JAN, THE UNREPENTANT

“It ain’t eight bells yet!” Cardegee expostulated.  “I’ll ’aunt you, sure!”

Jacob Kent faltered.  He was standing by the sun-dial, perhaps ten paces from his victim.  The man on the sled must have seen that something unusual was taking place, for he had risen to his knees, his whip singing viciously among the dogs.

The shadows swept into line.  Kent looked along the sights.

“Make ready!” he commanded solemnly.  “Eight b—”

But just a fraction of a second too soon, Cardegee rolled backward into the hole.  Kent held his fire and ran to the edge.  Bang!  The gun exploded full in the sailor’s face as he rose to his feet.  But no smoke came from the muzzle; instead, a sheet of flame burst from the side of the barrel near its butt, and Jacob Kent went down.  The dogs dashed up the bank, dragging the sled over his body, and the driver sprang off as Jim Cardegee freed his hands and drew himself from the hole.

“Jim!”  The new-comer recognized him.  “What’s the matter?”

“Wot’s the matter?  Oh, nothink at all.  It jest ’appens as I do little things like this for my ’ealth.  Wot’s the matter, you bloomin’ idjit?  Wot’s the matter, eh?  Cast me loose or I’ll show you wot!  ’Urry up, or I’ll ’olystone the decks with you!”

“Huh!” he added, as the other went to work with his sheath-knife.  “Wot’s the matter?  I want to know.  Jes’ tell me that, will you, wot’s the matter?  Hey?”

Kent was quite dead when they rolled him over.  The gun, an old-fashioned, heavy-weighted muzzle-loader, lay near him.  Steel and wood had parted company.  Near the butt of the right-hand barrel, with lips pressed outward, gaped a fissure several inches in length.  The sailor picked it up, curiously.  A glittering stream of yellow dust ran out through the crack.  The facts of the case dawned upon Jim Cardegee.

“Strike me standin’!” he roared; “’ere’s a go!  ’Ere’s ’is bloomin’ dust!  Gawd blime me, an’ you, too, Charley, if you don’t run an’ get the dish-pan!”

“For there’s never a law of God or manRuns north of Fifty-three.”

“For there’s never a law of God or manRuns north of Fifty-three.”

Jan rolled over, clawing and kicking.  He was fighting hand and foot now, and he fought grimly, silently.  Two of the three men who hung upon him, shouted directions to each other, and strove to curb the short, hairy devil who would not curb.  The third man howled.  His finger was between Jan’s teeth.

“Quit yer tantrums, Jan, an’ ease up!” panted Red Bill, getting a strangle-hold on Jan’s neck.  “Why on earth can’t yeh hang decent and peaceable?”

But Jan kept his grip on the third man’s finger, and squirmed over the floor of the tent, into the pots and pans.

“Youah no gentleman, suh,” reproved Mr. Taylor, his body following his finger, and endeavoring to accommodate itself to every jerk of Jan’s head.  “You hev killed Mistah Gordon, as brave and honorable a gentleman as ever hit the trail aftah the dogs.  Youah a murderah, suh, and without honah.”

“An’ yer no comrade,” broke in Red Bill.  “If you was, you’d hang ‘thout rampin’ around an’ roarin’.  Come on, Jan, there’s a good fellow.  Don’t give us no more trouble.  Jes’ quit, an’ we’ll hang yeh neat and handy, an’ be done with it.”

“Steady, all!” Lawson, the sailorman, bawled.  “Jam his head into the bean pot and batten down.”

“But my fingah, suh,” Mr. Taylor protested.

“Leggo with y’r finger, then!  Always in the way!”

“But I can’t, Mistah Lawson.  It’s in the critter’s gullet, and nigh chewed off as ’t is.”

“Stand by for stays!”  As Lawson gave the warning, Jan half lifted himself, and the struggling quartet floundered across the tent into a muddle of furs and blankets.  In its passage it cleared the body of a man, who lay motionless, bleeding from a bullet-wound in the neck.

All this was because of the madness which had come upon Jan—the madness which comes upon a man who has stripped off the raw skin of earth and grovelled long in primal nakedness, and before whose eyes rises the fat vales of the homeland, and into whose nostrils steals the whiff of bay, and grass, and flower, and new-turned soil.  Through five frigid years Jan had sown the seed.  Stuart River, Forty Mile, Circle City, Koyokuk, Kotzebue, had marked his bleak and strenuous agriculture, and now it was Nome that bore the harvest,—not the Nome of golden beaches and ruby sands, but the Nome of ’97, before Anvil City was located, or Eldorado District organized.  John Gordon was a Yankee, and should have known better.  But he passed the sharp word at a time when Jan’s blood-shot eyes blazed and his teeth gritted in torment.  And because of this, there was a smell of saltpetre in the tent, and one lay quietly, while the other fought like a cornered rat, and refused to hang in the decent and peacable manner suggested by his comrades.

“If you will allow me, Mistah Lawson, befoah we go further in this rumpus, I would say it wah a good idea to pry this hyer varmint’s teeth apart.  Neither will he bite off, nor will he let go.  He has the wisdom of the sarpint, suh, the wisdom of the sarpint.”

“Lemme get the hatchet to him!” vociferated the sailor.  “Lemme get the hatchet!”  He shoved the steel edge close to Mr. Taylor’s finger and used the man’s teeth as a fulcrum.  Jan held on and breathed through his nose, snorting like a grampus.  “Steady, all!  Now she takes it!”

“Thank you, suh; it is a powerful relief.”  And Mr. Taylor proceeded to gather into his arms the victim’s wildly waving legs.

But Jan upreared in his Berserker rage; bleeding, frothing, cursing; five frozen years thawing into sudden hell.  They swayed backward and forward, panted, sweated, like some cyclopean, many-legged monster rising from the lower deeps.  The slush-lamp went over, drowned in its own fat, while the midday twilight scarce percolated through the dirty canvas of the tent.

“For the love of Gawd, Jan, get yer senses back!” pleaded Red Bill.  “We ain’t goin’ to hurt yeh, ’r kill yeh, ’r anythin’ of that sort.  Jes’ want to hang yeh, that’s all, an’ you a-messin’ round an’ rampagin’ somethin’ terrible.  To think of travellin’ trail together an’ then bein’ treated this-a way.  Wouldn’t ’bleeved it of yeh, Jan!”

“He’s got too much steerage-way.  Grab holt his legs, Taylor, and heave’m over!”

“Yes, suh, Mistah Lawson.  Do you press youah weight above, after I give the word.”  The Kentuckian groped about him in the murky darkness.  “Now, suh, now is the accepted time!”

There was a great surge, and a quarter of a ton of human flesh tottered and crashed to its fall against the side-wall.  Pegs drew and guy-ropes parted, and the tent, collapsing, wrapped the battle in its greasy folds.

“Yer only makin’ it harder fer yerself,” Red Bill continued, at the same time driving both his thumbs into a hairy throat, the possessor of which he had pinned down.  “You’ve made nuisance enough a’ ready, an’ it’ll take half the day to get things straightened when we’ve strung yeh up.”

“I’ll thank you to leave go, suh,” spluttered Mr. Taylor.

Red Bill grunted and loosed his grip, and the twain crawled out into the open.  At the same instant Jan kicked clear of the sailor, and took to his heels across the snow.

“Hi! you lazy devils!  Buck!  Bright!  Sic’m!  Pull ’m down!” sang out Lawson, lunging through the snow after the fleeing man.  Buck and Bright, followed by the rest of the dogs, outstripped him and rapidly overhauled the murderer.

There was no reason that these men should do this; no reason for Jan to run away; no reason for them to attempt to prevent him.  On the one hand stretched the barren snow-land; on the other, the frozen sea.  With neither food nor shelter, he could not run far.  All they had to do was to wait till he wandered back to the tent, as he inevitably must, when the frost and hunger laid hold of him.  But these men did not stop to think.  There was a certain taint of madness running in the veins of all of them.  Besides, blood had been spilled, and upon them was the blood-lust, thick and hot.  “Vengeance is mine,” saith the Lord, and He saith it in temperate climes where the warm sun steals away the energies of men.  But in the Northland they have discovered that prayer is only efficacious when backed by muscle, and they are accustomed to doing things for themselves.  God is everywhere, they have heard, but he flings a shadow over the land for half the year that they may not find him; so they grope in darkness, and it is not to be wondered that they often doubt, and deem the Decalogue out of gear.

