he was glad he was without a sled, travelling light. In fact, he carried nothing but the lunch wrapped in the handkerchief.
He was surprised, however, at the cold. It certainly was cold, he concluded, as he rubbed his numbed nose and cheek-bones
with his mittened hand. He was a warm-whiskered man, but the hair on his face did not protect the high cheek-bones and the
eager nose that thrust itself aggressively into the frosty air.
At the man's heels trotted a dog, a big native husky, the proper wolf-dog, grey-coated and without any visible or temperamental
difference from its brother, the wild wolf. The animal was depressed by the tremendous cold. It knew that it was no time for
travelling. Its instinct told it a truer tale than was told to the man by the man's judgment. In reality, it was not merely
colder than fifty below zero; it was colder than sixty below, than seventy below. It was seventy-five below zero. Since the
freezing-point is thirty-two above zero, it meant that one hundred and seven degrees of frost obtained. The dog did not know
anything about thermometers. Possibly in its brain there was no sharp consciousness of a condition of very cold such as was
in the man's brain. But the brute had its instinct. It experienced a vague but menacing apprehension that subdued it and made
it slink along at the man's heels, and that made it question eagerly every unwonted movement of the man as if expecting him
to go into camp or to seek shelter somewhere and build a fire. The dog had learned fire, and it wanted fire, or else to burrow
under the snow and cuddle its warmth away from the air.
The frozen moisture of its breathing had settled on its fur in a fine powder of frost, and especially were its jowls,
muzzle, and eyelashes whitened by its crystalled breath. The man's red beard and moustache were likewise frosted, but more
solidly, the deposit taking the form of ice and increasing with every warm, moist breath he exhaled. Also, the man was chewing
tobacco, and the muzzle of ice held his lips so rigidly that he was unable to clear his chin when he expelled the juice. The
result was that a crystal beard of the colour and solidity of amber was increasing its length on his chin. If he fell down
it would shatter itself, like glass, into brittle fragments. But he did not mind the appendage. It was the penalty all tobacco-chewers
paid in that country, and he had been out before in two cold snaps. They had not been so cold as this, he knew, but by the
spirit thermometer at Sixty Mile he knew they had been registered at fifty below and at fifty-five.
He held on through the level stretch of woods for several miles, crossed a wide flat of nigger-heads, and dropped down
a bank to the frozen bed of a small stream. This was Henderson Creek, and he knew he was ten miles from the forks. He looked
at his watch. It was ten o'clock. He was making four miles an hour, and he calculated that he would arrive at the forks at
half-past twelve. He decided to celebrate that event by eating his lunch there.
The dog dropped in again at his heels, with a tail drooping discouragement, as the man swung along the creek-bed. The
furrow of the old sled-trail was plainly visible, but a dozen inches of snow covered the marks of the last runners. In a month
no man had come up or down that silent creek. The man held steadily on. He was not much given to thinking, and just then particularly
he had nothing to think about save that he would eat lunch at the forks and that at six o'clock he would be in camp with the
boys. There was nobody to talk to and, had there been, speech would have been impossible because of the ice-muzzle on his
mouth. So he continued monotonously to chew tobacco and to increase the length of his amber beard.
Once in a while the thought reiterated itself that it was very cold and that he had never experienced such cold. As
he walked along he rubbed his cheek-bones and nose with the back of his mittened hand. He did this automatically, now and
again changing hands. But rub as he would, the instant he stopped his cheek-bones went numb, and the following instant the
end of his nose went numb. He was sure to frost his cheeks; he knew that, and experienced a pang of regret that he had not
devised a nose-strap of the sort Bud wore in cold snaps. Such a strap passed across the cheeks, as well, and saved them. But
it didn't matter much, after all. What were frosted cheeks? A bit painful, that was all; they were never serious.
Empty as the man's mind was of thoughts, he was keenly observant, and he noticed the changes in the creek, the curves
and bends and timber-jams, and always he sharply noted where he placed his feet. Once, coming around a bend, he shied abruptly,
like a startled horse, curved away from the place where he had been walking, and retreated several paces back along the trail.
The creek he knew was frozen clear to the bottom--no creek could contain water in that arctic winter--but he knew also that
there were springs that bubbled out from the hillsides and ran along under the snow and on top the ice of the creek. He knew
that the coldest snaps never froze these springs, and he knew likewise their danger. They were traps. They hid pools of water
under the snow that might be three inches deep, or three feet. Sometimes a skin of ice half an inch thick covered them, and
in turn was covered by the snow. Sometimes there were alternate layers of water and ice-skin, so that when one broke through
he kept on breaking through for a while, sometimes wetting himself to the waist.
That was why he had shied in such panic. He had felt the give under his feet and heard the crackle of a snow-hidden
ice-skin. And to get his feet wet in such a temperature meant trouble and danger. At the very least it meant delay, for he
would be forced to stop and build a fire, and under its protection to bare his feet while he dried his socks and moccasins.
He stood and studied the creek-bed and its banks, and decided that the flow of water came from the right. He reflected awhile,
rubbing his nose and cheeks, then skirted to the left, stepping gingerly and testing the footing for each step. Once clear
of the danger, he took a fresh chew of tobacco and swung along at his four-mile gait.
In the course of the next two hours he came upon several similar traps. Usually the snow above the hidden pools had
a sunken, candied appearance that advertised the danger. Once again, however, he had a close call; and once, suspecting danger,
he compelled the dog to go on in front. The dog did not want to go. It hung back until the man shoved it forward, and then
it went quickly across the white, unbroken surface. Suddenly it broke through, floundered to one side, and got away to firmer
footing. It had wet its forefeet and legs, and almost immediately the water that clung to it turned to ice. It made quick
efforts to lick the ice off its legs, then dropped down in the snow and began to bite out the ice that had formed between
the toes. This was a matter of instinct. To permit the ice to remain would mean sore feet. It did not know this. It merely
obeyed the mysterious prompting that arose from the deep crypts of its being. But the man knew, having achieved a judgment
on the subject, and he removed the mitten from his right hand and helped tear out the ice-particles. He did not expose his
fingers more than a minute, and was astonished at the swift numbness that smote them. It certainly was cold. He pulled on
the mitten hastily, and beat the hand savagely across his chest.
At twelve o'clock the day was at its brightest. Yet the sun was too far south on its winter journey to clear the horizon.
The bulge of the earth intervened between it and Henderson Creek, where the man walked under a clear sky at noon and cast
no shadow. At half-past twelve, to the minute, he arrived at the forks of the creek. He was pleased at the speed he had made.
If he kept it up, he would certainly be with the boys by six. He unbuttoned his jacket and shirt and drew forth his lunch.
The action consumed no more than a quarter of a minute, yet in that brief moment the numbness laid hold of the exposed fingers.
He did not put the mitten on, but, instead, struck the fingers a dozen sharp smashes against his leg. Then he sat down on
a snow-covered log to eat. The sting that followed upon the striking of his fingers against his leg ceased so quickly that
he was startled, he had had no chance to take a bite of biscuit. He struck the fingers repeatedly and returned them to the
mitten, baring the other hand for the purpose of eating. He tried to take a mouthful, but the ice-muzzle prevented. He had
forgotten to build a fire and thaw out. He chuckled at his foolishness, and as he chuckled he noted the numbness creeping
into the exposed fingers. Also, he noted that the stinging which had first come to his toes when he sat down was already passing
away. He wondered whether the toes were warm or numbed. He moved them inside the moccasins and decided that they were numbed.
He pulled the mitten on hurriedly and stood up. He was a bit frightened. He stamped up and down until the stinging
returned into the feet. It certainly was cold, was his thought. That man from Sulphur Creek had spoken the truth when telling
how cold it sometimes got in the country. And he had laughed at him at the time! That showed one must not be too sure of things.
There was no mistake about it, it was cold. He strode up and down, stamping his feet and threshing his arms, until reassured
by the returning warmth. Then he got out matches and proceeded to make a fire. From the undergrowth, where high water of the
previous spring had lodged a supply of seasoned twigs, he got his firewood. Working carefully from a small beginning, he soon
had a roaring fire, over which he thawed the ice from his face and in the protection of which he ate his biscuits. For the
moment the cold of space was outwitted. The dog took satisfaction in the fire, stretching out close enough for warmth and
far enough away to escape being singed.
When the man had finished, he filled his pipe and took his comfortable time over a smoke. Then he pulled on his mittens,
settled the ear-flaps of his cap firmly about his ears, and took the creek trail up the left fork. The dog was disappointed
and yearned back toward the fire. This man did not know cold. Possibly all the generations of his ancestry had been ignorant
of cold, of real cold, of cold one hundred and seven degrees below freezing-point. But the dog knew; all its ancestry knew,
and it had inherited the knowledge. And it knew that it was not good to walk abroad in such fearful cold. It was the time
to lie snug in a hole in the snow and wait for a curtain of cloud to be drawn across the face of outer space whence this cold
came. On the other hand, there was keen intimacy between the dog and the man. The one was the toil-slave of the other, and
the only caresses it had ever received were the caresses of the whip-lash and of harsh and menacing throat-sounds that threatened
the whip-lash. So the dog made no effort to communicate its apprehension to the man. It was not concerned in the welfare of
the man; it was for its own sake that it yearned back toward the fire. But the man whistled, and spoke to it with the sound
of whip-lashes, and the dog swung in at the man's heels and followed after.
