LIKE ARGUS OF THE ANCIENT TIMES

“I made good on my job from the first, and lived in Quito in a ’dobe house with whacking big Spanish tiles on the roof that I’d rented.  And I never had much trouble with the Spiggoties, what of letting them sneak free rides in the tender or on the cowcatcher.  Me throw them off?  Never!  I took notice, when Jack Harris put off a bunch of them, that I attended his funeralmuy pronto—”

“Speak English,” the little woman beside him snapped.

“Sarah just can’t bear to tolerate me speaking Spanish,” he apologized.  “It gets so on her nerves that I promised not to.  Well, as I was saying, the goose hung high and everything was going hunky-dory, and I was piling up my wages to come north to Nebraska and marry Sarah, when I run on to Vahna—”

“The hussy!” Sarah hissed.

“Now, Sarah,” her towering giant of a husband begged, “I just got to mention her or I can’t tell about the nugget.—It was one night when I was taking a locomotive—no train—down to Amato, about thirty miles from Quito.  Seth Manners was my fireman.  I was breaking him in to engineer for himself, and I was letting him run the locomotive while I sat up in his seat meditating about Sarah here.  I’d just got a letter from her, begging as usual for me to come home and hinting as usual about the dangers of an unmarried man like me running around loose in a country full of senoritas and fandangos.  Lord!  If she could only a-seen them.  Positive frights, that’s what they are, their faces painted white as corpses and their lips red as—as some of the train wrecks I’ve helped clean up.

“It was a lovely April night, not a breath of wind, and a tremendous big moon shining right over the top of Chimborazo.—Some mountain that.  The railroad skirted it twelve thousand feet above sea level, and the top of it ten thousand feet higher than that.

“Mebbe I was drowsing, with Seth running the engine; but he slammed on the brakes so sudden hard that I darn near went through the cab window.

“‘What the—’ I started to yell, and ‘Holy hell,’ Seth says, as both of us looked at what was on the track.  And I agreed with Seth entirely in his remark.  It was an Indian girl—and take it from me, Indians ain’t Spiggoties by any manner of means.  Seth had managed to fetch a stop within twenty feet of her, and us bowling down hill at that!  But the girl.  She—”

I saw the form of Mrs. Julian Jones stiffen, although she kept her gaze fixed balefully upon two mud-hens that were prowling along the lagoon shallows below us.  “The hussy!” she hissed, once and implacably.  Jones had stopped at the sound, but went on immediately.

“She was a tall girl, slim and slender, you know the kind, with black hair, remarkably long hanging, down loose behind her, as she stood there no more afraid than nothing, her arms spread out to stop the engine.  She was wearing a slimpsy sort of garment wrapped around her that wasn’t cloth but ocelot skins, soft and dappled, and silky.  It was all she had on—”

“The hussy!” breathed Mrs. Jones.

But Mr. Jones went on, making believe that he was unaware of the interruption.

“‘Hell of a way to stop a locomotive,’ I complained at Seth, as I climbed down on to the right of way.  I walked past our engine and up to the girl, and what do you think?  Her eyes were shut tight.  She was trembling that violent that you would see it by the moonlight.  And she was barefoot, too.

“‘What’s the row?’ I said, none too gentle.  She gave a start, seemed to come out of her trance, and opened her eyes.  Say!  They were big and black and beautiful.  Believe me, she was some looker—”

“The hussy!”  At which hiss the two mud-hens veered away a few feet.  But Jones was getting himself in hand, and didn’t even blink.

“‘What are you stopping this locomotive for?’ I demanded in Spanish.  Nary an answer.  She stared at me, then at the snorting engine and then burst into tears, which you’ll admit is uncommon behaviour for an Indian woman.

“‘If you try to get rides that way,’ I slung at her in Spiggoty Spanish (which they tell me is some different from regular Spanish), ‘you’ll be taking one smeared all over our cowcatcher and headlight, and it’ll be up to my fireman to scrape you off.’

“My Spiggoty Spanish wasn’t much to brag on, but I could see she understood, though she only shook her head and wouldn’t speak.  But great Moses, she was some looker—”

I glanced apprehensively at Mrs. Jones, who must have caught me out of the tail of her eye, for she muttered: “If she hadn’t been do you think he’d a-taken her into his house to live?”

“Now hold on, Sarah,” he protested.  “That ain’t fair.  Besides, I’m telling this.—Next thing, Seth yells at me, ‘Goin’ to stay here all night?’

“‘Come on,’ I said to the girl, ‘and climb on board.  But next time you want a ride don’t flag a locomotive between stations.’  She followed along; but when I got to the step and turned to give her a lift-up, she wasn’t there.  I went forward again.  Not a sign of her.  Above and below was sheer cliff, and the track stretched ahead a hundred yards clear and empty.  And then I spotted her, crouched down right against the cowcatcher, that close I’d almost stepped on her.  If we’d started up, we’d have run over her in a second.  It was all so nonsensical, I never could make out her actions.  Maybe she was trying to suicide.  I grabbed her by the wrist and jerked her none too gentle to her feet.  And she came along all right.  Women do know when a man means business.”

I glanced from this Goliath to his little, bird-eyed spouse, and wondered if he had ever tried to mean business with her.