Jan ran blindly, reckoning not of the way of his feet, for he was mastered by the verb “to live.”  To live!  To exist!  Buck flashed gray through the air, but missed.  The man struck madly at him, and stumbled.  Then the white teeth of Bright closed on his mackinaw jacket, and he pitched into the snow.To live!To exist!  He fought wildly as ever, the centre of a tossing heap of men and dogs.  His left hand gripped a wolf-dog by the scruff of the back, while the arm was passed around the neck of Lawson.  Every struggle of the dog helped to throttle the hapless sailor.  Jan’s right hand was buried deep in the curling tendrils of Red Bill’s shaggy head, and beneath all, Mr. Taylor lay pinned and helpless.  It was a deadlock, for the strength of his madness was prodigious; but suddenly, without apparent reason, Jan loosed his various grips and rolled over quietly on his back.  His adversaries drew away a little, dubious and disconcerted.  Jan grinned viciously.

“Mine friends,” he said, still grinning, “you haf asked me to be politeful, und now I am politeful.  Vot piziness vood you do mit me?”

“That’s right, Jan.  Be ca’m,” soothed Red Bill.  “I knowed you’d come to yer senses afore long.  Jes’ be ca’m now, an’ we’ll do the trick with neatness and despatch.”

“Vot piziness?  Vot trick?”

“The hangin’.  An’ yeh oughter thank yer lucky stars for havin’ a man what knows his business.  I’ve did it afore now, more’n once, down in the States, an’ I can do it to a T.”

“Hang who?  Me?”

“Yep.”

“Ha! ha!  Shust hear der man speak foolishness!  Gif me a hand, Bill, und I vill get up und be hung.”  He crawled stiffly to his feet and looked about him.  “Herr Gott! listen to der man!  He vood hang me!  Ho! ho! ho!  I tank not!  Yes, I tank not!”

“And I tank yes, you swab,” Lawson spoke up mockingly, at the same time cutting a sled-lashing and coiling it up with ominous care.  “Judge Lynch holds court this day.”

“Von liddle while.”  Jan stepped back from the proffered noose.  “I haf somedings to ask und to make der great proposition.  Kentucky, you know about der Shudge Lynch?”

“Yes, suh.  It is an institution of free men and of gentlemen, and it is an ole one and time-honored.  Corruption may wear the robe of magistracy, suh, but Judge Lynch can always be relied upon to give justice without court fees.  I repeat, suh, without court fees.  Law may be bought and sold, but in this enlightened land justice is free as the air we breathe, strong as the licker we drink, prompt as—”

“Cut it short!  Find out what the beggar wants,” interrupted Lawson, spoiling the peroration.

“Vell, Kentucky, tell me dis: von man kill von odder man, Shudge Lynch hang dot man?”

“If the evidence is strong enough—yes, suh.”

“An’ the evidence in this here case is strong enough to hang a dozen men, Jan,” broke in Red Bill.

“Nefer you mind, Bill.  I talk mit you next.  Now von anodder ding I ask Kentucky.  If Shudge Lynch hang not der man, vot den?”

“If Judge Lynch does not hang the man, then the man goes free, and his hands are washed clean of blood.  And further, suh, our great and glorious constitution has said, to wit: that no man may twice be placed in jeopardy of his life for one and the same crime, or words to that effect.”

“Unt dey can’t shoot him, or hit him mit a club over der head alongside, or do nodings more mit him?”

“No, suh.”

“Goot!  You hear vot Kentucky speaks, all you noddleheads?  Now I talk mit Bill.  You know der piziness, Bill, und you hang me up brown, eh?  Vot you say?”

“’Betcher life, an’, Jan, if yeh don’t give no more trouble ye’ll be almighty proud of the job.  I’m a connesoor.”

“You haf der great head, Bill, und know somedings or two.  Und you know two und one makes tree—ain’t it?”

Bill nodded.

“Und when you haf two dings, you haf not tree dings—ain’t it?  Now you follow mit me close und I show you.  It takes tree dings to hang.  First ding, you haf to haf der man.  Goot!  I am der man.  Second ding, you haf to haf der rope.  Lawson haf der rope.  Goot!  Und tird ding, you haf to haf someding to tie der rope to.  Sling your eyes over der landscape und find der tird ding to tie der rope to?  Eh?  Vot you say?”

Mechanically they swept the ice and snow with their eyes.  It was a homogeneous scene, devoid of contrasts or bold contours, dreary, desolate, and monotonous,—the ice-packed sea, the slow slope of the beach, the background of low-lying hills, and over all thrown the endless mantle of snow.  “No trees, no bluffs, no cabins, no telegraph poles, nothin’,” moaned Red Bill; “nothin’ respectable enough nor big enough to swing the toes of a five-foot man clear o’ the ground.  I give it up.”  He looked yearningly at that portion of Jan’s anatomy which joins the head and shoulders.  “Give it up,” he repeated sadly to Lawson.  “Throw the rope down.  Gawd never intended this here country for livin’ purposes, an’ that’s a cold frozen fact.”

Jan grinned triumphantly.  “I tank I go mit der tent und haf a smoke.”

“Ostensiblee y’r correct, Bill, me son,” spoke up Lawson; “but y’r a dummy, and you can lay to that for another cold frozen fact.  Takes a sea farmer to learn you landsmen things.  Ever hear of a pair of shears?  Then clap y’r eyes to this.”

The sailor worked rapidly.  From the pile of dunnage where they had pulled up the boat the preceding fall, he unearthed a pair of long oars.  These he lashed together, at nearly right angles, close to the ends of the blades.  Where the handles rested he kicked holes through the snow to the sand.  At the point of intersection he attached two guy-ropes, making the end of one fast to a cake of beach-ice.  The other guy he passed over to Red Bill.  “Here, me son, lay holt o’ that and run it out.”

And to his horror, Jan saw his gallows rise in the air.  “No! no!” he cried, recoiling and putting up his fists.  “It is not goot!  I vill not hang!  Come, you noddleheads!  I vill lick you, all together, von after der odder!  I vill blay hell!  I vill do eferydings!  Und I vill die pefore I hang!”

The sailor permitted the two other men to clinch with the mad creature.  They rolled and tossed about furiously, tearing up snow and tundra, their fierce struggle writing a tragedy of human passion on the white sheet spread by nature.  And ever and anon a hand or foot of Jan emerged from the tangle, to be gripped by Lawson and lashed fast with rope-yarns.  Pawing, clawing, blaspheming, he was conquered and bound, inch by inch, and drawn to where the inexorable shears lay like a pair of gigantic dividers on the snow.  Red Bill adjusted the noose, placing the hangman’s knot properly under the left ear.  Mr. Taylor and Lawson tailed onto the running-guy, ready at the word to elevate the gallows.  Bill lingered, contemplating his work with artistic appreciation.

“Herr Gott!  Vood you look at it!”

The horror in Jan’s voice caused the rest to desist.  The fallen tent had uprisen, and in the gathering twilight it flapped ghostly arms about and titubated toward them drunkenly.  But the next instant John Gordon found the opening and crawled forth.

“What the flaming—!”  For the moment his voice died away in his throat as his eyes took in the tableau.  “Hold on!  I’m not dead!” he cried out, coming up to the group with stormy countenance.

“Allow me, Mistah Gordon, to congratulate you upon youah escape,” Mr. Taylor ventured.  “A close shave, suh, a powahful close shave.”

“ Congratulate hell!  I might have been dead and rotten and no thanks to you, you—!”  And thereat John Gordon delivered himself of a vigorous flood of English, terse, intensive, denunciative, and composed solely of expletives and adjectives.