The man took a chew of tobacco and proceeded to start a new amber beard. Also, his moist breath quickly powdered with
white his moustache, eyebrows, and lashes. There did not seem to be so many springs on the left fork of the Henderson, and
for half an hour the man saw no signs of any. And then it happened. At a place where there were no signs, where the soft,
unbroken snow seemed to advertise solidity beneath, the man broke through. It was not deep. He wetted himself half-way to
the knees before he floundered out to the firm crust.
He was angry, and cursed his luck aloud. He had hoped to get into camp with the boys at six o'clock, and this would
delay him an hour, for he would have to build a fire and dry out his foot-gear. This was imperative at that low temperature--he
knew that much; and he turned aside to the bank, which he climbed. On top, tangled in the underbrush about the trunks of several
small spruce trees, was a high-water deposit of dry firewood--sticks and twigs principally, but also larger portions of seasoned
branches and fine, dry, last-year's grasses. He threw down several large pieces on top of the snow. This served for a foundation
and prevented the young flame from drowning itself in the snow it otherwise would melt. The flame he got by touching a match
to a small shred of birch-bark that he took from his pocket. This burned even more readily than paper. Placing it on the foundation,
he fed the young flame with wisps of dry grass and with the tiniest dry twigs.
He worked slowly and carefully, keenly aware of his danger. Gradually, as the flame grew stronger, he increased the
size of the twigs with which he fed it. He squatted in the snow, pulling the twigs out from their entanglement in the brush
and feeding directly to the flame. He knew there must be no failure. When it is seventy-five below zero, a man must not fail
in his first attempt to build a fire--that is, if his feet are wet. If his feet are dry, and he fails, he can run along the
trail for half a mile and restore his circulation. But the circulation of wet and freezing feet cannot be restored by running
when it is seventy-five below. No matter how fast he runs, the wet feet will freeze the harder.
All this the man knew. The old-timer on Sulphur Creek had told him about it the previous fall, and now he was appreciating
the advice. Already all sensation had gone out of his feet. To build the fire he had been forced to remove his mittens, and
the fingers had quickly gone numb. His pace of four miles an hour had kept his heart pumping blood to the surface of his body
and to all the extremities. But the instant he stopped, the action of the pump eased down. The cold of space smote the unprotected
tip of the planet, and he, being on that unprotected tip, received the full force of the blow. The blood of his body recoiled
before it. The blood was alive, like the dog, and like the dog it wanted to hide away and cover itself up from the fearful
cold. So long as he walked four miles an hour, he pumped that blood, willy-nilly, to the surface; but now it ebbed away and
sank down into the recesses of his body. The extremities were the first to feel its absence. His wet feet froze the faster,
and his exposed fingers numbed the faster, though they had not yet begun to freeze. Nose and cheeks were already freezing,
while the skin of all his body chilled as it lost its blood.
But he was safe. Toes and nose and cheeks would be only touched by the frost, for the fire was beginning to burn with
strength. He was feeding it with twigs the size of his finger. In another minute he would be able to feed it with branches
the size of his wrist, and then he could remove his wet foot-gear, and, while it dried, he could keep his naked feet warm
by the fire, rubbing them at first, of course, with snow. The fire was a success. He was safe. He remembered the advice of
the old-timer on Sulphur Creek, and smiled. The old-timer had been very serious in laying down the law that no man must travel
alone in the Klondike after fifty below. Well, here he was; he had had the accident; he was alone; and he had saved himself.
Those old-timers were rather womanish, some of them, he thought. All a man had to do was to keep his head, and he was all
right. Any man who was a man could travel alone. But it was surprising, the rapidity with which his cheeks and nose were freezing.
And he had not thought his fingers could go lifeless in so short a time. Lifeless they were, for he could scarcely make them
move together to grip a twig, and they seemed remote from his body and from him. When he touched a twig, he had to look and
see whether or not he had hold of it. The wires were pretty well down between him and his finger-ends.
All of which counted for little. There was the fire, snapping and crackling and promising life with every dancing flame.
He started to untie his moccasins. They were coated with ice; the thick German socks were like sheaths of iron half-way to
the knees; and the mocassin strings were like rods of steel all twisted and knotted as by some conflagration. For a moment
he tugged with his numbed fingers, then, realizing the folly of it, he drew his sheath-knife.
But before he could cut the strings, it happened. It was his own fault or, rather, his mistake. He should not have
built the fire under the spruce tree. He should have built it in the open. But it had been easier to pull the twigs from the
brush and drop them directly on the fire. Now the tree under which he had done this carried a weight of snow on its boughs.
No wind had blown for weeks, and each bough was fully freighted. Each time he had pulled a twig he had communicated a slight
agitation to the tree--an imperceptible agitation, so far as he was concerned, but an agitation sufficient to bring about
the disaster. High up in the tree one bough capsized its load of snow. This fell on the boughs beneath, capsizing them. This
process continued, spreading out and involving the whole tree. It grew like an avalanche, and it descended without warning
upon the man and the fire, and the fire was blotted out! Where it had burned was a mantle of fresh and disordered snow.
The man was shocked. It was as though he had just heard his own sentence of death. For a moment he sat and stared at
the spot where the fire had been. Then he grew very calm. Perhaps the old-timer on Sulphur Creek was right. If he had only
had a trail-mate he would have been in no danger now. The trail-mate could have built the fire. Well, it was up to him to
build the fire over again, and this second time there must be no failure. Even if he succeeded, he would most likely lose
some toes. His feet must be badly frozen by now, and there would be some time before the second fire was ready.
Such were his thoughts, but he did not sit and think them. He was busy all the time they were passing through his mind,
he made a new foundation for a fire, this time in the open; where no treacherous tree could blot it out. Next, he gathered
dry grasses and tiny twigs from the high-water flotsam. He could not bring his fingers together to pull them out, but he was
able to gather them by the handful. In this way he got many rotten twigs and bits of green moss that were undesirable, but
it was the best he could do. He worked methodically, even collecting an armful of the larger branches to be used later when
the fire gathered strength. And all the while the dog sat and watched him, a certain yearning wistfulness in its eyes, for
it looked upon him as the fire-provider, and the fire was slow in coming.
When all was ready, the man reached in his pocket for a second piece of birch-bark. He knew the bark was there, and,
though he could not feel it with his fingers, he could hear its crisp rustling as he fumbled for it. Try as he would, he could
not clutch hold of it. And all the time, in his consciousness, was the knowledge that each instant his feet were freezing.
This thought tended to put him in a panic, but he fought against it and kept calm. He pulled on his mittens with his teeth,
and threshed his arms back and forth, beating his hands with all his might against his sides. He did this sitting down, and
he stood up to do it; and all the while the dog sat in the snow, its wolf-brush of a tail curled around warmly over its forefeet,
its sharp wolf-ears pricked forward intently as it watched the man. And the man as he beat and threshed with his arms and
hands, felt a great surge of envy as he regarded the creature that was warm and secure in its natural covering.
After a time he was aware of the first far-away signals of sensation in his beaten fingers. The faint tingling grew
stronger till it evolved into a stinging ache that was excruciating, but which the man hailed with satisfaction. He stripped
the mitten from his right hand and fetched forth the birch-bark. The exposed fingers were quickly going numb again. Next he
brought out his bunch of sulphur matches. But the tremendous cold had already driven the life out of his fingers. In his effort
to separate one match from the others, the whole bunch fell in the snow. He tried to pick it out of the snow, but failed.
The dead fingers could neither touch nor clutch. He was very careful. He drove the thought of his freezing feet; and nose,
and cheeks, out of his mind, devoting his whole soul to the matches. He watched, using the sense of vision in place of that
of touch, and when he saw his fingers on each side the bunch, he closed them--that is, he willed to close them, for the wires
were drawn, and the fingers did not obey. He pulled the mitten on the right hand, and beat it fiercely against his knee. Then,
with both mittened hands, he scooped the bunch of matches, along with much snow, into his lap. Yet he was no better off.
After some manipulation he managed to get the bunch between the heels of his mittened hands. In this fashion he carried
it to his mouth. The ice crackled and snapped when by a violent effort he opened his mouth. He drew the lower jaw in, curled
the upper lip out of the way, and scraped the bunch with his upper teeth in order to separate a match. He succeeded in getting
one, which he dropped on his lap. He was no better off. He could not pick it up. Then he devised a way. He picked it up in
his teeth and scratched it on his leg. Twenty times he scratched before he succeeded in lighting it. As it flamed he held
it with his teeth to the birch-bark. But the burning brimstone went up his nostrils and into his lungs, causing him to cough
spasmodically. The match fell into the snow and went out.
The old-timer on Sulphur Creek was right, he thought in the moment of controlled despair that ensued: after fifty below,
a man should travel with a partner. He beat his hands, but failed in exciting any sensation. Suddenly he bared both hands,
removing the mittens with his teeth. He caught the whole bunch between the heels of his hands. His arm-muscles not being frozen
enabled him to press the hand-heels tightly against the matches. Then he scratched the bunch along his leg. It flared into
flame, seventy sulphur matches at once! There was no wind to blow them out. He kept his head to one side to escape the strangling
fumes, and held the blazing bunch to the birch-bark. As he so held it, he became aware of sensation in his hand. His flesh
was burning. He could smell it. Deep down below the surface he could feel it. The sensation developed into pain that grew
acute. And still he endured it, holding the flame of the matches clumsily to the bark that would not light readily because
his own burning hands were in the way, absorbing most of the flame.