“Seth kicked at first, but I boosted her into the cab and made her sit up beside me—”

“And I suppose Seth was busy running the engine,” Mrs. Jones observed.

“I was breaking him in, wasn’t I?”  Mr. Jones protested.  “So we made the run into Amato.  She’d never opened her mouth once, and no sooner’d the engine stopped than she’d jumped to the ground and was gone.  Just like that.  Not a thank you kindly.  Nothing.

“But next morning when we came to pull out for Quito with a dozen flat cars loaded with rails, there she was in the cab waiting for us; and in the daylight I could see how much better a looker she was than the night before.

“‘Huh! she’s adopted you,’ Seth grins.  And it looked like it.  She just stood there and looked at me—at us—like a loving hound dog that you love, that you’ve caught with a string of sausages inside of him, and that just knows you ain’t going to lift a hand to him.  ‘Go chase yourself!’ I told herpronto.”  (Mrs. Jones her proximity noticeable with a wince at the Spanish word.)  “You see, Sarah, I’d no use for her, even at the start.”

Mrs. Jones stiffened.  Her lips moved soundlessly, but I knew to what syllables.

“And what made it hardest was Seth jeering at me.  ‘You can’t shake her that way,’ he said.  ‘You saved her life—’  ‘I didn’t,’ I said sharply; ‘it was you.’  ‘But she thinks you did, which is the same thing,’ he came back at me.  ‘And now she belongs to you.  Custom of the country, as you ought to know.’”

“Heathenish,” said Mrs. Jones, and though her steady gaze was set upon the Tower of Jewels I knew she was making no reference to its architecture.

“‘She’s come to do light housekeeping for you,’ Seth grinned.  I let him rave, though afterwards I kept him throwing in the coal too fast to work his mouth very much.  Why, say, when I got to the spot where I picked her up, and stopped the train for her to get off, she just flopped down on her knees, got a hammerlock with her arms around my knees, and cried all over my shoes.  What was I to do?”

With no perceptible movement that I was aware of, Mrs. Jones advertised her certitude of knowledge of whatshewould have done.

“And the moment we pulled into Quito, she did what she’d done before—vanished.  Sarah never believes me when I say how relieved I felt to be quit of her.  But it was not to be.  I got to my ’dobe house and managed a cracking fine dinner my cook had ready for me.  She was mostly Spiggoty and half Indian, and her name was Paloma.—Now, Sarah, haven’t I told you she was older’n a grandmother, and looked more like a buzzard than a dove?  Why, I couldn’t bear to eat with her around where I could look at her.  But she did make things comfortable, and she was some economical when it came to marketing.

“That afternoon, after a big long siesta, what’d I find in the kitchen, just as much at home as if she belonged there, but that blamed Indian girl.  And old Paloma was squatting at the girl’s feet and rubbing the girl’s knees and legs like for rheumatism, which I knew the girl didn’t have from the way I’d sized up the walk of her, and keeping time to the rubbing with a funny sort of gibberish chant.  And I let loose right there and then.  As Sarah knows, I never could a-bear women around the house—young, unmarried women, I mean.  But it was no go!  Old Paloma sided with the girl, and said if the girl went she went, too.  Also, she called me more kinds of a fool than the English language has accommodation for.  You’d like the Spanish lingo, Sarah, for expressing yourself in such ways, and you’d have liked old Paloma, too.  She was a good woman, though she didn’t have any teeth and her face could kill a strong man’s appetite in the cradle.

“I gave in.  I had to.  Except for the excuse that she needed Vahna’s help around the house (which she didn’t at all), old Paloma never said why she stuck up for the girl.  Anyway, Vahna was a quiet thing, never in the way.  And she never gadded.  Just sat in-doors jabbering with Paloma and helping with the chores.  But I wasn’t long in getting on to that she was afraid of something.  She would look up, that anxious it hurt, whenever anybody called, like some of the boys to have a gas or a game of pedro.  I tried to worm it out of Paloma what was worrying the girl, but all the old woman did was to look solemn and shake her head like all the devils in hell was liable to precipitate a visit on us.

“And then one day Vahna had a visitor.  I’d just come in from a run and was passing the time of day with her—I had to be polite, even if she had butted in on me and come to live in my house for keeps—when I saw a queer expression come into her eyes.  In the doorway stood an Indian boy.  He looked like her, but was younger and slimmer.  She took him into the kitchen and they must have had a great palaver, for he didn’t leave until after dark.  Inside the week he came back, but I missed him.  When I got home, Paloma put a fat nugget of gold into my hand, which Vahna had sent him for.  The blamed thing weighed all of two pounds and was worth more than five hundred dollars.  She explained that Vahna wanted me to take it to pay for her keep.  And I had to take it to keep peace in the house.

“Then, after a long time, came another visitor.  We were sitting before the fire—”

“Him and the hussy,” quoth Mrs. Jones.

“And Paloma,” he added quickly.

“Him and his cook and his light housekeeper sitting by the fire,” she amended.

“Oh, I admit Vahna did like me a whole heap,” he asserted recklessly, then modified with a pang of caution: “A heap more than was good for her, seeing that I had no inclination her way.