“Simply creased me,” he went on when he had eased himself sufficiently.  “Ever crease cattle, Taylor?”

“Yes, suh, many a time down in God’s country.”

“Just so.  That’s what happened to me.  Bullet just grazed the base of my skull at the top of the neck.  Stunned me but no harm done.”  He turned to the bound man.  “Get up, Jan.  I’m going to lick you to a standstill or you’re going to apologize.  The rest of you lads stand clear.”

“I tank not.  Shust tie me loose und you see,” replied Jan, the Unrepentant, the devil within him still unconquered.  “Und after as I lick you, I take der rest of der noddleheads, von after der odder, altogedder!”

A wolfish head, wistful-eyed and frost-rimed, thrust aside the tent-flaps.

“Hi!  Chook!  Siwash!  Chook, you limb of Satan!” chorused the protesting inmates.  Bettles rapped the dog sharply with a tin plate, and it withdrew hastily.  Louis Savoy refastened the flaps, kicked a frying-pan over against the bottom, and warmed his hands.  It was very cold without.  Forty-eight hours gone, the spirit thermometer had burst at sixty-eight below, and since that time it had grown steadily and bitterly colder.  There was no telling when the snap would end.  And it is poor policy, unless the gods will it, to venture far from a stove at such times, or to increase the quantity of cold atmosphere one must breathe.  Men sometimes do it, and sometimes they chill their lungs.  This leads up to a dry, hacking cough, noticeably irritable when bacon is being fried.  After that, somewhere along in the spring or summer, a hole is burned in the frozen muck.  Into this a man’s carcass is dumped, covered over with moss, and left with the assurance that it will rise on the crack of Doom, wholly and frigidly intact.  For those of little faith, sceptical of material integration on that fateful day, no fitter country than the Klondike can be recommended to die in.  But it is not to be inferred from this that it is a fit country for living purposes.

It was very cold without, but it was not over-warm within.  The only article which might be designated furniture was the stove, and for this the men were frank in displaying their preference.  Upon half of the floor pine boughs had been cast; above this were spread the sleeping-furs, beneath lay the winter’s snowfall.  The remainder of the floor was moccasin-packed snow, littered with pots and pans and the generalimpedimentaof an Arctic camp.  The stove was red and roaring hot, but only a bare three feet away lay a block of ice, as sharp-edged and dry as when first quarried from the creek bottom.  The pressure of the outside cold forced the inner heat upward.  Just above the stove, where the pipe penetrated the roof, was a tiny circle of dry canvas; next, with the pipe always as centre, a circle of steaming canvas; next a damp and moisture-exuding ring; and finally, the rest of the tent, sidewalls and top, coated with a half-inch of dry, white, crystal-encrusted frost.

“Oh!  OH!  OH!”  A young fellow, lying asleep in the furs, bearded and wan and weary, raised a moan of pain, and without waking increased the pitch and intensity of his anguish.  His body half-lifted from the blankets, and quivered and shrank spasmodically, as though drawing away from a bed of nettles.

“Roll’m over!” ordered Bettles.  “He’s crampin’.”

And thereat, with pitiless good-will, he was pitched upon and rolled and thumped and pounded by half-a-dozen willing comrades.

“Damn the trail,” he muttered softly, as he threw off the robes and sat up.  “I’ve run across country, played quarter three seasons hand-running, and hardened myself in all manner of ways; and then I pilgrim it into this God-forsaken land and find myself an effeminate Athenian without the simplest rudiments of manhood!”  He hunched up to the fire and rolled a cigarette.  “Oh, I’m not whining.  I can take my medicine all right, all right; but I’m just decently ashamed of myself, that’s all.  Here I am, on top of a dirty thirty miles, as knocked up and stiff and sore as a pink-tea degenerate after a five-mile walk on a country turn-pike.  Bah!  It makes me sick!  Got a match?”  “Don’t git the tantrums, youngster.”  Bettles passed over the required fire-stick and waxed patriarchal.  “Ye’ve gotter ’low some for the breakin’-in.  Sufferin’ cracky! don’t I recollect the first time I hit the trail!  Stiff?  I’ve seen the time it’d take me ten minutes to git my mouth from the water-hole an’ come to my feet—every jint crackin’ an’ kickin’ fit to kill.  Cramp?  In sech knots it’d take the camp half a day to untangle me.  You’re all right, for a cub, any ye’ve the true sperrit.  Come this day year, you’ll walk all us old bucks into the ground any time.  An’ best in your favor, you hain’t got that streak of fat in your make-up which has sent many a husky man to the bosom of Abraham afore his right and proper time.”

“Streak of fat?”

“Yep.  Comes along of bulk.  ’T ain’t the big men as is the best when it comes to the trail.”

“Never heard of it.”

“Never heered of it, eh?  Well, it’s a dead straight, open-an’-shut fact, an’ no gittin’ round.  Bulk’s all well enough for a mighty big effort, but ’thout stayin’ powers it ain’t worth a continental whoop; an’ stayin’ powers an’ bulk ain’t runnin’ mates.  Takes the small, wiry fellows when it comes to gittin’ right down an’ hangin’ on like a lean-jowled dog to a bone.  Why, hell’s fire, the big men they ain’t in it!”

“By gar!” broke in Louis Savoy, “dat is no, vot you call, josh!  I know one mans, so vaire beeg like ze buffalo.  Wit him, on ze Sulphur Creek stampede, go one small mans, Lon McFane.  You know dat Lon McFane, dat leetle Irisher wit ze red hair and ze grin.  An’ dey walk an’ walk an’ walk, all ze day long an’ ze night long.  And beeg mans, him become vaire tired, an’ lay down mooch in ze snow.  And leetle mans keek beeg mans, an’ him cry like, vot you call—ah! vot you call ze kid.  And leetle mans keek an’ keek an’ keek, an’ bime by, long time, long way, keek beeg mans into my cabin.  Tree days ’fore him crawl out my blankets.  Nevaire I see beeg squaw like him.  No nevaire.  Him haf vot you call ze streak of fat.  You bet.”

“But there was Axel Gunderson,” Prince spoke up.  The great Scandinavian, with the tragic events which shadowed his passing, had made a deep mark on the mining engineer.  “He lies up there, somewhere.”  He swept his hand in the vague direction of the mysterious east.

“Biggest man that ever turned his heels to Salt Water, or run a moose down with sheer grit,” supplemented Bettles; “but he’s the prove-the-rule exception.  Look at his woman, Unga,—tip the scales at a hundred an’ ten, clean meat an’ nary ounce to spare.  She’d bank grit ’gainst his for all there was in him, an’ see him, an’ go him better if it was possible.  Nothing over the earth, or in it, or under it, she wouldn’t ’a’ done.”

“But she loved him,” objected the engineer.

“’T ain’t that.  It—”

“Look you, brothers,” broke in Sitka Charley from his seat on the grub-box.  “Ye have spoken of the streak of fat that runs in big men’s muscles, of the grit of women and the love, and ye have spoken fair; but I have in mind things which happened when the land was young and the fires of men apart as the stars.  It was then I had concern with a big man, and a streak of fat, and a woman.  And the woman was small; but her heart was greater than the beef-heart of the man, and she had grit.  And we traveled a weary trail, even to the Salt Water, and the cold was bitter, the snow deep, the hunger great.  And the woman’s love was a mighty love—no more can man say than this.”

He paused, and with the hatchet broke pieces of ice from the large chunk beside him.  These he threw into the gold pan on the stove, where the drinking-water thawed.  The men drew up closer, and he of the cramps sought greater comfort vainly for his stiffened body.

“Brothers, my blood is red with Siwash, but my heart is white.  To the faults of my fathers I owe the one, to the virtues of my friends the other.  A great truth came to me when I was yet a boy.  I learned that to your kind and you was given the earth; that the Siwash could not withstand you, and like the caribou and the bear, must perish in the cold.  So I came into the warm and sat among you, by your fires, and behold, I became one of you, I have seen much in my time.  I have known strange things, and bucked big, on big trails, with men of many breeds.  And because of these things, I measure deeds after your manner, and judge men, and think thoughts.  Wherefore, when I speak harshly of one of your own kind, I know you will not take it amiss; and when I speak high of one of my father’s people, you will not take it upon you to say, ‘Sitka Charley is Siwash, and there is a crooked light in his eyes and small honor to his tongue.’  Is it not so?”