At last, when he could endure no more, he jerked his hands apart. The blazing matches fell sizzling into the snow,
but the birch-bark was alight. He began laying dry grasses and the tiniest twigs on the flame. He could not pick and choose,
for he had to lift the fuel between the heels of his hands. Small pieces of rotten wood and green moss clung to the twigs,
and he bit them off as well as he could with his teeth. He cherished the flame carefully and awkwardly. It meant life, and
it must not perish. The withdrawal of blood from the surface of his body now made him begin to shiver, and he grew more awkward.
A large piece of green moss fell squarely on the little fire. He tried to poke it out with his fingers, but his shivering
frame made him poke too far, and he disrupted the nucleus of the little fire, the burning grasses and tiny twigs separating
and scattering. He tried to poke them together again, but in spite of the tenseness of the effort, his shivering got away
with him, and the twigs were hopelessly scattered. Each twig gushed a puff of smoke and went out. The fire-provider had failed.
As he looked apathetically about him, his eyes chanced on the dog, sitting across the ruins of the fire from him, in the snow,
making restless, hunching movements, slightly lifting one forefoot and then the other, shifting its weight back and forth
on them with wistful eagerness.
The sight of the dog put a wild idea into his head. He remembered the tale of the man, caught in a blizzard, who killed
a steer and crawled inside the carcass, and so was saved. He would kill the dog and bury his hands in the warm body until
the numbness went out of them. Then he could build another fire. He spoke to the dog, calling it to him; but in his voice
was a strange note of fear that frightened the animal, who had never known the man to speak in such way before. Something
was the matter, and its suspicious nature sensed danger,--it knew not what danger but somewhere, somehow, in its brain arose
an apprehension of the man. It flattened its ears down at the sound of the man's voice, and its restless, hunching movements
and the liftings and shiftings of its forefeet became more pronounced but it would not come to the man. He got on his hands
and knees and crawled toward the dog. This unusual posture again excited suspicion, and the animal sidled mincingly away.
The man sat up in the snow for a moment and struggled for calmness. Then he pulled on his mittens, by means of his
teeth, and got upon his feet. He glanced down at first in order to assure himself that he was really standing up, for the
absence of sensation in his feet left him unrelated to the earth. His erect position in itself started to drive the webs of
suspicion from the dog's mind; and when he spoke peremptorily, with the sound of whip-lashes in his voice, the dog rendered
its customary allegiance and came to him. As it came within reaching distance, the man lost his control. His arms flashed
out to the dog, and he experienced genuine surprise when he discovered that his hands could not clutch, that there was neither
bend nor feeling in the lingers. He had forgotten for the moment that they were frozen and that they were freezing more and
more. All this happened quickly, and before the animal could get away, he encircled its body with his arms. He sat down in
the snow, and in this fashion held the dog, while it snarled and whined and struggled.
But it was all he could do, hold its body encircled in his arms and sit there. He realized that he could not kill the
dog. There was no way to do it. With his helpless hands he could neither draw nor hold his sheath-knife nor throttle the animal.
He released it, and it plunged wildly away, with tail between its legs, and still snarling. It halted forty feet away and
surveyed him curiously, with ears sharply pricked forward. The man looked down at his hands in order to locate them, and found
them hanging on the ends of his arms. It struck him as curious that one should have to use his eyes in order to find out where
his hands were. He began threshing his arms back and forth, beating the mittened hands against his sides. He did this for
five minutes, violently, and his heart pumped enough blood up to the surface to put a stop to his shivering. But no sensation
was aroused in the hands. He had an impression that they hung like weights on the ends of his arms, but when he tried to run
the impression down, he could not find it.
A certain fear of death, dull and oppressive, came to him. This fear quickly became poignant as he realized that it
was no longer a mere matter of freezing his fingers and toes, or of losing his hands and feet, but that it was a matter of
life and death with the chances against him. This threw him into a panic, and he turned and ran up the creek-bed along the
old, dim trail. The dog joined in behind and kept up with him. He ran blindly, without intention, in fear such as he had never
known in his life. Slowly, as he ploughed and floundered through the snow, he began to see things again--the banks of the
creek, the old timber-jams, the leafless aspens, and the sky. The running made him feel better. He did not shiver. Maybe,
if he ran on, his feet would thaw out; and, anyway, if he ran far enough, he would reach camp and the boys. Without doubt
he would lose some fingers and toes and some of his face; but the boys would take care of him, and save the rest of him when
he got there. And at the same time there was another thought in his mind that said he would never get to the camp and the
boys; that it was too many miles away, that the freezing had too great a start on him, and that he would soon be stiff and
dead. This thought he kept in the background and refused to consider. Sometimes it pushed itself forward and demanded to be
heard, but he thrust it back and strove to think of other things.
It struck him as curious that he could run at all on feet so frozen that he could not feel them when they struck the
earth and took the weight of his body. He seemed to himself to skim along above the surface and to have no connection with
the earth. Somewhere he had once seen a winged Mercury, and he wondered if Mercury felt as he felt when skimming over the
earth.
His theory of running until he reached camp and the boys had one flaw in it: he lacked the endurance. Several times
he stumbled, and finally he tottered, crumpled up, and fell. When he tried to rise, he failed. He must sit and rest, he decided,
and next time he would merely walk and keep on going. As he sat and regained his breath, he noted that he was feeling quite
warm and comfortable. He was not shivering, and it even seemed that a warm glow had come to his chest and trunk. And yet,
when he touched his nose or cheeks, there was no sensation. Running would not thaw them out. Nor would it thaw out his hands
and feet. Then the thought came to him that the frozen portions of his body must be extending. He tried to keep this thought
down, to forget it, to think of something else; he was aware of the panicky feeling that it caused, and he was afraid of the
panic. But the thought asserted itself, and persisted, until it produced a vision of his body totally frozen. This was too
much, and he made another wild run along the trail. Once he slowed down to a walk, but the thought of the freezing extending
itself made him run again.
And all the time the dog ran with him, at his heels. When he fell down a second time, it curled its tail over its forefeet
and sat in front of him facing him curiously eager and intent. The warmth and security of the animal angered him, and he cursed
it till it flattened down its ears appeasingly. This time the shivering came more quickly upon the man. He was losing in his
battle with the frost. It was creeping into his body from all sides. The thought of it drove him on, but he ran no more than
a hundred feet, when he staggered and pitched headlong. It was his last panic. When he had recovered his breath and control,
he sat up and entertained in his mind the conception of meeting death with dignity. However, the conception did not come to
him in such terms. His idea of it was that he had been making a fool of himself, running around like a chicken with its head
cut off--such was the simile that occurred to him. Well, he was bound to freeze anyway, and he might as well take it decently.
With this new-found peace of mind came the first glimmerings of drowsiness. A good idea, he thought, to sleep off to death.
It was like taking an anaesthetic. Freezing was not so bad as people thought. There were lots worse ways to die.
He pictured the boys finding his body next day. Suddenly he found himself with them, coming along the trail and looking
for himself. And, still with them, he came around a turn in the trail and found himself lying in the snow. He did not belong
with himself any more, for even then he was out of himself, standing with the boys and looking at himself in the snow. It
certainly was cold, was his thought. When he got back to the States he could tell the folks what real cold was. He drifted
on from this to a vision of the old-timer on Sulphur Creek. He could see him quite clearly, warm and comfortable, and smoking
a pipe.
"You were right, old hoss; you were right," the man mumbled to the old-timer of Sulphur Creek.
Then the man drowsed off into what seemed to him the most comfortable and satisfying sleep he had ever known. The dog
sat facing him and waiting. The brief day drew to a close in a long, slow twilight. There were no signs of a fire to be made,
and, besides, never in the dog's experience had it known a man to sit like that in the snow and make no fire. As the twilight
drew on, its eager yearning for the fire mastered it, and with a great lifting and shifting of forefeet, it whined softly,
then flattened its ears down in anticipation of being chidden by the man. But the man remained silent. Later, the dog whined
loudly. And still later it crept close to the man and caught the scent of death. This made the animal bristle and back away.
A little longer it delayed, howling under the stars that leaped and danced and shone brightly in the cold sky. Then it turned
and trotted up the trail in the direction of the camp it knew, where were the other food-providers and fire-providers.

"Brown Wolf"
She had delayed, because of the dew-wet grass, in order
to put on her overshoes, and when she emerged from the house found her waiting husband absorbed in the wonder of a bursting
almond-bud. She sent a questing glance across the tall grass and in and out among the orchard trees.
"Where's
Wolf?" she asked.
"He
was here a moment ago." Walt Irvine drew himself away with a jerk from the metaphysics and poetry of the organic miracle of
blossom, and surveyed the landscape. "He was running a rabbit the last I saw of him."
"Wolf!
Wolf! Here Wolf!" she called, as they left the clearing and took the trail that led down through the waxen-belled manzanita
jungle to the county road.
Irvine
thrust between his lips the little finger of each hand and lent to her efforts a shrill whistling.