“Well, as I was saying, she had another visitor.  He was a lean, tall, white-headed old Indian, with a beak on him like an eagle.  He walked right in without knocking.  Vahna gave a little cry that was half like a yelp and half like a gasp, and flumped down on her knees before me, pleading to me with deer’s eyes and to him with the eyes of a deer about to be killed that don’t want to be killed.  Then, for a minute that seemed as long as a life-time, she and the old fellow glared at each other.  Paloma was the first to talk, in his own lingo, for he talked back to her.  But great Moses, if he wasn’t the high and mighty one!  Paloma’s old knees were shaking, and she cringed to him like a hound dog.  And all this in my own house!  I’d have thrown him out on his neck, only he was so old.

“If the things he said to Vahna were as terrible as the way he looked!  Say!  He just spit words at her!  But Paloma kept whimpering and butting in, till something she said got across, because his face relaxed.  He condescended to give me the once over and fired some question at Vahna.  She hung her head, and looked foolish, and blushed, and then replied with a single word and a shake of the head.  And with that he just naturally turned on his heel and beat it.  I guess she’d said ‘No.’

“For some time after that Vahna used to fluster up whenever she saw me.  Then she took to the kitchen for a spell.  But after a long time she began hanging around the big room again.  She was still mighty shy, but she’d keep on following me about with those big eyes of hers—”

“The hussy!” I heard plainly.  But Julian Jones and I were pretty well used to it by this time.

“I don’t mind saying that I was getting some interested myself—oh, not in the way Sarah never lets up letting me know she thinks.  That two-pound nugget was what had me going.  If Vahna’d put me wise to where it came from, I could say good-bye to railroading and hit the high places for Nebraska and Sarah.

“And then the beans were spilled . . . by accident.  Come a letter from Wisconsin.  My Aunt Eliza ’d died and up and left me her big farm.  I let out a whoop when I read it; but I could have canned my joy, for I was jobbed out of it by the courts and lawyers afterward—not a cent to me, and I’m still paying ’m in instalments.

“But I didn’t know, then; and I prepared to pull back to God’s country.  Paloma got sore, and Vahna got the weeps.  ‘Don’t go!  Don’t go!’  That was her song.  But I gave notice on my job, and wrote a letter to Sarah here—didn’t I, Sarah?

“That night, sitting by the fire like at a funeral, Vahna really loosened up for the first time.

“‘Don’t go,’ she says to me, with old Paloma nodding agreement with her.  ‘I’ll show you where my brother got the nugget, if you don’t go.’  ‘Too late,’ said I.  And I told her why.

“And told her about me waiting for you back in Nebraska,” Mrs. Jones observed in cold, passionless tones.

“Now, Sarah, why should I hurt a poor Indian girl’s feelings?  Of course I didn’t.

“Well, she and Paloma talked Indian some more, and then Vahna says: ‘If you stay, I’ll show you the biggest nugget that is the father of all other nuggets.’  ‘How big?’ I asked.  ‘As big as me?’  She laughed.  ‘Bigger than you,’ she says, ‘much, much bigger.’  ‘They don’t grow that way,’ I said.  But she said she’d seen it and Paloma backed her up.  Why, to listen to them you’d have thought there was millions in that one nugget.  Paloma ’d never seen it herself, but she’d heard about it.  A secret of the tribe which she couldn’t share, being only half Indian herself.”

Julian Jones paused and heaved a sigh.

“And they kept on insisting until I fell for—”

“The hussy,” said Mrs. Jones, pert as a bird, at the ready instant.

“‘No; for the nugget.  What of Aunt Eliza’s farm I was rich enough to quit railroading, but not rich enough to turn my back on big money—and I just couldn’t help believing them two women.  Gee!  I could be another Vanderbilt, or J. P. Morgan.  That’s the way I thought; and I started in to pump Vahna.  But she wouldn’t give down.  ‘You come along with me,’ she says.  ‘We can be back here in a couple of weeks with all the gold the both of us can carry.’  ‘We’ll take a burro, or a pack-train of burros,’ was my suggestion.  But nothing doing.  And Paloma agreed with her.  It was too dangerous.  The Indians would catch us.

“The two of us pulled out when the nights were moonlight.  We travelled only at night, and laid up in the days.  Vahna wouldn’t let me light a fire, and I missed my coffee something fierce.  We got up in the real high mountains of the main Andes, where the snow on one pass gave us some trouble; but the girl knew the trails, and, though we didn’t waste any time, we were a full week getting there.  I know the general trend of our travel, because I carried a pocket compass; and the general trend is all I need to get there again, because of that peak.  There’s no mistaking it.  There ain’t another peak like it in the world.  Now, I’m not telling you its particular shape, but when you and I head out for it from Quito I’ll take you straight to it.

“It’s no easy thing to climb, and the person doesn’t live that can climb it at night.  We had to take the daylight to it, and didn’t reach the top till after sunset.  Why, I could take hours and hours telling you about that last climb, which I won’t.  The top was flat as a billiard table, about a quarter of an acre in size, and was almost clean of snow.  Vahna told me that the great winds that usually blew, kept the snow off of it.

“We were winded, and I got mountain sickness so bad that I had to stretch out for a spell.  Then, when the moon come up, I took a prowl around.  It didn’t take long, and I didn’t catch a sight or a smell of anything that looked like gold.  And when I asked Vahna, she only laughed and clapped her hands.  Meantime my mountain sickness tuned up something fierce, and I sat down on a big rock to wait for it to ease down.