Deep down in throat, the circle vouchsafed its assent.

“The woman was Passuk.  I got her in fair trade from her people, who were of the Coast and whose Chilcat totem stood at the head of a salt arm of the sea.  My heart did not go out to the woman, nor did I take stock of her looks.  For she scarce took her eyes from the ground, and she was timid and afraid, as girls will be when cast into a stranger’s arms whom they have never seen before.  As I say, there was no place in my heart for her to creep, for I had a great journey in mind, and stood in need of one to feed my dogs and to lift a paddle with me through the long river days.  One blanket would cover the twain; so I chose Passuk.

“Have I not said I was a servant to the Government?  If not, it is well that ye know.  So I was taken on a warship, sleds and dogs and evaporated foods, and with me came Passuk.  And we went north, to the winter ice-rim of Bering Sea, where we were landed,—myself, and Passuk, and the dogs.  I was also given moneys of the Government, for I was its servant, and charts of lands which the eyes of man had never dwelt upon, and messages.  These messages were sealed, and protected shrewdly from the weather, and I was to deliver them to the whale-ships of the Arctic, ice-bound by the great Mackenzie.  Never was there so great a river, forgetting only our own Yukon, the Mother of all Rivers.

“All of which is neither here nor there, for my story deals not with the whale-ships, nor the berg-bound winter I spent by the Mackenzie.  Afterward, in the spring, when the days lengthened and there was a crust to the snow, we came south, Passuk and I, to the Country of the Yukon.  A weary journey, but the sun pointed out the way of our feet.  It was a naked land then, as I have said, and we worked up the current, with pole and paddle, till we came to Forty Mile.  Good it was to see white faces once again, so we put into the bank.  And that winter was a hard winter.  The darkness and the cold drew down upon us, and with them the famine.  To each man the agent of the Company gave forty pounds of flour and twenty of bacon.  There were no beans.  And, the dogs howled always, and there were flat bellies and deep-lined faces, and strong men became weak, and weak men died.  There was also much scurvy.

“Then came we together in the store one night, and the empty shelves made us feel our own emptiness the more.  We talked low, by the light of the fire, for the candles had been set aside for those who might yet gasp in the spring.  Discussion was held, and it was said that a man must go forth to the Salt Water and tell to the world our misery.  At this all eyes turned to me, for it was understood that I was a great traveler.  ‘It is seven hundred miles,’ said I, ‘to Haines Mission by the sea, and every inch of it snowshoe work.  Give me the pick of your dogs and the best of your grub, and I will go.  And with me shall go Passuk.’

“To this they were agreed.  But there arose one, Long Jeff, a Yankee-man, big-boned and big-muscled.  Also his talk was big.  He, too, was a mighty traveler, he said, born to the snowshoe and bred up on buffalo milk.  He would go with me, in case I fell by the trail, that he might carry the word on to the Mission.  I was young, and I knew not Yankee-men.  How was I to know that big talk betokened the streak of fat, or that Yankee-men who did great things kept their teeth together?  So we took the pick of the dogs and the best of the grub, and struck the trail, we three,—Passuk, Long Jeff, and I.

“Well, ye have broken virgin snow, labored at the gee-pole, and are not unused to the packed river-jams; so I will talk little of the toil, save that on some days we made ten miles, and on others thirty, but more often ten.  And the best of the grub was not good, while we went on stint from the start.  Likewise the pick of the dogs was poor, and we were hard put to keep them on their legs.  At the White River our three sleds became two sleds, and we had only come two hundred miles.  But we lost nothing; the dogs that left the traces went into the bellies of those that remained.

“Not a greeting, not a curl of smoke, till we made Pelly.  Here I had counted on grub; and here I had counted on leaving Long Jeff, who was whining and trail-sore.  But the factor’s lungs were wheezing, his eyes bright, his cache nigh empty; and he showed us the empty cache of the missionary, also his grave with the rocks piled high to keep off the dogs.  There was a bunch of Indians there, but babies and old men there were none, and it was clear that few would see the spring.

“So we pulled on, light-stomached and heavy-hearted, with half a thousand miles of snow and silence between us and Haines Mission by the sea.  The darkness was at its worst, and at midday the sun could not clear the sky-line to the south.  But the ice-jams were smaller, the going better; so I pushed the dogs hard and traveled late and early.  As I said at Forty Mile, every inch of it was snow-shoe work.  And the shoes made great sores on our feet, which cracked and scabbed but would not heal.  And every day these sores grew more grievous, till in the morning, when we girded on the shoes, Long Jeff cried like a child.  I put him at the fore of the light sled to break trail, but he slipped off the shoes for comfort.  Because of this the trail was not packed, his moccasins made great holes, and into these holes the dogs wallowed.  The bones of the dogs were ready to break through their hides, and this was not good for them.  So I spoke hard words to the man, and he promised, and broke his word.  Then I beat him with the dog-whip, and after that the dogs wallowed no more.  He was a child, what of the pain and the streak of fat.

“But Passuk.  While the man lay by the fire and wept, she cooked, and in the morning helped lash the sleds, and in the evening to unlash them.  And she saved the dogs.  Ever was she to the fore, lifting the webbed shoes and making the way easy.  Passuk—how shall I say?—I took it for granted that she should do these things, and thought no more about it.  For my mind was busy with other matters, and besides, I was young in years and knew little of woman.  It was only on looking back that I came to understand.

“And the man became worthless.  The dogs had little strength in them, but he stole rides on the sled when he lagged behind.  Passuk said she would take the one sled, so the man had nothing to do.  In the morning I gave him his fair share of grub and started him on the trail alone.  Then the woman and I broke camp, packed the sleds, and harnessed the dogs.  By midday, when the sun mocked us, we would overtake the man, with the tears frozen on his cheeks, and pass him.  In the night we made camp, set aside his fair share of grub, and spread his furs.  Also we made a big fire, that he might see.  And hours afterward he would come limping in, and eat his grub with moans and groans, and sleep.  He was not sick, this man.  He was only trail-sore and tired, and weak with hunger.  But Passuk and I were trail-sore and tired, and weak with hunger; and we did all the work and he did none.  But he had the streak of fat of which our brother Bettles has spoken.  Further, we gave the man always his fair share of grub.

“Then one day we met two ghosts journeying through the Silence.  They were a man and a boy, and they were white.  The ice had opened on Lake Le Barge, and through it had gone their main outfit.  One blanket each carried about his shoulders.  At night they built a fire and crouched over it till morning.  They had a little flour.  This they stirred in warm water and drank.  The man showed me eight cups of flour—all they had, and Pelly, stricken with famine, two hundred miles away.  They said, also, that there was an Indian behind; that they had whacked fair, but that he could not keep up.  I did not believe they had whacked fair, else would the Indian have kept up.  But I could give them no grub.  They strove to steal a dog—the fattest, which was very thin—but I shoved my pistol in their faces and told them begone.  And they went away, like drunken men, through the Silence toward Pelly.

“I had three dogs now, and one sled, and the dogs were only bones and hair.  When there is little wood, the fire burns low and the cabin grows cold.  So with us.  With little grub the frost bites sharp, and our faces were black and frozen till our own mothers would not have known us.  And our feet were very sore.  In the morning, when I hit the trail, I sweated to keep down the cry when the pain of the snowshoes smote me.  Passuk never opened her lips, but stepped to the fore to break the way.  The man howled.