She
covered her ears hastily and made a wry grimace.
"My!
for a poet, delicately attuned and all the rest of it, you can make unlovely noises. My ear-drums are pierced. You outwhistle
- "
"Orpheus."
"I
was about to say a street-arab," she concluded severely.
"Poesy
does not prevent one from being practical - at least it doesn't prevent ME. Mine is no futility of genius that can't sell
gems to the magazines."
He
assumed a mock extravagance, and went on:
"I
am no attic singer, no ballroom warbler. And why? Because I am practical. Mine is no squalor of song that cannot transmute
itself, with proper exchange value, into a flower-crowned cottage, a sweet mountain-meadow, a grove of red-woods, an orchard
of thirty-seven trees, one long row of blackberries and two short rows of strawberries, to say nothing of a quarter of a mile
of gurgling brook. I am a beauty-merchant, a trader in song, and I pursue utility, dear Madge. I sing a song, and thanks to
the magazine editors I transmute my song into a waft of the west wind sighing through our redwoods, into a murmur of waters
over mossy stones that sings back to me another song than the one I sang and yet the same song wonderfully - er - transmuted."
"O
that all your song-transmutations were as successful!" she laughed.
"Name
one that wasn't."
"Those
two beautiful sonnets that you transmuted into the cow that was accounted the worst milker in the township."
"She
was beautiful - " he began,
"But
she didn't give milk," Madge interrupted.
"But
she WAS beautiful, now, wasn't she?" he insisted.
"And
here's where beauty and utility fall out," was her reply. "And there's the Wolf!"
From
the thicket-covered hillside came a crashing of underbrush, and then, forty feet above them, on the edge of the sheer wall
of rock, appeared a wolf's head and shoulders. His braced fore paws dislodged a pebble, and with sharp-pricked ears and peering
eyes he watched the fall of the pebble till it struck at their feet. Then he transferred his gaze and with open mouth laughed
down at them.
"You
Wolf, you!" and "You blessed Wolf!" the man and woman called out to him.
The
ears flattened back and down at the sound, and the head seemed to snuggle under the caress of an invisible hand.
They
watched him scramble backward into the thicket, then proceeded on their way. Several minutes later, rounding a turn in the
trail where the descent was less precipitous, he joined them in the midst of a miniature avalanche of pebbles and loose soil.
He was not demonstrative. A pat and a rub around the ears from the man, and a more prolonged caressing from the woman, and
he was away down the trail in front of them, gliding effortlessly over the ground in true wolf fashion.
In
build and coat and brush he was a huge timber-wolf; but the lie was given to his wolfhood by his color and marking. There
the dog unmistakably advertised itself. No wolf was ever colored like him. He was brown, deep brown, red-brown, an orgy of
browns. Back and shoulders were a warm brown that paled on the sides and underneath to a yellow that was dingy because of
the brown that lingered in it. The white of the throat and paws and the spots over the eyes was dirty because of the persistent
and ineradicable brown, while the eyes themselves were twin topazes, golden and brown.
The
man and woman loved the dog very much; perhaps this was because it had been such a task to win his love. It had been no easy
matter when he first drifted in mysteriously out of nowhere to their little mountain cottage. Footsore and famished, he had
killed a rabbit under their very noses and under their very windows, and then crawled away and slept by the spring at the
foot of the blackberry bushes. When Walt Irvine went down to inspect the intruder, he was snarled at for his pains, and Madge
likewise was snarled at when she went down to present, as a peace-offering, a large pan of bread and milk.
A
most unsociable dog he proved to be, resenting all their advances, refusing to let them lay hands on him, menacing them with
bared fangs and bristling hair. Nevertheless he remained, sleeping and resting by the spring, and eating the food they gave
him after they set it down at a safe distance and retreated. His wretched physical condition explained why he lingered; and
when he had recuperated, after several days' sojourn, he disappeared.
And
this would have been the end of him, so far as Irvine and his wife were concerned, had not Irvine at that particular time
been called away into the northern part of the state. Riding along on the train, near to the line between California and Oregon,
he chanced to look out of the window and saw his unsociable guest sliding along the wagon road, brown and wolfish, tired yet
tireless, dust-covered and soiled with two hundred miles of travel.
Now
Irvine was a man of impulse, a poet. He got off the train at the next station, bought a piece of meat at a butcher shop, and
captured the vagrant on the outskirts of the town. The return trip was made in the baggage car, and so Wolf came a second
time to the mountain cottage. Here he was tied up for a week and made love to by the man and woman. But it was very circumspect
love-making. Remote and alien as a traveller from another planet, he snarled down their soft-spoken love-words. He never barked.
In all the time they had him he was never known to bark.
To
win him became a problem. Irvine liked problems. He had a metal plate made, on which was stamped: RETURN TO WALT IRVINE, GLEN
ELLEN, SONOMA COUNTY, CALIFORNIA. This was riveted to a collar and strapped about the dog's neck. Then he was turned loose,
and promptly he disappeared. A day later came a telegram from Mendocino County. In twenty hours he had made over a hundred
miles to the north, and was still going when captured.
He
came back by Wells Fargo Express, was tied up three days, and was loosed on the fourth and lost. This time he gained southern
Oregon before he was caught and returned. Always, as soon as he received his liberty, he fled away, and always he fled north.
He was possessed of an obsession that drove him north. The homing instinct, Irvine called it, after he had expended the selling
price of a sonnet in getting the animal back from northern Oregon.
Another
time the brown wanderer succeeded in traversing half the length of California, all of Oregon, and most of Washington, before
he was picked up and returned "Collect." A remarkable thing was the speed with which he travelled. Fed up and rested, as soon
as he was loosed he devoted all his energy to getting over the ground. On the first day's run he was known to cover as high
as a hundred and fifty miles, and after that he would average a hundred miles a day until caught. He always arrived back lean
and hungry and savage, and always departed fresh and vigorous, cleaving his way northward in response to some prompting of
his being that no one could understand.
But
at last, after a futile year of flight, he accepted the inevitable and elected to remain at the cottage where first he had
killed the rabbit and slept by the spring. Even after that, a long time elapsed before the man and woman succeeded in patting
him. It was a great victory, for they alone were allowed to put hands on him. He was fastidiously exclusive, and no guest
at the cottage ever succeeded in making up to him. A low growl greeted such approach; if any one had the hardihood to come
nearer, the lips lifted, the naked fangs appeared, and the growl became a snarl - a snarl so terrible and malignant that it
awed the stoutest of them, as it likewise awed the farmers' dogs that knew ordinary dog- snarling, but had never seen wolf-snarling
before.
He
was without antecedents. His history began with Walt and Madge. He had come up from the south, but never a clew did they get
of the owner from whom he had evidently fled. Mrs. Johnson, their nearest neighbor and the one who supplied them with milk,
proclaimed him a Klondike dog. Her brother was burrowing for frozen pay-streaks in that far country, and so she constituted
herself an authority on the subject.
But
they did not dispute her. There were the tips of Wolf's ears, obviously so severely frozen at some time that they would never
quite heal again. Besides, he looked like the photographs of the Alaskan dogs they saw published in magazines and newspapers.
They often speculated over his past, and tried to conjure up (from what they had read and heard) what his northland life had
been. That the northland still drew him, they knew; for at night they sometimes heard him crying softly; and when the north
wind blew and the bite of frost was in the air, a great restlessness would come upon him and he would lift a mournful lament
which they knew to be the long wolf-howl. Yet he never barked. No provocation was great enough to draw from him that canine
cry.
Long
discussion they had, during the time of winning him, as to whose dog he was. Each claimed him, and each proclaimed loudly
any expression of affection made by him. But the man had the better of it at first, chiefly because he was a man. It was patent
that Wolf had had no experience with women. He did not understand women. Madge's skirts were something he never quite accepted.
The swish of them was enough to set him a-bristle with suspicion, and on a windy day she could not approach him at all.
On
the other hand, it was Madge who fed him; also it was she who ruled the kitchen, and it was by her favor, and her favor alone,
that he was permitted to come within that sacred precinct. It was because of these things that she bade fair to overcome the
handicap of her garments. Then it was that Walt put forth special effort, making it a practice to have Wolf lie at his feet
while he wrote, and, between petting and talking, losing much time from his work. Walt won in the end, and his victory was
most probably due to the fact that he was a man, though Madge averred that they would have had another quarter of a mile of
gurgling brook, and at least two west winds sighing through their redwoods, had Wait properly devoted his energies to song-transmutation
and left Wolf alone to exercise a natural taste and an unbiassed judgment.
"It's
about time I heard from those triolets", Walt said, after a silence of five minutes, during which they had swung steadily
down the trail. "There'll be a check at the post-office, I know, and we'll transmute it into beautiful buckwheat flour, a
gallon of maple syrup, and a new pair of overshoes for you."
"And
into beautiful milk from Mrs. Johnson's beautiful cow," Madge added. "To-morrow's the first of the month, you know."
Walt
scowled unconsciously; then his face brightened, and he clapped his hand to his breast pocket.
"Never
mind. I have here a nice beautiful new cow, the best milker in California."
"When
did you write it?" she demanded eagerly. Then, reproachfully, "And you never showed it to me."