“‘Come on, now,’ I said, when I felt better.  ‘Stop your fooling and tell me where that nugget is.’  ‘It’s nearer to you right now than I’ll ever get,’ she answered, her big eyes going sudden wistful.  ‘All you Gringos are alike.  Gold is the love of your heart, and women don’t count much.’

“I didn’t say anything.  That was no time to tell her about Sarah here.  But Vahna seemed to shake off her depressed feelings, and began to laugh and tease again.  ‘How do you like it?’ she asked.  ‘Like what?’  ‘The nugget you’re sitting on.’

“I jumped up as though it was a red-hot stove.  And all it was was a rock.  I felt nay heart sink.  Either she had gone clean loco or this was her idea of a joke.  Wrong on both counts.  She gave me the hatchet and told me to take a hack at the boulder, which I did, again and again, for yellow spots sprang up from under every blow.  By the great Moses! it was gold!  The whole blamed boulder!”

Jones rose suddenly to his full height and flung out his long arms, his face turned to the southern skies.  The movement shot panic into the heart of a swan that had drawn nearer with amiably predatory designs.  Its consequent abrupt retreat collided it with a stout old lady, who squealed and dropped her bag of peanuts.  Jones sat down and resumed.

“Gold, I tell you, solid gold and that pure and soft that I chopped chips out of it.  It had been coated with some sort of rain-proof paint or lacquer made out of asphalt or something.  No wonder I’d taken it for a rock.  It was ten feet long, all of five feet through, and tapering to both ends like an egg.  Here.  Take a look at this.”

From his pocket he drew and opened a leather case, from which he took an object wrapped in tissue-paper.  Unwrapping it, he dropped into my hand a chip of pure soft gold, the size of a ten-dollar gold-piece.  I could make out the greyish substance on one side with which it had been painted.

“I chopped that from one end of the thing,” Jones went on, replacing the chip in its paper and leather case.  “And lucky I put it in my pocket.  For right at my back came one loud word—more like a croak than a word, in my way of thinking.  And there was that lean old fellow with the eagle beak that had dropped in on us one night.  And there was about thirty Indians with him—all slim young fellows.

“Vahna’d flopped down and begun whimpering, but I told her, ‘Get up and make friends with them for me.’  ‘No, no,’ she cried.  ‘This is death.  Good-bye,amigo—’”

Here Mrs. Jones winced, and her husband abruptly checked the particular flow of his narrative.

“‘Then get up and fight along with me,’ I said to her.  And she did.  She was some hellion, there on the top of the world, clawing and scratching tooth and nail—a regular she cat.  And I wasn’t idle, though all I had was that hatchet and my long arms.  But they were too many for me, and there was no place for me to put my back against a wall.  When I come to, minutes after they’d cracked me on the head—here, feel this.”

Removing his hat, Julian Jones guided my finger tips through his thatch of sandy hair until they sank into an indentation.  It was fully three inches long, and went into the bone itself of the skull.

“When I come to, there was Vahna spread-eagled on top of the nugget, and the old fellow with a beak jabbering away solemnly as if going through some sort of religious exercises.  In his hand he had a stone knife—you know, a thin, sharp sliver of some obsidian-like stuff same as they make arrow-heads out of.  I couldn’t lift a hand, being held down, and being too weak besides.  And—well, anyway, that stone knife did for her, and me they didn’t even do the honour of killing there on top their sacred peak.  They chucked me off of it like so much carrion.

“And the buzzards didn’t get me either.  I can see the moonlight yet, shining on all those peaks of snow, as I went down.  Why, sir, it was a five-hundred-foot fall, only I didn’t make it.  I went into a big snow-drift in a crevice.  And when I come to (hours after I know, for it was full day when I next saw the sun), I found myself in a regular snow-cave or tunnel caused by the water from the melting snow running along the ledge.  In fact, the stone above actually overhung just beyond where I first landed.  A few feet more to the side, either way, and I’d almost be going yet.  It was a straight miracle, that’s what it was.

“But I paid for it.  It was two years and over before I knew what happened.  All I knew was that I was Julian Jones and that I’d been blacklisted in the big strike, and that I was married to Sarah here.  I mean that.  I didn’t know anything in between, and when Sarah tried to talk about it, it gave me pains in the head.  I mean my head was queer, and I knew it was queer.

“And then, sitting on the porch of her father’s farmhouse back in Nebraska one moonlight evening, Sarah came out and put that gold chip into my hand.  Seems she’d just found it in the torn lining of the trunk I’d brought back from Ecuador—I who for two years didn’t even know I’d been to Ecuador, or Australia, or anything!  Well, I just sat there looking at the chip in the moonlight, and turning it over and over and figuring what it was and where it’d come from, when all of a sudden there was a snap inside my head as if something had broken, and then I could see Vahna spread-eagled on that big nugget and the old fellow with the beak waving the stone knife, and . . . and everything.  That is, everything that had happened from the time I first left Nebraska to when I crawled to the daylight out of the snow after they had chucked me off the mountain-top.  But everything that’d happened after that I’d clean forgotten.  When Sarah said I was her husband, I wouldn’t listen to her.  Took all her family and the preacher that’d married us to convince me.