“The Thirty Mile was swift, and the current ate away the ice from beneath, and there were many air-holes and cracks, and much open water.  One day we came upon the man, resting, for he had gone ahead, as was his wont, in the morning.  But between us was open water.  This he had passed around by taking to the rim-ice where it was too narrow for a sled.  So we found an ice-bridge.  Passuk weighed little, and went first, with a long pole crosswise in her hands in chance she broke through.  But she was light, and her shoes large, and she passed over.  Then she called the dogs.  But they had neither poles nor shoes, and they broke through and were swept under by the water.  I held tight to the sled from behind, till the traces broke and the dogs went on down under the ice.  There was little meat to them, but I had counted on them for a week’s grub, and they were gone.

“The next morning I divided all the grub, which was little, into three portions.  And I told Long Jeff that he could keep up with us, or not, as he saw fit; for we were going to travel light and fast.  But he raised his voice and cried over his sore feet and his troubles, and said harsh things against comradeship.  Passuk’s feet were sore, and my feet were sore—ay, sorer than his, for we had worked with the dogs; also, we looked to see.  Long Jeff swore he would die before he hit the trail again; so Passuk took a fur robe, and I a cooking pot and an axe, and we made ready to go.  But she looked on the man’s portion, and said, ‘It is wrong to waste good food on a baby.  He is better dead.’  I shook my head and said no—that a comrade once was a comrade always.  Then she spoke of the men of Forty Mile; that they were many men and good; and that they looked to me for grub in the spring.  But when I still said no, she snatched the pistol from my belt, quick, and as our brother Bettles has spoken, Long Jeff went to the bosom of Abraham before his time.  I chided Passuk for this; but she showed no sorrow, nor was she sorrowful.  And in my heart I knew she was right.”

Sitka Charley paused and threw pieces of ice into the gold pan on the stove.  The men were silent, and their backs chilled to the sobbing cries of the dogs as they gave tongue to their misery in the outer cold.

“And day by day we passed in the snow the sleeping-places of the two ghosts—Passuk and I—and we knew we would be glad for such ere we made Salt Water.  Then we came to the Indian, like another ghost, with his face set toward Pelly.  They had not whacked up fair, the man and the boy, he said, and he had had no flour for three days.  Each night he boiled pieces of his moccasins in a cup, and ate them.  He did not have much moccasins left.  And he was a Coast Indian, and told us these things through Passuk, who talked his tongue.  He was a stranger in the Yukon, and he knew not the way, but his face was set to Pelly.  How far was it?  Two sleeps? ten? a hundred—he did not know, but he was going to Pelly.  It was too far to turn back; he could only keep on.

“He did not ask for grub, for he could see we, too, were hard put.  Passuk looked at the man, and at me, as though she were of two minds, like a mother partridge whose young are in trouble.  So I turned to her and said, ‘This man has been dealt unfair.  Shall I give him of our grub a portion?’  I saw her eyes light, as with quick pleasure; but she looked long at the man and at me, and her mouth drew close and hard, and she said, ‘No.  The Salt Water is afar off, and Death lies in wait.  Better it is that he take this stranger man and let my man Charley pass.’  So the man went away in the Silence toward Pelly.  That night she wept.  Never had I seen her weep before.  Nor was it the smoke of the fire, for the wood was dry wood.  So I marveled at her sorrow, and thought her woman’s heart had grown soft at the darkness of the trail and the pain.

“Life is a strange thing.  Much have I thought on it, and pondered long, yet daily the strangeness of it grows not less, but more.  Why this longing for Life?  It is a game which no man wins.  To live is to toil hard, and to suffer sore, till Old Age creeps heavily upon us and we throw down our hands on the cold ashes of dead fires.  It is hard to live.  In pain the babe sucks his first breath, in pain the old man gasps his last, and all his days are full of trouble and sorrow; yet he goes down to the open arms of Death, stumbling, falling, with head turned backward, fighting to the last.  And Death is kind.  It is only Life, and the things of Life that hurt.  Yet we love Life, and we hate Death.  It is very strange.

“We spoke little, Passuk and I, in the days which came.  In the night we lay in the snow like dead people, and in the morning we went on our way, walking like dead people.  And all things were dead.  There were no ptarmigan, no squirrels, no snowshoe rabbits,—nothing.  The river made no sound beneath its white robes.  The sap was frozen in the forest.  And it became cold, as now; and in the night the stars drew near and large, and leaped and danced; and in the day the sun-dogs mocked us till we saw many suns, and all the air flashed and sparkled, and the snow was diamond dust.  And there was no heat, no sound, only the bitter cold and the Silence.  As I say, we walked like dead people, as in a dream, and we kept no count of time.  Only our faces were set to Salt Water, our souls strained for Salt Water, and our feet carried us toward Salt Water.  We camped by the Tahkeena, and knew it not.  Our eyes looked upon the White Horse, but we saw it not.  Our feet trod the portage of the Canyon, but they felt it not.  We felt nothing.  And we fell often by the way, but we fell, always, with our faces toward Salt Water.

“Our last grub went, and we had shared fair, Passuk and I, but she fell more often, and at Caribou Crossing her strength left her.  And in the morning we lay beneath the one robe and did not take the trail.  It was in my mind to stay there and meet Death hand-in-hand with Passuk; for I had grown old, and had learned the love of woman.  Also, it was eighty miles to Haines Mission, and the great Chilcoot, far above the timber-line, reared his storm-swept head between.  But Passuk spoke to me, low, with my ear against her lips that I might hear.  And now, because she need not fear my anger, she spoke her heart, and told me of her love, and of many things which I did not understand.

“And she said: ‘You are my man, Charley, and I have been a good woman to you.  And in all the days I have made your fire, and cooked your food, and fed your dogs, and lifted paddle or broken trail, I have not complained.  Nor did I say that there was more warmth in the lodge of my father, or that there was more grub on the Chilcat.  When you have spoken, I have listened.  When you have ordered, I have obeyed.  Is it not so, Charley?’

“And I said: ‘Ay, it is so.’

“And she said: ‘When first you came to the Chilcat, nor looked upon me, but bought me as a man buys a dog, and took me away, my heart was hard against you and filled with bitterness and fear.  But that was long ago.  For you were kind to me, Charley, as a good man is kind to his dog.  Your heart was cold, and there was no room for me; yet you dealt me fair and your ways were just.  And I was with you when you did bold deeds and led great ventures, and I measured you against the men of other breeds, and I saw you stood among them full of honor, and your word was wise, your tongue true.  And I grew proud of you, till it came that you filled all my heart, and all my thought was of you.  You were as the midsummer sun, when its golden trail runs in a circle and never leaves the sky.  And whatever way I cast my eyes I beheld the sun.  But your heart was ever cold, Charley, and there was no room.’

“And I said: ‘It is so.  It was cold, and there was no room.  But that is past.  Now my heart is like the snowfall in the spring, when the sun has come back.  There is a great thaw and a bending, a sound of running waters, and a budding and sprouting of green things.  And there is drumming of partridges, and songs of robins, and great music, for the winter is broken, Passuk, and I have learned the love of woman.’

“She smiled and moved for me to draw her closer.  And she said, ‘I am glad.’  After that she lay quiet for a long time, breathing softly, her head upon my breast.  Then she whispered: ‘The trail ends here, and I am tired.  But first I would speak of other things.  In the long ago, when I was a girl on the Chilcat, I played alone among the skin bales of my father’s lodge; for the men were away on the hunt, and the women and boys were dragging in the meat.  It was in the spring, and I was alone.  A great brown bear, just awake from his winter’s sleep, hungry, his fur hanging to the bones in flaps of leanness, shoved his head within the lodge and said, “Oof!”  My brother came running back with the first sled of meat.  And he fought the bear with burning sticks from the fire, and the dogs in their harnesses, with the sled behind them, fell upon the bear.  There was a great battle and much noise.  They rolled in the fire, the skin bales were scattered, the lodge overthrown.  But in the end the bear lay dead, with the fingers of my brother in his mouth and the marks of his claws upon my brother’s face.  Did you mark the Indian by the Pelly trail, his mitten which had no thumb, his hand which he warmed by our fire?  He was my brother.  And I said he should have no grub.  And he went away in the Silence without grub.’