"I
saved it to read to you on the way to the post-office, in a spot remarkably like this one," he answered, indicating, with
a wave of his hand, a dry log on which to sit.
A
tiny stream flowed out of a dense fern-brake, slipped down a mossy-lipped stone, and ran across the path at their feet. From
the valley arose the mellow song of meadow-larks, while about them, in and out, through sunshine and shadow, fluttered great
yellow butterflies.
Up
from below came another sound that broke in upon Walt reading softly from his manuscript. It was a crunching of heavy feet,
punctuated now and again by the clattering of a displaced stone. As Walt finished and looked to his wife for approval, a man
came into view around the turn of the trail. He was bare-headed and sweaty. With a handkerchief in one hand he mopped his
face, while in the other hand he carried a new hat and a wilted starched collar which he had removed from his neck. He was
a well-built man, and his muscles seemed on the point of bursting out of the painfully new and ready-made black clothes he
wore.
"Warm
day," Walt greeted him. Walt believed in country democracy, and never missed an opportunity to practise it.
The
man paused and nodded.
"I
guess I ain't used much to the warm," he vouchsafed half apologetically. "I'm more accustomed to zero weather."
"You
don't find any of that in this country," Walt laughed.
"Should
say not," the man answered. "An' I ain't here a-lookin' for it neither. I'm tryin' to find my sister. Mebbe you know where
she lives. Her name's Johnson, Mrs. William Johnson."
"You're
not her Klondike brother!" Madge cried, her eyes bright with interest, "about whom we've heard so much?"
"Yes'm,
that's me," he answered modestly. "My name's Miller, Skiff Miller. I just thought I'd s'prise her."
"You
are on the right track then. Only you've come by the foot- path." Madge stood up to direct him, pointing up the canyon a quarter
of a mile. "You see that blasted redwood? Take the little trail turning off to the right. It's the short cut to her house.
You can't miss it."
"Yes'm,
thank you, ma'am," he said. He made tentative efforts to go, but seemed awkwardly rooted to the spot. He was gazing at her
with an open admiration of which he was quite unconscious, and which was drowning, along with him, in the rising sea of embarrassment
in which he floundered.
"We'd
like to hear you tell about the Klondike," Madge said. "Mayn't we come over some day while you are at your sister's? Or, better
yet, won't you come over and have dinner with us?"
"Yes'm,
thank you, ma'am," he mumbled mechanically. Then he caught himself up and added: "I ain't stoppin' long. I got to be pullin'
north again. I go out on to-night's train. You see, I've got a mail contract with the government."
When
Madge had said that it was too bad, he made another futile effort to go. But he could not take his eyes from her face. He
forgot his embarrassment in his admiration, and it was her turn to flush and feel uncomfortable.
It
was at this juncture, when Walt had just decided it was time for him to be saying something to relieve the strain, that Wolf,
who had been away nosing through the brush, trotted wolf-like into view.
Skiff
Miller's abstraction disappeared. The pretty woman before him passed out of his field of vision. He had eyes only for the
dog, and a great wonder came into his face.
"Well,
I'll be damned!" he enunciated slowly and solemnly.
He
sat down ponderingly on the log, leaving Madge standing. At the sound of his voice, Wolf's ears had flattened down, then his
mouth had opened in a laugh. He trotted slowly up to the stranger and first smelled his hands, then licked them with his tongue.
Skiff
Miller patted the dog's head, and slowly and solemnly repeated, "Well, I'll be damned!"
"Excuse
me, ma'am," he said the next moment "I was just s'prised some, that was all."
"We're
surprised, too," she answered lightly. "We never saw Wolf make up to a stranger before."
"Is
that what you call him - Wolf?" the man asked.
Madge
nodded. "But I can't understand his friendliness toward you - unless it's because you're from the Klondike. He's a Klondike
dog, you know."
"Yes'm,"
Miller said absently. He lifted one of Wolf's fore legs and examined the foot-pads, pressing them and denting them with his
thumb. "Kind of SOFT," he remarked. "He ain't been on trail for a long time."
"I
say," Walt broke in, "it is remarkable the way he lets you handle him."
Skiff
Miller arose, no longer awkward with admiration of Madge, and in a sharp, businesslike manner asked, "How long have you had
him?"
But
just then the dog, squirming and rubbing against the newcomer's legs, opened his mouth and barked. It was an explosive bark,
brief and joyous, but a bark.
"That's
a new one on me," Skiff Miller remarked.
Walt
and Madge stared at each other. The miracle had happened. Wolf had barked.
"It's
the first time he ever barked," Madge said.
"First
time I ever heard him, too," Miller volunteered.
Madge
smiled at him. The man was evidently a humorist.
"Of
course," she said, "since you have only seen him for five minutes."
Skiff
Miller looked at her sharply, seeking in her face the guile her words had led him to suspect.
"I
thought you understood," he said slowly. "I thought you'd tumbled to it from his makin' up to me. He's my dog. His name ain't
Wolf. It's Brown."
"Oh,
Walt!" was Madge's instinctive cry to her husband.
Walt
was on the defensive at once.
"How
do you know he's your dog?" he demanded.
"Because
he is," was the reply.
"Mere
assertion," Walt said sharply.
In
his slow and pondering way, Skiff Miller looked at him, then asked, with a nod of his head toward Madge:
"How
d'you know she's your wife? You just say, 'Because she is,' and I'll say it's mere assertion. The dog's mine. I bred 'm an'
raised 'm, an' I guess I ought to know. Look here. I'll prove it to you."
Skiff
Miller turned to the dog. "Brown!" His voice rang out sharply, and at the sound the dog's ears flattened down as to a caress.
"Gee!" The dog made a swinging turn to the right. "Now mush-on!" And the dog ceased his swing abruptly and started straight
ahead, halting obediently at command.
"I
can do it with whistles", Skiff Miller said proudly. "He was my lead dog."
"But
you are not going to take him away with you?" Madge asked tremulously.
The
man nodded.
"Back
into that awful Klondike world of suffering?"
He
nodded and added: "Oh, it ain't so bad as all that. Look at me. Pretty healthy specimen, ain't I?"
"But
the dogs! The terrible hardship, the heart-breaking toil, the starvation, the frost! Oh, I've read about it and I know."
"I
nearly ate him once, over on Little Fish River," Miller volunteered grimly. "If I hadn't got a moose that day was all that
saved 'm."
"I'd
have died first!" Madge cried.
"Things
is different down here", Miller explained. "You don't have to eat dogs. You think different just about the time you're all
in. You've never ben all in, so you don't know anything about it."
"That's
the very point," she argued warmly. "Dogs are not eaten in California. Why not leave him here? He is happy. He'll never want
for food - you know that. He'll never suffer from cold and hardship. Here all is softness and gentleness. Neither the human
nor nature is savage. He will never know a whip-lash again. And as for the weather - why, it never snows here."
"But
it's all-fired hot in summer, beggin' your pardon," Skiff Miller laughed.
"But
you do not answer," Madge continued passionately. "What have you to offer him in that northland life?"
"Grub,
when I've got it, and that's most of the time," came the answer.
"And
the rest of the time?"
"No
grub."
"And
the work?"
"Yes,
plenty of work," Miller blurted out impatiently. "Work without end, an' famine, an' frost, an all the rest of the miseries
- that's what he'll get when he comes with me. But he likes it. He is used to it. He knows that life. He was born to it an'
brought up to it. An' you don't know anything about it. You don't know what you're talking about. That's where the dog belongs,
and that's where he'll be happiest."
"The
dog doesn't go," Walt announced in a determined voice. "So there is no need of further discussion."
"What's
that?" Skiff Miller demanded, his brows lowering and an obstinate flush of blood reddening his forehead.
"I
said the dog doesn't go, and that settles it. I don't believe he's your dog. You may have seen him sometime. You may even
sometime have driven him for his owner. But his obeying the ordinary driving commands of the Alaskan trail is no demonstration
that he is yours. Any dog in Alaska would obey you as he obeyed. Besides, he is undoubtedly a valuable dog, as dogs go in
Alaska, and that is sufficient explanation of your desire to get possession of him. Anyway, you've got to prove property."
Skiff
Miller, cool and collected, the obstinate flush a trifle deeper on his forehead, his huge muscles bulging under the black
cloth of his coat, carefully looked the poet up and down as though measuring the strength of his slenderness.
The
Klondiker's face took on a contemptuous expression as he said finally, "I reckon there's nothin' in sight to prevent me takin'
the dog right here an' now."
Walt's
face reddened, and the striking-muscles of his arms and shoulders seemed to stiffen and grow tense. His wife fluttered apprehensively
into the breach.
"Maybe
Mr. Miller is right", she said. "I am afraid that he is. Wolf does seem to know him, and certainly he answers to the name
of 'Brown.' He made friends with him instantly, and you know that's something he never did with anybody before. Besides, look
at the way he barked. He was just bursting with joy. Joy over what? Without doubt at finding Mr. Miller."
Walt's
striking-muscles relaxed, and his shoulders seemed to droop with hopelessness.
"I
guess you're right, Madge," he said. "Wolf isn't Wolf, but Brown, and he must belong to Mr. Miller."
"Perhaps
Mr. Miller will sell him," she suggested. "We can buy him."
Skiff
Miller shook his head, no longer belligerent, but kindly, quick to be generous in response to generousness.