“Later on I wrote to Seth Manners.  The railroad hadn’t killed him yet, and he pieced out a lot for me.  I’ll show you his letters.  I’ve got them at the hotel.  One day, he said, making his regular run, I crawled out on to the track.  I didn’t stand upright, I just crawled.  He took me for a calf, or a big dog, at first.  I wasn’t anything human, he said, and I didn’t know him or anything.  As near as I can make out, it was ten days after the mountain-top to the time Seth picked me up.  What I ate I don’t know.  Maybe I didn’t eat.  Then it was doctors at Quito, and Paloma nursing me (she must have packed that gold chip in my trunk), until they found out I was a man without a mind, and the railroad sent me back to Nebraska.  At any rate, that’s what Seth writes me.  Of myself, I don’t know.  But Sarah here knows.  She corresponded with the railroad before they shipped me and all that.”

Mrs. Jones nodded affirmation of his words, sighed and evidenced unmistakable signs of eagerness to go.

“I ain’t been able to work since,” her husband continued.  “And I ain’t been able to figure out how to get back that big nugget.  Sarah’s got money of her own, and she won’t let go a penny—”

“He won’t get down tothatcountry no more!” she broke forth.

“But, Sarah, Vahna’s dead—you know that,” Julian Jones protested.

“I don’t know anything about anything,” she answered decisively, “except thatthatcountry is no place for a married man.”

Her lips snapped together, and she fixed an unseeing stare across to where the afternoon sun was beginning to glow into sunset.  I gazed for a moment at her face, white, plump, tiny, and implacable, and gave her up.

“How do you account for such a mass of gold being there?” I queried of Julian Jones.  “A solid-gold meteor that fell out of the sky?”

“Not for a moment.”  He shook his head.  “ It was carried there by the Indians.”

“Up a mountain like that—and such enormous weight and size!” I objected.

“Just as easy,” he smiled.  “I used to be stumped by that proposition myself, after I got my memory back.  Now how in Sam Hill—’ I used to begin, and then spend hours figuring at it.  And then when I got the answer I felt downright idiotic, it was that easy.”  He paused, then announced: “They didn’t.”

“But you just—said they did.”

“They did and they didn’t,” was his enigmatic reply.  “Of course they never carried that monster nugget up there.  What they did was to carry up its contents.”

He waited until he saw enlightenment dawn in my face.

“And then of course melted all the gold, or welded it, or smelted it, all into one piece.  You know the first Spaniards down there, under a leader named Pizarro, were a gang of robbers and cut-throats.  They went through the country like the hoof-and-mouth disease, and killed the Indians off like cattle.  You see, the Indians had lots of gold.  Well, what the Spaniards didn’t get, the surviving Indians hid away in that one big chunk on top the mountain, and it’s been waiting there ever since for me—and for you, if you want to go in on it.”

And here, by the Lagoon of the Palace of Fine Arts, ended my acquaintance with Julian Jones.  On my agreeing to finance the adventure, he promised to call on me at my hotel next morning with the letters of Seth Manners and the railroad, and conclude arrangements.  But he did not call.  That evening I telephoned his hotel and was informed by the clerk that Mr. Julian Jones and wife had departed in the early afternoon, with their baggage.

Can Mrs. Jones have rushed him back and hidden him away in Nebraska?  I remember that as we said good-bye, there was that in her smile that recalled the vulpine complacency of Mona Lisa, the Wise.

THE END

Kohala, Hawaii,May5, 1916.

Itwas the summer of 1897, and there was trouble in the Tarwater family.  Grandfather Tarwater, after remaining properly subdued and crushed for a quiet decade, had broken out again.  This time it was the Klondike fever.  His first and one unvarying symptom of such attacks was song.  One chant only he raised, though he remembered no more than the first stanza and but three lines of that.  And the family knew his feet were itching and his brain was tingling with the old madness, when he lifted his hoarse-cracked voice, now falsetto-cracked, in:

Like Argus of the ancient times,We leave this modern Greece,Tum-tum, tum-tum, tum, tum, tum-tum,To shear the Golden Fleece.

Ten years earlier he had lifted the chant, sung to the air of the “Doxology,” when afflicted with the fever to go gold-mining in Patagonia.  The multitudinous family had sat upon him, but had had a hard time doing it.  When all else had failed to shake his resolution, they had applied lawyers to him, with the threat of getting out guardianship papers and of confining him in the state asylum for the insane—which was reasonable for a man who had, a quarter of a century before, speculated away all but ten meagre acres of a California principality, and who had displayed no better business acumen ever since.

The application of lawyers to John Tarwater was like the application of a mustard plaster.  For, in his judgment, they were the gentry, more than any other, who had skinned him out of the broad Tarwater acres.  So, at the time of his Patagonian fever, the very thought of so drastic a remedy was sufficient to cure him.  He quickly demonstrated he was not crazy by shaking the fever from him and agreeing not to go to Patagonia.

Next, he demonstrated how crazy he really was, by deeding over to his family, unsolicited, the ten acres on Tarwater Flat, the house, barn, outbuildings, and water-rights.  Also did he turn over the eight hundred dollars in bank that was the long-saved salvage of his wrecked fortune.  But for this the family found no cause for committal to the asylum, since such committal would necessarily invalidate what he had done.