“This, my brothers, was the love of Passuk, who died in the snow, by the Caribou Crossing.  It was a mighty love, for she denied her brother for the man who led her away on weary trails to a bitter end.  And, further, such was this woman’s love, she denied herself.  Ere her eyes closed for the last time she took my hand and slipped it under her squirrel-skinparkato her waist.  I felt there a well-filled pouch, and learned the secret of her lost strength.  Day by day we had shared fair, to the last least bit; and day by day but half her share had she eaten.  The other half had gone into the well-filled pouch.

“And she said: ‘This is the end of the trail for Passuk; but your trail, Charley, leads on and on, over the great Chilcoot, down to Haines Mission and the sea.  And it leads on and on, by the light of many suns, over unknown lands and strange waters, and it is full of years and honors and great glories.  It leads you to the lodges of many women, and good women, but it will never lead you to a greater love than the love of Passuk.’

“And I knew the woman spoke true.  But a madness came upon me, and I threw the well-filled pouch from me, and swore that my trail had reached an end, till her tired eyes grew soft with tears, and she said: ‘Among men has Sitka Charley walked in honor, and ever has his word been true.  Does he forget that honor now, and talk vain words by the Caribou Crossing?  Does he remember no more the men of Forty Mile, who gave him of their grub the best, of their dogs the pick?  Ever has Passuk been proud of her man.  Let him lift himself up, gird on his snowshoes, and begone, that she may still keep her pride.’

“And when she grew cold in my arms I arose, and sought out the well-filled pouch, and girt on my snowshoes, and staggered along the trail; for there was a weakness in my knees, and my head was dizzy, and in my ears there was a roaring, and a flashing of fire upon my eyes.  The forgotten trails of boyhood came back to me.  I sat by the full pots of thepotlachfeast, and raised my voice in song, and danced to the chanting of the men and maidens and the booming of the walrus drums.  And Passuk held my hand and walked by my side.  When I laid down to sleep, she waked me.  When I stumbled and fell, she raised me.  When I wandered in the deep snow, she led me back to the trail.  And in this wise, like a man bereft of reason, who sees strange visions and whose thoughts are light with wine, I came to Haines Mission by the sea.”

Sitka Charley threw back the tent-flaps.  It was midday.  To the south, just clearing the bleak Henderson Divide, poised the cold-disked sun.  On either hand the sun-dogs blazed.  The air was a gossamer of glittering frost.  In the foreground, beside the trail, a wolf-dog, bristling with frost, thrust a long snout heavenward and mourned.

“Must I, then, must I, then, now leave this town—And you, my love, stay here?”—Schwabian Folk-song.

“Must I, then, must I, then, now leave this town—And you, my love, stay here?”—Schwabian Folk-song.

The singer, clean-faced and cheery-eyed, bent over and added water to a pot of simmering beans, and then, rising, a stick of firewood in hand, drove back the circling dogs from the grub-box and cooking-gear.  He was blue of eye, and his long hair was golden, and it was a pleasure to look upon his lusty freshness.  A new moon was thrusting a dim horn above the white line of close-packed snow-capped pines which ringed the camp and segregated it from all the world.  Overhead, so clear it was and cold, the stars danced with quick, pulsating movements.  To the southeast an evanescent greenish glow heralded the opening revels of the aurora borealis.  Two men, in the immediate foreground, lay upon the bearskin which was their bed.  Between the skin and naked snow was a six-inch layer of pine boughs.  The blankets were rolled back.  For shelter, there was a fly at their backs,—a sheet of canvas stretched between two trees and angling at forty-five degrees.  This caught the radiating heat from the fire and flung it down upon the skin.  Another man sat on a sled, drawn close to the blaze, mending moccasins.  To the right, a heap of frozen gravel and a rude windlass denoted where they toiled each day in dismal groping for the pay-streak.  To the left, four pairs of snowshoes stood erect, showing the mode of travel which obtained when the stamped snow of the camp was left behind.

That Schwabian folk-song sounded strangely pathetic under the cold northern stars, and did not do the men good who lounged about the fire after the toil of the day.  It put a dull ache into their hearts, and a yearning which was akin to belly-hunger, and sent their souls questing southward across the divides to the sun-lands.

“For the love of God, Sigmund, shut up!” expostulated one of the men.  His hands were clenched painfully, but he hid them from sight in the folds of the bearskin upon which he lay.

“And what for, Dave Wertz?” Sigmund demanded.  “Why shall I not sing when the heart is glad?”

“Because you’ve got no call to, that’s why.  Look about you, man, and think of the grub we’ve been defiling our bodies with for the last twelvemonth, and the way we’ve lived and worked like beasts!”

Thus abjured, Sigmund, the golden-haired, surveyed it all, and the frost-rimmed wolf-dogs and the vapor breaths of the men.  “And why shall not the heart be glad?” he laughed.  “It is good; it is all good.  As for the grub—”  He doubled up his arm and caressed the swelling biceps.  “And if we have lived and worked like beasts, have we not been paid like kings?  Twenty dollars to the pan the streak is running, and we know it to be eight feet thick.  It is another Klondike—and we know it—Jim Hawes there, by your elbow, knows it and complains not.  And there’s Hitchcock!  He sews moccasins like an old woman, and waits against the time.  Only you can’t wait and work until the wash-up in the spring.  Then we shall all be rich, rich as kings, only you cannot wait.  You want to go back to the States.  So do I, and I was born there, but I can wait, when each day the gold in the pan shows up yellow as butter in the churning.  But you want your good time, and, like a child, you cry for it now.  Bah!  Why shall I not sing:

“In a year, in a year, when the grapes are ripe,I shall stay no more away.Then if you still are true, my love,It will be our wedding day.In a year, in a year, when my time is past,Then I’ll live in your love for aye.Then if you still are true, my love,It will be our wedding day.”

“In a year, in a year, when the grapes are ripe,I shall stay no more away.Then if you still are true, my love,It will be our wedding day.In a year, in a year, when my time is past,Then I’ll live in your love for aye.Then if you still are true, my love,It will be our wedding day.”

The dogs, bristling and growling, drew in closer to the firelight.  There was a monotonous crunch-crunch of webbed shoes, and between each crunch the dragging forward of the heel of the shoe like the sound of sifting sugar.  Sigmund broke off from his song to hurl oaths and firewood at the animals.  Then the light was parted by a fur-clad figure, and an Indian girl slipped out of the webs, threw back the hood of her squirrel-skinparka, and stood in their midst.  Sigmund and the men on the bearskin greeted her as “Sipsu,” with the customary “Hello,” but Hitchcock made room on the sled that she might sit beside him.

“And how goes it, Sipsu?” he asked, talking, after her fashion, in broken English and bastard Chinook.  “Is the hunger still mighty in the camp? and has the witch doctor yet found the cause wherefore game is scarce and no moose in the land?”

“Yes; even so.  There is little game, and we prepare to eat the dogs.  Also has the witch doctor found the cause of all this evil, and to-morrow will he make sacrifice and cleanse the camp.”

“And what does the sacrifice chance to be?—a new-born babe or some poor devil of a squaw, old and shaky, who is a care to the tribe and better out of the way?”

“It chanced not that wise; for the need was great, and he chose none other than the chief’s daughter; none other than I, Sipsu.”

“Hell!”  The word rose slowly to Hitchcock’s lips, and brimmed over full and deep, in a way which bespoke wonder and consideration.

“Wherefore we stand by a forking of the trail, you and I,” she went on calmly, “and I have come that we may look once more upon each other, and once more only.”

She was born of primitive stock, and primitive had been her traditions and her days; so she regarded life stoically, and human sacrifice as part of the natural order.  The powers which ruled the day-light and the dark, the flood and the frost, the bursting of the bud and the withering of the leaf, were angry and in need of propitiation.  This they exacted in many ways,—death in the bad water, through the treacherous ice-crust, by the grip of the grizzly, or a wasting sickness which fell upon a man in his own lodge till he coughed, and the life of his lungs went out through his mouth and nostrils.  Likewise did the powers receive sacrifice.  It was all one.  And the witch doctor was versed in the thoughts of the powers and chose unerringly.  It was very natural.  Death came by many ways, yet was it all one after all,—a manifestation of the all-powerful and inscrutable.