"I
had five dogs," he said, casting about for the easiest way to temper his refusal. "He was the leader. They was the crack team
of Alaska. Nothin' could touch 'em. In 1898 I refused five thousand dollars for the bunch. Dogs was high, then, anyway; but
that wasn't what made the fancy price. It was the team itself. Brown was the best in the team. That winter I refused twelve
hundred for 'm. I didn't sell 'm then, an' I ain't a-sellin' 'm now. Besides, I think a mighty lot of that dog. I've ben lookin'
for 'm for three years. It made me fair sick when I found he'd ben stole - not the value of him, but the - well, I liked 'm
like hell, that's all, beggin' your pardon. I couldn't believe my eyes when I seen 'm just now. I thought I was dreamin'.
It was too good to be true. Why, I was his wet-nurse. I put 'm to bed, snug every night. His mother died, and I brought 'm
up on condensed milk at two dollars a can when I couldn't afford it in my own coffee. He never knew any mother but me. He
used to suck my finger regular, the darn little cuss - that finger right there!"
And
Skiff Miller, too overwrought for speech, held up a fore finger for them to see.
"That
very finger," he managed to articulate, as though it somehow clinched the proof of ownership and the bond of affection.
He
was still gazing at his extended finger when Madge began to speak.
"But
the dog," she said. "You haven't considered the dog."
Skiff
Miller looked puzzled.
"Have
you thought about him?" she asked.
"Don't
know what you're drivin' at," was the response.
"Maybe
the dog has some choice in the matter," Madge went on. "Maybe he has his likes and desires. You have not considered him. You
give him no choice. It has never entered your mind that possibly he might prefer California to Alaska. You consider only what
you like. You do with him as you would with a sack of potatoes or a bale of hay."
This
was a new way of looking at it, and Miller was visibly impressed as he debated it in his mind. Madge took advantage of his
indecision.
"If
you really love him, what would be happiness to him would be your happiness also," she urged.
Skiff
Miller continued to debate with himself, and Madge stole a glance of exultation to her husband, who looked back warm approval.
"What
do you think?" the Klondiker suddenly demanded.
It
was her turn to be puzzled. "What do you mean?" she asked.
"D'ye
think he'd sooner stay in California?"
She
nodded her head with positiveness. "I am sure of it."
Skiff
Miller again debated with himself, though this time aloud, at the same time running his gaze in a judicial way over the mooted
animal.
"He
was a good worker. He's done a heap of work for me. He never loafed on me, an' he was a joe-dandy at hammerin' a raw team
into shape. He's got a head on him. He can do everything but talk. He knows what you say to him. Look at 'm now. He knows
we're talkin' about him."
The
dog was lying at Skiff Miller's feet, head close down on paws, ears erect and listening, and eyes that were quick and eager
to follow the sound of speech as it fell from the lips of first one and then the other.
"An'
there's a lot of work in 'm yet. He's good for years to come. An' I do like him. I like him like hell."
Once
or twice after that Skiff Miller opened his mouth and closed it again without speaking. Finally he said:
"I'll
tell you what I'll do. Your remarks, ma'am, has some weight in them. The dog's worked hard, and maybe he's earned a soft berth
an' has got a right to choose. Anyway, we'll leave it up to him. Whatever he says, goes. You people stay right here settin'
down. I'll say good-by and walk off casual-like. If he wants to stay, he can stay. If he wants to come with me, let 'm come.
I won't call 'm to come an' don't you call 'm to come back."
He
looked with sudden suspicion at Madge, and added, "Only you must play fair. No persuadin' after my back is turned."
"We'll
play fair," Madge began, but Skiff Miller broke in on her assurances.
"I
know the ways of women," he announced. "Their hearts is soft. When their hearts is touched they're likely to stack the cards,
look at the bottom of the deck, an' lie like the devil - beggin' your pardon, ma'am. I'm only discoursin' about women in general."
"I
don't know how to thank you," Madge quavered.
"I
don't see as you've got any call to thank me," he replied. "Brown ain't decided yet. Now you won't mind if I go away slow?
It's no more'n fair, seein' I'll be out of sight inside a hundred yards." - Madge agreed, and added, "And I promise you faithfully
that we won't do anything to influence him."
"Well,
then, I might as well be gettin' along," Skiff Miller said in the ordinary tones of one departing.
At
this change in his voice, Wolf lifted his head quickly, and still more quickly got to his feet when the man and woman shook
hands. He sprang up on his hind legs, resting his fore paws on her hip and at the same time licking Skiff Miller's hand. When
the latter shook hands with Walt, Wolf repeated his act, resting his weight on Walt and licking both men's hands.
"It
ain't no picnic, I can tell you that," were the Klondiker's last words, as he turned and went slowly up the trail.
For
the distance of twenty feet Wolf watched him go, himself all eagerness and expectancy, as though waiting for the man to turn
and retrace his steps. Then, with a quick low whine, Wolf sprang after him, overtook him, caught his hand between his teeth
with reluctant tenderness, and strove gently to make him pause.
Failing
in this, Wolf raced back to where Walt Irvine sat, catching his coat-sleeve in his teeth and trying vainly to drag him after
the retreating man.
Wolf's
perturbation began to wax. He desired ubiquity. He wanted to be in two places at the same time, with the old master and the
new, and steadily the distance between them was increasing. He sprang about excitedly, making short nervous leaps and twists,
now toward one, now toward the other, in painful indecision, not knowing his own mind, desiring both and unable to choose,
uttering quick sharp whines and beginning to pant.
He
sat down abruptly on his haunches, thrusting his nose upward, the mouth opening and closing with jerking movements, each time
opening wider. These jerking movements were in unison with the recurrent spasms that attacked the throat, each spasm severer
and more intense than the preceding one. And in accord with jerks and spasms the larynx began to vibrate, at first silently,
accompanied by the rush of air expelled from the lungs, then sounding a low, deep note, the lowest in the register of the
human ear. All this was the nervous and muscular preliminary to howling.
But
just as the howl was on the verge of bursting from the full throat, the wide-opened mouth was closed, the paroxysms ceased,
and he looked long and steadily at the retreating man. Suddenly Wolf turned his head, and over his shoulder just as steadily
regarded Walt. The appeal was unanswered. Not a word nor a sign did the dog receive, no suggestion and no clew as to what
his conduct should be.
A
glance ahead to where the old master was nearing the curve of the trail excited him again. He sprang to his feet with a whine,
and then, struck by a new idea, turned his attention to Madge. Hitherto he had ignored her, but now, both masters failing
him, she alone was left. He went over to her and snuggled his head in her lap, nudging her arm with his nose - an old trick
of his when begging for favors. He backed away from her and began writhing and twisting playfully, curvetting and prancing,
half rearing and striking his fore paws to the earth, struggling with all his body, from the wheedling eyes and flattening
ears to the wagging tail, to express the thought that was in him and that was denied him utterance.
This,
too, he soon abandoned. He was depressed by the coldness of these humans who had never been cold before. No response could
he drawn from them, no help could he get. They did not consider him. They were as dead.
He
turned and silently gazed after the old master. Skiff Miller was rounding the curve. In a moment he would be gone from view.
Yet he never turned his head, plodding straight onward, slowly and methodically, as though possessed of no interest in what
was occurring behind his back.
And
in this fashion he went out of view. Wolf waited for him to reappear. He waited a long minute, silently, quietly, without
movement, as though turned to stone - withal stone quick with eagerness and desire. He barked once, and waited. Then he turned
and trotted back to Walt Irvine. He sniffed his hand and dropped down heavily at his feet, watching the trail where it curved
emptily from view.
The
tiny stream slipping down the mossy-lipped stone seemed suddenly to increase the volume of its gurgling noise. Save for the
meadow-larks, there was no other sound. The great yellow butterflies drifted silently through the sunshine and lost themselves
in the drowsy shadows. Madge gazed triumphantly at her husband.
A
few minutes later Wolf got upon his feet. Decision and deliberation marked his movements. He did not glance at the man and
woman. His eyes were fixed up the trail. He had made up his mind. They knew it. And they knew, so far as they were concerned,
that the ordeal had just begun.
He
broke into a trot, and Madge's lips pursed, forming an avenue for the caressing sound that it was the will of her to send
forth. But the caressing sound was not made. She was impelled to look at her husband, and she saw the sternness with which
he watched her. The pursed lips relaxed, and she sighed inaudibly.
Wolf's trot broke into a run. Wider and wider were the leaps he made. Not once
did he turn his head, his wolf's brush standing out straight behind him. He cut sharply across the curve of the trail and
was gone.

"The Son of the Wolf"
MAN RARELY places a proper valuation upon his womankind, at least not
until deprived of them. He has no conception of the subtle atmosphere exhaled by the sex feminine, so long as he bathes in
it; but let it be withdrawn, and an ever-growing void begins to manifest itself in his existence, and he becomes hungry, in
a vague sort of way, for a something so indefinite that he cannot characterize it. If his comrades have no more experience
than himself, they will shake their heads dubiously and dose him with strong physic. But the hunger will continue and become
stronger; he will lose interest in the things of his everyday life and wax morbid; and one day, when the emptiness has become
unbearable, a revelation will dawn upon him.