“Grandfather is sure peeved,” said Mary, his oldest daughter, herself a grandmother, when her father quit smoking.

All he had retained for himself was a span of old horses, a mountain buckboard, and his one room in the crowded house.  Further, having affirmed that he would be beholden to none of them, he got the contract to carry the United States mail, twice a week, from Kelterville up over Tarwater Mountain to Old Almaden—which was a sporadically worked quick-silver mine in the upland cattle country.  With his old horses it took all his time to make the two weekly round trips.  And for ten years, rain or shine, he had never missed a trip.  Nor had he failed once to pay his week’s board into Mary’s hand.  This board he had insisted on, in the convalescence from his Patagonian fever, and he had paid it strictly, though he had given up tobacco in order to be able to do it.

“Huh!” he confided to the ruined water wheel of the old Tarwater Mill, which he had built from the standing timber and which had ground wheat for the first settlers.  “Huh!  They’ll never put me in the poor farm so long as I support myself.  And without a penny to my name it ain’t likely any lawyer fellows’ll come snoopin’ around after me.”

And yet, precisely because of these highly rational acts, it was held that John Tarwater was mildly crazy!

The first time he had lifted the chant of “Like Argus of the Ancient Times,” had been in 1849, when, twenty-two years’ of age, violently attacked by the Californian fever, he had sold two hundred and forty Michigan acres, forty of it cleared, for the price of four yoke of oxen, and a wagon, and had started across the Plains.

“And we turned off at Fort Hall, where the Oregon emigration went north’ard, and swung south for Californy,” was his way of concluding the narrative of that arduous journey.  “And Bill Ping and me used to rope grizzlies out of the underbrush of Cache Slough in the Sacramento Valley.”

Years of freighting and mining had followed, and, with a stake gleaned from the Merced placers, he satisfied the land-hunger of his race and time by settling in Sonoma County.

During the ten years of carrying the mail across Tarwater Township, up Tarwater Valley, and over Tarwater Mountain, most all of which land had once been his, he had spent his time dreaming of winning back that land before he died.  And now, his huge gaunt form more erect than it had been for years, with a glinting of blue fires in his small and close-set eyes, he was lifting his ancient chant again.

“There he goes now—listen to him,” said William Tarwater.

“Nobody at home,” laughed Harris Topping, day labourer, husband of Annie Tarwater, and father of her nine children.

The kitchen door opened to admit the old man, returning from feeding his horses.  The song had ceased from his lips; but Mary was irritable from a burnt hand and a grandchild whose stomach refused to digest properly diluted cows’ milk.

“Now there ain’t no use you carryin’ on that way, father,” she tackled him.  “The time’s past for you to cut and run for a place like the Klondike, and singing won’t buy you nothing.”

“Just the same,” he answered quietly.  “I bet I could go to that Klondike place and pick up enough gold to buy back the Tarwater lands.”

“Old fool!” Annie contributed.

“You couldn’t buy them back for less’n three hundred thousand and then some,” was William’s effort at squelching him.

“Then I could pick up three hundred thousand, and then some, if I was only there,” the old man retorted placidly.

“Thank God you can’t walk there, or you’d be startin’, I know,” Mary cried.  “Ocean travel costs money.”

“I used to have money,” her father said humbly.

“Well, you ain’t got any now—so forget it,” William advised.  “Them times is past, like roping bear with Bill Ping.  There ain’t no more bear.”

“Just the same—”

But Mary cut him off.  Seizing the day’s paper from the kitchen table, she flourished it savagely under her aged progenitor’s nose.

“What do those Klondikers say?  There it is in cold print.  Only the young and robust can stand the Klondike.  It’s worse than the north pole.  And they’ve left their dead a-plenty there themselves.  Look at their pictures.  You’re forty years older ’n the oldest of them.”

John Tarwater did look, but his eyes strayed to other photographs on the highly sensational front page.

“And look at the photys of them nuggets they brought down,” he said.  “I know gold.  Didn’t I gopher twenty thousand outa the Merced?  And wouldn’t it a-ben a hundred thousand if that cloudburst hadn’t busted my wing-dam?  Now if I was only in the Klondike—”

“Crazy as a loon,” William sneered in open aside to the rest.

“A nice way to talk to your father,” Old Man Tarwater censured mildly.  “My father’d have walloped the tar out of me with a single-tree if I’d spoke to him that way.”

“But youarecrazy, father—” William began.

“Reckon you’re right, son.  And that’s where my father wasn’t crazy.  He’d a-done it.”

“The old man’s been reading some of them magazine articles about men who succeeded after forty,” Annie jibed.

“And why not, daughter?” he asked.  “And why can’t a man succeed after he’s seventy?  I was only seventy this year.  And mebbe I could succeed if only I could get to the Klondike—”

“Which you ain’t going to get to,” Mary shut him off.

“Oh, well, then,” he sighed, “seein’s I ain’t, I might just as well go to bed.”

He stood up, tall, gaunt, great-boned and gnarled, a splendid ruin of a man.  His ragged hair and whiskers were not grey but snowy white, as were the tufts of hair that stood out on the backs of his huge bony fingers.  He moved toward the door, opened it, sighed, and paused with a backward look.

“Just the same,” he murmured plaintively, “the bottoms of my feet is itching something terrible.”