But Hitchcock came of a later world-breed.  His traditions were less concrete and without reverence, and he said, “Not so, Sipsu.  You are young, and yet in the full joy of life.  The witch doctor is a fool, and his choice is evil.  This thing shall not be.”

She smiled and answered, “Life is not kind, and for many reasons.  First, it made of us twain the one white and the other red, which is bad.  Then it crossed our trails, and now it parts them again; and we can do nothing.  Once before, when the gods were angry, did your brothers come to the camp.  They were three, big men and white, and they said the thing shall not be.  But they died quickly, and the thing was.”

Hitchcock nodded that he heard, half-turned, and lifted his voice.  “Look here, you fellows!  There’s a lot of foolery going on over to the camp, and they’re getting ready to murder Sipsu.  What d’ye say?”

Wertz looked at Hawes, and Hawes looked back, but neither spoke.  Sigmund dropped his head, and petted the shepherd dog between his knees.  He had brought Shep in with him from the outside, and thought a great deal of the animal.  In fact, a certain girl, who was much in his thoughts, and whose picture in the little locket on his breast often inspired him to sing, had given him the dog and her blessing when they kissed good-by and he started on his Northland quest.

“What d’ye say?” Hitchcock repeated.

“Mebbe it’s not so serious,” Hawes answered with deliberation.  “Most likely it’s only a girl’s story.”

“That isn’t the point!”  Hitchcock felt a hot flush of anger sweep over him at their evident reluctance.  “The question is, if it is so, are we going to stand it?  What are we going to do?”

“I don’t see any call to interfere,” spoke up Wertz.  “If it is so, it is so, and that’s all there is about it.  It’s a way these people have of doing.  It’s their religion, and it’s no concern of ours.  Our concern is to get the dust and then get out of this God-forsaken land.  ’T isn’t fit for naught else but beasts?  And what are these black devils but beasts?  Besides, it’d be damn poor policy.”

“That’s what I say,” chimed in Hawes.  “Here we are, four of us, three hundred miles from the Yukon or a white face.  And what can we do against half-a-hundred Indians?  If we quarrel with them, we have to vamose; if we fight, we are wiped out.  Further, we’ve struck pay, and, by God! I, for one, am going to stick by it!”

“Ditto here,” supplemented Wertz.

Hitchcock turned impatiently to Sigmund, who was softly singing,—

“In a year, in a year, when the grapes are ripe,I shall stay no more away.”

“In a year, in a year, when the grapes are ripe,I shall stay no more away.”

“Well, it’s this way, Hitchcock,” he finally said, “I’m in the same boat with the rest.  If three-score bucks have made up their mind to kill the girl, why, we can’t help it.  One rush, and we’d be wiped off the landscape.  And what good’d that be?  They’d still have the girl.  There’s no use in going against the customs of a people except you’re in force.”

“But we are in force!” Hitchcock broke in.  “Four whites are a match for a hundred times as many reds.  And think of the girl!”

Sigmund stroked the dog meditatively.  “But I do think of the girl.  And her eyes are blue like summer skies, and laughing like summer seas, and her hair is yellow, like mine, and braided in ropes the size of a big man’s arms.  She’s waiting for me, out there, in a better land.  And she’s waited long, and now my pile’s in sight I’m not going to throw it away.”

“And shamed I would be to look into the girl’s blue eyes and remember the black ones of the girl whose blood was on my hands,” Hitchcock sneered; for he was born to honor and championship, and to do the thing for the thing’s sake, nor stop to weigh or measure.

Sigmund shook his head.  “You can’t make me mad, Hitchcock, nor do mad things because of your madness.  It’s a cold business proposition and a question of facts.  I didn’t come to this country for my health, and, further, it’s impossible for us to raise a hand.  If it is so, it is too bad for the girl, that’s all.  It’s a way of her people, and it just happens we’re on the spot this one time.  They’ve done the same for a thousand-thousand years, and they’re going to do it now, and they’ll go on doing it for all time to come.  Besides, they’re not our kind.  Nor’s the girl.  No, I take my stand with Wertz and Hawes, and—”

But the dogs snarled and drew in, and he broke off, listening to the crunch-crunch of many snowshoes.  Indian after Indian stalked into the firelight, tall and grim, fur-clad and silent, their shadows dancing grotesquely on the snow.  One, the witch doctor, spoke gutturally to Sipsu.  His face was daubed with savage paint blotches, and over his shoulders was drawn a wolfskin, the gleaming teeth and cruel snout surmounting his head.  No other word was spoken.  The prospectors held the peace.  Sipsu arose and slipped into her snowshoes.

“Good-by, O my man,” she said to Hitchcock.  But the man who had sat beside her on the sled gave no sign, nor lifted his head as they filed away into the white forest.

Unlike many men, his faculty of adaptation, while large, had never suggested the expediency of an alliance with the women of the Northland.  His broad cosmopolitanism had never impelled toward covenanting in marriage with the daughters of the soil.  If it had, his philosophy of life would not have stood between.  But it simply had not.  Sipsu?  He had pleasured in camp-fire chats with her, not as a man who knew himself to be man and she woman, but as a man might with a child, and as a man of his make certainly would if for no other reason than to vary the tedium of a bleak existence.  That was all.  But there was a certain chivalric thrill of warm blood in him, despite his Yankee ancestry and New England upbringing, and he was so made that the commercial aspect of life often seemed meaningless and bore contradiction to his deeper impulses.

So he sat silent, with head bowed forward, an organic force, greater than himself, as great as his race, at work within him.  Wertz and Hawes looked askance at him from time to time, a faint but perceptible trepidation in their manner.  Sigmund also felt this.  Hitchcock was strong, and his strength had been impressed upon them in the course of many an event in their precarious life.  So they stood in a certain definite awe and curiosity as to what his conduct would be when he moved to action.

But his silence was long, and the fire nigh out, when Wertz stretched his arms and yawned, and thought he’d go to bed.  Then Hitchcock stood up his full height.

“May God damn your souls to the deepest hells, you chicken-hearted cowards!  I’m done with you!”  He said it calmly enough, but his strength spoke in every syllable, and every intonation was advertisement of intention.  “Come on,” he continued, “whack up, and in whatever way suits you best.  I own a quarter-interest in the claims; our contracts show that.  There’re twenty-five or thirty ounces in the sack from the test pans.  Fetch out the scales.  We’ll divide that now.  And you, Sigmund, measure me my quarter-share of the grub and set it apart.  Four of the dogs are mine, and I want four more.  I’ll trade you my share in the camp outfit and mining-gear for the dogs.  And I’ll throw in my six or seven ounces and the spare 45-90 with the ammunition.  What d’ye say?”

The three men drew apart and conferred.  When they returned, Sigmund acted as spokesman.  “We’ll whack up fair with you, Hitchcock.  In everything you’ll get your quarter-share, neither more nor less; and you can take it or leave it.  But we want the dogs as bad as you do, so you get four, and that’s all.  If you don’t want to take your share of the outfit and gear, why, that’s your lookout.  If you want it, you can have it; if you don’t, leave it.”

“The letter of the law,” Hitchcock sneered.  “But go ahead.  I’m willing.  And hurry up.  I can’t get out of this camp and away from its vermin any too quick.”

The division was effected without further comment.  He lashed his meagre belongings upon one of the sleds, rounded in his four dogs, and harnessed up.  His portion of outfit and gear he did not touch, though he threw onto the sled half a dozen dog harnesses, and challenged them with his eyes to interfere.  But they shrugged their shoulders and watched him disappear in the forest.