In the Yukon country, when this comes to pass, the man usually provisions
a poling boat, if it is summer, and if winter, harnesses his dogs, and heads for the Southland. A few months later, supposing
him to be possessed of a faith in the country, he returns with a wife to share with him in that faith, and incidentally in
his hardships. This but serves to show the innate selfishness of man. It also brings us to the trouble of `Scruff' Mackenzie,
which occurred in 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 Marriage of Lit-Lit"
When
John Fox came into a country where whisky freezes solid and may be used as a paper-weight for a large part of the year, he
came without the ideals and illusions that usually hamper the progress of more delicately nurtured adventurers. Born and reared
on the frontier fringe of the United States, he took with him into Canada a primitive cast of mind, an elemental simplicity
and grip on things, as it were, that insured him immediate success in his new career. From a mere servant of the Hudson Bay
Company, driving a paddle with the voyageurs and carrying goods on his back across the portages, he swiftly rose to a Factorship
and took charge of a trading post at Fort Angelus.
Here,
because of his elemental simplicity, he took to himself a native wife, and, by reason of the connubial bliss that followed,
he escaped the unrest and vain longings that curse the days of more fastidious men, spoil their work, and conquer them in
the end. He lived contentedly, was at single purposes with the business he was set there to do, and achieved a brilliant record
in the service of the Company. About this time his wife died, was claimed by her people, and buried with savage circumstance
in a tin trunk in the top of a tree.
Two
sons she had borne him, and when the Company promoted him, he journeyed with them still deeper into the vastness of the North-
West Territory to a place called Sin Rock, where he took charge of a new post in a more important fur field. Here he spent
several lonely and depressing months, eminently disgusted with the unprepossessing appearance of the Indian maidens, and greatly
worried by his growing sons who stood in need of a mother's care. Then his eyes chanced upon Lit-lit.
"Lit-lit--well,
she is Lit-lit," was the fashion in which he despairingly described her to his chief clerk, Alexander McLean.
McLean
was too fresh from his Scottish upbringing--"not dry behind the ears yet," John Fox put it--to take to the marriage customs
of the country. Nevertheless he was not averse to the Factor's imperilling his own immortal soul, and, especially, feeling
an ominous attraction himself for Lit-lit, he was sombrely content to clinch his own soul's safety by seeing her married to
the Factor.
Nor
is it to be wondered that McLean's austere Scotch soul stood in danger of being thawed in the sunshine of Lit-lit's eyes.
She was pretty, and slender, and willowy; without the massive face and temperamental stolidity of the average squaw. "Lit-lit,"
so called from her fashion, even as a child, of being fluttery, of darting about from place to place like a butterfly, of
being inconsequent and merry, and of laughing as lightly as she darted and danced about.
Lit-lit
was the daughter of Snettishane, a prominent chief in the tribe, by a half-breed mother, and to him the Factor fared casually
one summer day to open negotiations of marriage. He sat with the chief in the smoke of a mosquito smudge before his lodge,
and together they talked about everything under the sun, or, at least, everything that in the Northland is under the sun,
with the sole exception of marriage. John Fox had come particularly to talk of marriage; Snettishane knew it, and John Fox
knew he knew it, wherefore the subject was religiously avoided. This is alleged to be Indian subtlety. In reality it is transparent
simplicity.
The
hours slipped by, and Fox and Snettishane smoked interminable pipes, looking each other in the eyes with a guilelessness superbly
histrionic. In the mid-afternoon McLean and his brother clerk, McTavish, strolled past, innocently uninterested, on their
way to the river. When they strolled back again an hour later, Fox and Snettishane had attained to a ceremonious discussion
of the condition and quality of the gunpowder and bacon which the Company was offering in trade. Meanwhile Lit-lit, divining
the Factor's errand, had crept in under the rear wall of the lodge, and through the front flap was peeping out at the two
logomachists by the mosquito smudge. She was flushed and happy-eyed, proud that no less a man than the Factor (who stood next
to God in the Northland hierarchy) had singled her out, femininely curious to see at close range what manner of man he was.
Sunglare on the ice, camp smoke, and weather beat had burned his face to a copper-brown, so that her father was as fair as
he, while she was fairer. She was remotely glad of this, and more immediately glad that he was large and strong, though his
great black beard half frightened her, it was so strange.
Being
very young, she was unversed in the ways of men. Seventeen times she had seen the sun travel south and lose itself beyond
the sky-line, and seventeen times she had seen it travel back again and ride the sky day and night till there was no night
at all. And through these years she had been cherished jealously by Snettishane, who stood between her and all suitors, listening
disdainfully to the young hunters as they bid for her hand, and turning them away as though she were beyond price. Snettishane
was mercenary. Lit-lit was to him an investment. She represented so much capital, from which he expected to receive, not a
certain definite interest, but an incalculable interest.
And
having thus been reared in a manner as near to that of the nunnery as tribal conditions would permit, it was with a great
and maidenly anxiety that she peeped out at the man who had surely come for her, at the husband who was to teach her all that
was yet unlearned of life, at the masterful being whose word was to be her law, and who was to mete and bound her actions
and comportment for the rest of her days.
But,
peeping through the front flap of the lodge, flushed and thrilling at the strange destiny reaching out for her, she grew disappointed
as the day wore along, and the Factor and her father still talked pompously of matters concerning other things and not pertaining
to marriage things at all. As the sun sank lower and lower toward the north and midnight approached, the Factor began making
unmistakable preparations for departure. As he turned to stride away Lit-lit's heart sank; but it rose again as he halted,
half turning on one heel.
"Oh,
by the way, Snettishane," he said, "I want a squaw to wash for me and mend my clothes."
Snettishane
grunted and suggested Wanidani, who was an old woman and toothless.
"No,
no," interposed the Factor. "What I want is a wife. I've been kind of thinking about it, and the thought just struck me that
you might know of some one that would suit."
Snettishane
looked interested, whereupon the Factor retraced his steps, casually and carelessly to linger and discuss this new and incidental
topic.
"Kattou?"
suggested Snettishane.
"She
has but one eye," objected the Factor.
"Laska?"
"Her
knees be wide apart when she stands upright. Kips, your biggest dog, can leap between her knees when she stands upright."
"Senatee?"
went on the imperturbable Snettishane.
But
John Fox feigned anger, crying: "What foolishness is this? Am I old, that thou shouldst mate me with old women? Am I toothless?
lame of leg? blind of eye? Or am I poor that no bright-eyed maiden may look with favour upon me? Behold! I am the Factor,
both rich and great, a power in the land, whose speech makes men tremble and is obeyed!"
Snettishane
was inwardly pleased, though his sphinx-like visage never relaxed. He was drawing the Factor, and making him break ground.
Being a creature so elemental as to have room for but one idea at a time, Snettishane could pursue that one idea a greater
distance than could John Fox. For John Fox, elemental as he was, was still complex enough to entertain several glimmering
ideas at a time, which debarred him from pursuing the one as single-heartedly or as far as did the chief.
Snettishane
calmly continued calling the roster of eligible maidens, which, name by name, as fast as uttered, were stamped ineligible
by John Fox, with specified objections appended. Again he gave it up and started to return to the Fort. Snettishane watched
him go, making no effort to stop him, but seeing him, in the end, stop himself.
"Come
to think of it," the Factor remarked, "we both of us forgot Lit-lit. Now I wonder if she'll suit me?"
Snettishane
met the suggestion with a mirthless face, behind the mask of which his soul grinned wide. It was a distinct victory. Had the
Factor gone but one step farther, perforce Snettishane would himself have mentioned the name of Lit-lit, but--the Factor had
not gone that one step farther.
The
chief was non-committal concerning Lit-lit's suitability, till he drove the white man into taking the next step in order of
procedure.
"Well,"
the Factor meditated aloud, "the only way to find out is to make a try of it." He raised his voice. "So I will give for Lit-
lit ten blankets and three pounds of tobacco which is good tobacco."
Snettishane
replied with a gesture which seemed to say that all the blankets and tobacco in all the world could not compensate him for
the loss of Lit-lit and her manifold virtues. When pressed by the Factor to set a price, he coolly placed it at five hundred
blankets, ten guns, fifty pounds of tobacco, twenty scarlet cloths, ten bottles of rum, a music-box, and lastly the good-will
and best offices of the Factor, with a place by his fire.
The
Factor apparently suffered a stroke of apoplexy, which stroke was successful in reducing the blankets to two hundred and in
cutting out the place by the fire--an unheard-of condition in the marriages of white men with the daughters of the soil. In
the end, after three hours more of chaffering, they came to an agreement. For Lit-lit Snettishane was to receive one hundred
blankets, five pounds of tobacco, three guns, and a bottle of rum, goodwill and best offices included, which according to
John Fox, was ten blankets and a gun more than she was worth. And as he went home through the wee sma' hours, the three-o'clock
sun blazing in the due north-east, he was unpleasantly aware that Snettishane had bested him over the bargain.
Snettishane,
tired and victorious, sought his bed, and discovered Lit-lit before she could escape from the lodge.
He
grunted knowingly: "Thou hast seen. Thou has heard. Wherefore it be plain to thee thy father's very great wisdom and understanding.
I have made for thee a great match. Heed my words and walk in the way of my words, go when I say go, come when I bid thee
come, and we shall grow fat with the wealth of this big white man who is a fool according to his bigness."