Long before the family stirred next morning, his horses fed and harnessed by lantern light, breakfast cooked and eaten by lamp fight, Old Man Tarwater was off and away down Tarwater Valley on the road to Kelterville.  Two things were unusual about this usual trip which he had made a thousand and forty times since taking the mail contract.  He did not drive to Kelterville, but turned off on the main road south to Santa Rosa.  Even more remarkable than this was the paper-wrapped parcel between his feet.  It contained his one decent black suit, which Mary had been long reluctant to see him wear any more, not because it was shabby, but because, as he guessed what was at the back of her mind, it was decent enough to bury him in.

And at Santa Rosa, in a second-hand clothes shop, he sold the suit outright for two dollars and a half.  From the same obliging shopman he received four dollars for the wedding ring of his long-dead wife.  The span of horses and the wagon he disposed of for seventy-five dollars, although twenty-five was all he received down in cash.  Chancing to meet Alton Granger on the street, to whom never before had he mentioned the ten dollars loaned him in ’74, he reminded Alton Granger of the little affair, and was promptly paid.  Also, of all unbelievable men to be in funds, he so found the town drunkard for whom he had bought many a drink in the old and palmy days.  And from him John Tarwater borrowed a dollar.  Finally, he took the afternoon train to San Francisco.

A dozen days later, carrying a half-empty canvas sack of blankets and old clothes, he landed on the beach of Dyea in the thick of the great Klondike Rush.  The beach was screaming bedlam.  Ten thousand tons of outfit lay heaped and scattered, and twice ten thousand men struggled with it and clamoured about it.  Freight, by Indian-back, over Chilcoot to Lake Linderman, had jumped from sixteen to thirty cents a pound, which latter was a rate of six hundred dollars a ton.  And the sub-arctic winter gloomed near at hand.  All knew it, and all knew that of the twenty thousand of them very few would get across the passes, leaving the rest to winter and wait for the late spring thaw.

Such the beach old John Tarwater stepped upon; and straight across the beach and up the trail toward Chilcoot he headed, cackling his ancient chant, a very Grandfather Argus himself, with no outfit worry in the world, for he did not possess any outfit.  That night he slept on the flats, five miles above Dyea, at the head of canoe navigation.  Here the Dyea River became a rushing mountain torrent, plunging out of a dark canyon from the glaciers that fed it far above.

And here, early next morning, he beheld a little man weighing no more than a hundred, staggering along a foot-log under all of a hundred pounds of flour strapped on his back.  Also, he beheld the little man stumble off the log and fall face-downward in a quiet eddy where the water was two feet deep and proceed quietly to drown.  It was no desire of his to take death so easily, but the flour on his back weighed as much as he and would not let him up.

“Thank you, old man,” he said to Tarwater, when the latter had dragged him up into the air and ashore.

While he unlaced his shoes and ran the water out, they had further talk.  Next, he fished out a ten-dollar gold-piece and offered it to his rescuer.

Old Tarwater shook his head and shivered, for the ice-water had wet him to his knees.

“But I reckon I wouldn’t object to settin’ down to a friendly meal with you.”

“Ain’t had breakfast?” the little man, who was past forty and who had said his name was Anson, queried with a glance frankly curious.

“Nary bite,” John Tarwater answered.

“Where’s your outfit?  Ahead?”

“Nary outfit.”

“Expect to buy your grub on the Inside?”

“Nary a dollar to buy it with, friend.  Which ain’t so important as a warm bite of breakfast right now.”

In Anson’s camp, a quarter of a mile on, Tarwater found a slender, red-whiskered young man of thirty cursing over a fire of wet willow wood.  Introduced as Charles, he transferred his scowl and wrath to Tarwater, who, genially oblivious, devoted himself to the fire, took advantage of the chill morning breeze to create a draught which the other had left stupidly blocked by stones, and soon developed less smoke and more flame.  The third member of the party, Bill Wilson, or Big Bill as they called him, came in with a hundred-and-forty-pound pack; and what Tarwater esteemed to be a very rotten breakfast was dished out by Charles.  The mush was half cooked and mostly burnt, the bacon was charred carbon, and the coffee was unspeakable.

Immediately the meal was wolfed down the three partners took their empty pack-straps and headed down trail to where the remainder of their outfit lay at the last camp a mile away.  And old Tarwater became busy.  He washed the dishes, foraged dry wood, mended a broken pack-strap, put an edge on the butcher-knife and camp-axe, and repacked the picks and shovels into a more carryable parcel.

What had impressed him during the brief breakfast was the sort of awe in which Anson and Big Bill stood of Charles.  Once, during the morning, while Anson took a breathing spell after bringing in another hundred-pound pack, Tarwater delicately hinted his impression.

“You see, it’s this way,” Anson said.  “We’ve divided our leadership.  We’ve got specialities.  Now I’m a carpenter.  When we get to Lake Linderman, and the trees are chopped and whipsawed into planks, I’ll boss the building of the boat.  Big Bill is a logger and miner.  So he’ll boss getting out the logs and all mining operations.  Most of our outfit’s ahead.  We went broke paying the Indians to pack that much of it to the top of Chilcoot.  Our last partner is up there with it, moving it along by himself down the other side.  His name’s Liverpool, and he’s a sailor.  So, when the boat’s built, he’s the boss of the outfit to navigate the lakes and rapids to Klondike.