* * * * *

A man crawled upon his belly through the snow.  On every hand loomed the moose-hide lodges of the camp.  Here and there a miserable dog howled or snarled abuse upon his neighbor.  Once, one of them approached the creeping man, but the man became motionless.  The dog came closer and sniffed, and came yet closer, till its nose touched the strange object which had not been there when darkness fell.  Then Hitchcock, for it was Hitchcock, upreared suddenly, shooting an unmittened hand out to the brute’s shaggy throat.  And the dog knew its death in that clutch, and when the man moved on, was left broken-necked under the stars.  In this manner Hitchcock made the chief’s lodge.  For long he lay in the snow without, listening to the voices of the occupants and striving to locate Sipsu.  Evidently there were many in the tent, and from the sounds they were in high excitement.  At last he heard the girl’s voice, and crawled around so that only the moose-hide divided them.  Then burrowing in the snow, he slowly wormed his head and shoulders underneath.  When the warm inner air smote his face, he stopped and waited, his legs and the greater part of his body still on the outside.  He could see nothing, nor did he dare lift his head.  On one side of him was a skin bale.  He could smell it, though he carefully felt to be certain.  On the other side his face barely touched a furry garment which he knew clothed a body.  This must be Sipsu.  Though he wished she would speak again, he resolved to risk it.

He could hear the chief and the witch doctor talking high, and in a far corner some hungry child whimpering to sleep.  Squirming over on his side, he carefully raised his head, still just touching the furry garment.  He listened to the breathing.  It was a woman’s breathing; he would chance it.

He pressed against her side softly but firmly, and felt her start at the contact.  Again he waited, till a questioning hand slipped down upon his head and paused among the curls.  The next instant the hand turned his face gently upward, and he was gazing into Sipsu’s eyes.

She was quite collected.  Changing her position casually, she threw an elbow well over on the skin bale, rested her body upon it, and arranged herparka.  In this way he was completely concealed.  Then, and still most casually, she reclined across him, so that he could breathe between her arm and breast, and when she lowered her head her ear pressed lightly against his lips.

“When the time suits, go thou,” he whispered, “out of the lodge and across the snow, down the wind to the bunch of jackpine in the curve of the creek.  There wilt thou find my dogs and my sled, packed for the trail.  This night we go down to the Yukon; and since we go fast, lay thou hands upon what dogs come nigh thee, by the scruff of the neck, and drag them to the sled in the curve of the creek.”

Sipsu shook her head in dissent; but her eyes glistened with gladness, and she was proud that this man had shown toward her such favor.  But she, like the women of all her race, was born to obey the will masculine, and when Hitchcock repeated “Go!” he did it with authority, and though she made no answer he knew that his will was law.

“And never mind harness for the dogs,” he added, preparing to go.  “I shall wait.  But waste no time.  The day chaseth the night alway, nor does it linger for man’s pleasure.”

Half an hour later, stamping his feet and swinging his arms by the sled, he saw her coming, a surly dog in either hand.  At the approach of these his own animals waxed truculent, and he favored them with the butt of his whip till they quieted.  He had approached the camp up the wind, and sound was the thing to be most feared in making his presence known.

“Put them into the sled,” he ordered when she had got the harness on the two dogs.  “I want my leaders to the fore.”

But when she had done this, the displaced animals pitched upon the aliens.  Though Hitchcock plunged among them with clubbed rifle, a riot of sound went up and across the sleeping camp.

“Now we shall have dogs, and in plenty,” he remarked grimly, slipping an axe from the sled lashings.  “Do thou harness whichever I fling thee, and betweenwhiles protect the team.”

He stepped a space in advance and waited between two pines.  The dogs of the camp were disturbing the night with their jangle, and he watched for their coming.  A dark spot, growing rapidly, took form upon the dim white expanse of snow.  It was a forerunner of the pack, leaping cleanly, and, after the wolf fashion, singing direction to its brothers.  Hitchcock stood in the shadow.  As it sprang past, he reached out, gripped its forelegs in mid-career, and sent it whirling earthward.  Then he struck it a well-judged blow beneath the ear, and flung it to Sipsu.  And while she clapped on the harness, he, with his axe, held the passage between the trees, till a shaggy flood of white teeth and glistening eyes surged and crested just beyond reach.  Sipsu worked rapidly.  When she had finished, he leaped forward, seized and stunned a second, and flung it to her.  This he repeated thrice again, and when the sled team stood snarling in a string of ten, he called, “Enough!”

But at this instant a young buck, the forerunner of the tribe, and swift of limb, wading through the dogs and cuffing right and left, attempted the passage.  The butt of Hitchcock’s rifle drove him to his knees, whence he toppled over sideways.  The witch doctor, running lustily, saw the blow fall.

Hitchcock called to Sipsu to pull out.  At her shrill “Chook!” the maddened brutes shot straight ahead, and the sled, bounding mightily, just missed unseating her.  The powers were evidently angry with the witch doctor, for at this moment they plunged him upon the trail.  The lead-dog fouled his snowshoes and tripped him up, and the nine succeeding dogs trod him under foot and the sled bumped over him.  But he was quick to his feet, and the night might have turned out differently had not Sipsu struck backward with the long dog-whip and smitten him a blinding blow across the eyes.  Hitchcock, hurrying to overtake her, collided against him as he swayed with pain in the middle of the trail.  Thus it was, when this primitive theologian got back to the chief’s lodge, that his wisdom had been increased in so far as concerns the efficacy of the white man’s fist.  So, when he orated then and there in the council, he was wroth against all white men.

* * * * *

“Tumble out, you loafers!  Tumble out!  Grub’ll be ready before you get into your footgear!”

Dave Wertz threw off the bearskin, sat up, and yawned.

Hawes stretched, discovered a lame muscle in his arm, and rubbed it sleepily.  “Wonder where Hitchcock bunked last night?” he queried, reaching for his moccasins.  They were stiff, and he walked gingerly in his socks to the fire to thaw them out.  “It’s a blessing he’s gone,” he added, “though he was a mighty good worker.”

“Yep.  Too masterful.  That was his trouble.  Too bad for Sipsu.  Think he cared for her much?”

“Don’t think so.  Just principle.  That’s all.  He thought it wasn’t right—and, of course, it wasn’t,—but that was no reason for us to interfere and get hustled over the divide before our time.”

“Principle is principle, and it’s good in its place, but it’s best left to home when you go to Alaska.  Eh?”  Wertz had joined his mate, and both were working pliability into their frozen moccasins.  “Think we ought to have taken a hand?”

Sigmund shook his head.  He was very busy.  A scud of chocolate-colored foam was rising in the coffee-pot, and the bacon needed turning.  Also, he was thinking about the girl with laughing eyes like summer seas, and he was humming softly.

His mates chuckled to each other and ceased talking.  Though it was past seven, daybreak was still three hours distant.  The aurora borealis had passed out of the sky, and the camp was an oasis of light in the midst of deep darkness.  And in this light the forms of the three men were sharply defined.  Emboldened by the silence, Sigmund raised his voice and opened the last stanza of the old song:-

“In a year, in a year, when the grapes are ripe—”

“In a year, in a year, when the grapes are ripe—”

Then the night was split with a rattling volley of rifle-shots.  Hawes sighed, made an effort to straighten himself, and collapsed.  Wertz went over on an elbow with drooping head.  He choked a little, and a dark stream flowed from his mouth.  And Sigmund, the Golden-Haired, his throat a-gurgle with the song, threw up his arms and pitched across the fire.

* * * * *

The witch doctor’s eyes were well blackened, and his temper none of the best; for he quarrelled with the chief over the possession of Wertz’s rifle, and took more than his share of the part-sack of beans.  Also he appropriated the bearskin, and caused grumbling among the tribesmen.  And finally, he tried to kill Sigmund’s dog, which the girl had given him, but the dog ran away, while he fell into the shaft and dislocated his shoulder on the bucket.  When the camp was well looted they went back to their own lodges, and there was a great rejoicing among the women.  Further, a band of moose strayed over the south divide and fell before the hunters, so the witch doctor attained yet greater honor, and the people whispered among themselves that he spoke in council with the gods.

But later, when all were gone, the shepherd dog crept back to the deserted camp, and all the night long and a day it wailed the dead.  After that it disappeared, though the years were not many before the Indian hunters noted a change in the breed of timber wolves, and there were dashes of bright color and variegated markings such as no wolf bore before.


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