The
next day no trading was done at the store. The Factor opened whisky before breakfast, to the delight of McLean and McTavish,
gave his dogs double rations, and wore his best moccasins. Outside the Fort preparations were under way for a POTLATCH. Potlatch
means "a giving," and John Fox's intention was to signalize his marriage with Lit-lit by a potlatch as generous as she was
good- looking. In the afternoon the whole tribe gathered to the feast. Men, women, children, and dogs gorged to repletion,
nor was there one person, even among the chance visitors and stray hunters from other tribes, who failed to receive some token
of the bridegroom's largess.
Lit-lit,
tearfully shy and frightened, was bedecked by her bearded husband with a new calico dress, splendidly beaded moccasins, a
gorgeous silk handkerchief over her raven hair, a purple scarf about her throat, brass ear-rings and finger-rings, and a whole
pint of pinchbeck jewellery, including a Waterbury watch. Snettishane could scarce contain himself at the spectacle, but watching
his chance drew her aside from the feast.
"Not
this night, nor the next night," he began ponderously, "but in the nights to come, when I shall call like a raven by the river
bank, it is for thee to rise up from thy big husband, who is a fool, and come to me.
"Nay,
nay," he went on hastily, at sight of the dismay in her face at turning her back upon her wonderful new life. "For no sooner
shall this happen than thy big husband, who is a fool, will come wailing to my lodge. Then it is for thee to wail likewise,
claiming that this thing is not well, and that the other thing thou dost not like, and that to be the wife of the Factor is
more than thou didst bargain for, only wilt thou be content with more blankets, and more tobacco, and more wealth of various
sorts for thy poor old father, Snettishane. Remember well, when I call in the night, like a raven, from the river bank."
Lit-lit
nodded; for to disobey her father was a peril she knew well; and, furthermore, it was a little thing he asked, a short separation
from the Factor, who would know only greater gladness at having her back. She returned to the feast, and, midnight being well
at hand, the Factor sought her out and led her away to the Fort amid joking and outcry, in which the squaws were especially
conspicuous.
Lit-lit
quickly found that married life with the head-man of a fort was even better than she had dreamed. No longer did she have to
fetch wood and water and wait hand and foot upon cantankerous menfolk. For the first time in her life she could lie abed till
breakfast was on the table. And what a bed!--clean and soft, and comfortable as no bed she had ever known. And such food!
Flour, cooked into biscuits, hot-cakes and bread, three times a day and every day, and all one wanted! Such prodigality was
hardly believable.
To
add to her contentment, the Factor was cunningly kind. He had buried one wife, and he knew how to drive with a slack rein
that went firm only on occasion, and then went very firm. "Lit-lit is boss of this place," he announced significantly at the
table the morning after the wedding. "What she says goes. Understand?" And McLean and McTavish understood. Also, they knew
that the Factor had a heavy hand.
But
Lit-lit did not take advantage. Taking a leaf from the book of her husband, she at once assumed charge of his own growing
sons, giving them added comforts and a measure of freedom like to that which he gave her. The two sons were loud in the praise
of their new mother; McLean and McTavish lifted their voices; and the Factor bragged of the joys of matrimony till the story
of her good behaviour and her husband's satisfaction became the property of all the dwellers in the Sin Rock district.
Whereupon
Snettishane, with visions of his incalculable interest keeping him awake of nights, thought it time to bestir himself. On
the tenth night of her wedded life Lit-lit was awakened by the croaking of a raven, and she knew that Snettishane was waiting
for her by the river bank. In her great happiness she had forgotten her pact, and now it came back to her with behind it all
the childish terror of her father. For a time she lay in fear and trembling, loath to go, afraid to stay. But in the end the
Factor won the silent victory, and his kindness plus his great muscles and square jaw, nerved her to disregard Snettishane's
call.
But
in the morning she arose very much afraid, and went about her duties in momentary fear of her father's coming. As the day
wore along, however, she began to recover her spirits. John Fox, soundly berating McLean and McTavish for some petty dereliction
of duty, helped her to pluck up courage. She tried not to let him go out of her sight, and when she followed him into the
huge cache and saw him twirling and tossing great bales around as though they were feather pillows, she felt strengthened
in her disobedience to her father. Also (it was her first visit to the warehouse, and Sin Rock was the chief distributing
point to several chains of lesser posts), she was astounded at the endlessness of the wealth there stored away.
This
sight and the picture in her mind's eye of the bare lodge of Snettishane, put all doubts at rest. Yet she capped her conviction
by a brief word with one of her step-sons. "White daddy good?" was what she asked, and the boy answered that his father was
the best man he had ever known. That night the raven croaked again. On the night following the croaking was more persistent.
It awoke the Factor, who tossed restlessly for a while. Then he said aloud, "Damn that raven," and Lit-lit laughed quietly
under the blankets.
In
the morning, bright and early, Snettishane put in an ominous appearance and was set to breakfast in the kitchen with Wanidani.
He refused "squaw food," and a little later bearded his son-in-law in the store where the trading was done. Having learned,
he said, that his daughter was such a jewel, he had come for more blankets, more tobacco, and more guns--especially more guns.
He had certainly been cheated in her price, he held, and he had come for justice. But the Factor had neither blankets nor
justice to spare. Whereupon he was informed that Snettishane had seen the missionary at Three Forks, who had notified him
that such marriages were not made in heaven, and that it was his father's duty to demand his daughter back.
"I
am good Christian man now," Snettishane concluded. "I want my Lit-lit to go to heaven."
The
Factor's reply was short and to the point; for he directed his father-in-law to go to the heavenly antipodes, and by the scruff
of the neck and the slack of the blanket propelled him on that trail as far as the door.
But
Snettishane sneaked around and in by the kitchen, cornering Lit-lit in the great living-room of the Fort.
"Mayhap
thou didst sleep over-sound last night when I called by the river bank," he began, glowering darkly.
"Nay,
I was awake and heard." Her heart was beating as though it would choke her, but she went on steadily, "And the night before
I was awake and heard, and yet again the night before."
And
thereat, out of her great happiness and out of the fear that it might be taken from her, she launched into an original and
glowing address upon the status and rights of woman--the first new-woman lecture delivered north of Fifty-three.
But
it fell on unheeding ears. Snettishane was still in the dark ages. As she paused for breath, he said threateningly, "To-night
I shall call again like the raven."
At
this moment the Factor entered the room and again helped Snettishane on his way to the heavenly antipodes.
That
night the raven croaked more persistently than ever. Lit-lit, who was a light sleeper, heard and smiled. John Fox tossed restlessly.
Then he awoke and tossed about with greater restlessness. He grumbled and snorted, swore under his breath and over his breath,
and finally flung out of bed. He groped his way to the great living-room, and from the rack took down a loaded shot-gun--loaded
with bird-shot, left therein by the careless McTavish.
The
Factor crept carefully out of the Fort and down to the river. The croaking had ceased, but he stretched out in the long grass
and waited. The air seemed a chilly balm, and the earth, after the heat of the day, now and again breathed soothingly against
him. The Factor, gathered into the rhythm of it all, dozed off, with his head upon his arm, and slept.
Fifty
yards away, head resting on knees, and with his back to John Fox, Snettishane likewise slept, gently conquered by the quietude
of the night. An hour slipped by and then he awoke, and, without lifting his head, set the night vibrating with the hoarse
gutturals of the raven call.
The
Factor roused, not with the abrupt start of civilized man, but with the swift and comprehensive glide from sleep to waking
of the savage. In the night-light he made out a dark object in the midst of the grass and brought his gun to bear upon it.
A second croak began to rise, and he pulled the trigger. The crickets ceased from their sing-song chant, the wildfowl from
their squabbling, and the raven croak broke midmost and died away in gasping silence.
John
Fox ran to the spot and reached for the thing he had killed, but his fingers closed on a coarse mop of hair and he turned
Snettishane's face upward to the starlight. He knew how a shotgun scattered at fifty yards, and he knew that he had peppered
Snettishane across the shoulders and in the small of the back. And Snettishane knew that he knew, but neither referred to
it
"What
dost thou here?" the Factor demanded. "It were time old bones should be in bed."
But
Snettishane was stately in spite of the bird-shot burning under his skin.
"Old
bones will not sleep," he said solemnly. "I weep for my daughter, for my daughter Lit-lit, who liveth and who yet is dead,
and who goeth without doubt to the white man's hell."
"Weep
henceforth on the far bank, beyond ear-shot of the Fort," said John Fox, turning on his heel, "for the noise of thy weeping
is exceeding great and will not let one sleep of nights."
"My
heart is sore," Snettishane answered, "and my days and nights be black with sorrow."
"As
the raven is black," said John Fox.
"As
the raven is black," Snettishane said. Never again was the voice of the raven heard by the river
bank. Lit-lit grows matronly day by day and is very happy. Also, there are sisters to the sons of John Fox's first wife who
lies buried in a tree. Old Snettishane is no longer a visitor at the Fort, and spends long hours raising a thin, aged voice
against the filial ingratitude of children in general and of his daughter Lit-lit in particular. His declining years are embittered
by the knowledge that he was cheated, and even John Fox has withdrawn the assertion that the price for Lit-lit was too much
by ten blankets and a gun.

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