“And Charles—this Mr. Crayton—what might his speciality be?” Tarwater asked.

“He’s the business man.  When it comes to business and organization he’s boss.”

“Hum,” Tarwater pondered.  “Very lucky to get such a bunch of specialities into one outfit.”

“More than luck,” Anson agreed.  “It was all accident, too.  Each of us started alone.  We met on the steamer coming up from San Francisco, and formed the party.—Well, I got to be goin’.  Charles is liable to get kicking because I ain’t packin’ my share’ just the same, you can’t expect a hundred-pound man to pack as much as a hundred-and-sixty-pounder.”

“Stick around and cook us something for dinner,” Charles, on his next load in and noting the effects of the old man’s handiness, told Tarwater.

And Tarwater cooked a dinner that was a dinner, washed the dishes, had real pork and beans for supper, and bread baked in a frying-pan that was so delectable that the three partners nearly foundered themselves on it.  Supper dishes washed, he cut shavings and kindling for a quick and certain breakfast fire, showed Anson a trick with foot-gear that was invaluable to any hiker, sang his “Like Argus of the Ancient Times,” and told them of the great emigration across the Plains in Forty-nine.

“My goodness, the first cheerful and hearty-like camp since we hit the beach,” Big Bill remarked as he knocked out his pipe and began pulling off his shoes for bed.

“Kind of made things easy, boys, eh?”  Tarwater queried genially.

All nodded.  “Well, then, I got a proposition, boys.  You can take it or leave it, but just listen kindly to it.  You’re in a hurry to get in before the freeze-up.  Half the time is wasted over the cooking by one of you that he might be puttin’ in packin’ outfit.  If I do the cookin’ for you, you all’ll get on that much faster.  Also, the cookin’ ’ll be better, and that’ll make you pack better.  And I can pack quite a bit myself in between times, quite a bit, yes, sir, quite a bit.”

Big Bill and Anson were just beginning to nod their heads in agreement, when Charles stopped them.

“What do you expect of us in return?” he demanded of the old man.

“Oh, I leave it up to the boys.”

“That ain’t business,” Charles reprimanded sharply.  “You made the proposition.  Now finish it.”

“Well, it’s this way—”

“You expect us to feed you all winter, eh?” Charles interrupted.

“No, siree, I don’t.  All I reckon is a passage to Klondike in your boat would be mighty square of you.”

“You haven’t an ounce of grub, old man.  You’ll starve to death when you get there.”

“I’ve been feedin’ some long time pretty successful,” Old Tarwater replied, a whimsical light in his eyes.  “I’m seventy, and ain’t starved to death never yet.”

“Will you sign a paper to the effect that you shift for yourself as soon as you get to Dawson?” the business one demanded.

“Oh, sure,” was the response.

Again Charles checked his two partners’ expressions of satisfaction with the arrangement.

“One other thing, old man.  We’re a party of four, and we all have a vote on questions like this.  Young Liverpool is ahead with the main outfit.  He’s got a say so, and he isn’t here to say it.”

“What kind of a party might he be?” Tarwater inquired.

“He’s a rough-neck sailor, and he’s got a quick, bad temper.”

“Some turbulent,” Anson contributed.

“And the way he can cuss is simply God-awful,” Big Bill testified.

“But he’s square,” Big Bill added.

Anson nodded heartily to this appraisal.

“Well, boys,” Tarwater summed up, “I set out for Californy and I got there.  And I’m going to get to Klondike.  Ain’t a thing can stop me, ain’t a thing.  I’m going to get three hundred thousand outa the ground, too.  Ain’t a thing can stop me, ain’t a thing, because I just naturally need the money.  I don’t mind a bad temper so long’s the boy is square.  I’ll take my chance, an’ I’ll work along with you till we catch up with him.  Then, if he says no to the proposition, I reckon I’ll lose.  But somehow I just can’t see ’m sayin’ no, because that’d mean too close up to freeze-up and too late for me to find another chance like this.  And, as I’m sure going to get to Klondike, it’s just plumb impossible for him to say no.”

Old John Tarwater became a striking figure on a trail unusually replete with striking figures.  With thousands of men, each back-tripping half a ton of outfit, retracing every mile of the trail twenty times, all came to know him and to hail him as “Father Christmas.”  And, as he worked, ever he raised his chant with his age-falsetto voice.  None of the three men he had joined could complain about his work.  True, his joints were stiff—he admitted to a trifle of rheumatism.  He moved slowly, and seemed to creak and crackle when he moved; but he kept on moving.  Last into the blankets at night, he was first out in the morning, so that the other three had hot coffee before their one before-breakfast pack.  And, between breakfast and dinner and between dinner and supper, he always managed to back-trip for several packs himself.  Sixty pounds was the limit of his burden, however.  He could manage seventy-five, but he could not keep it up.  Once, he tried ninety, but collapsed on the trail and was seriously shaky for a couple of days afterward.

Work!  On a trail where hard-working men learned for the first time what work was, no man worked harder in proportion to his strength than Old Tarwater.  Driven desperately on by the near-thrust of winter, and lured madly on by the dream of gold, they worked to their last ounce of strength and fell by the way.  Others, when failure made certain, blew out their brains.  Some went mad, and still others, under the irk of the man-destroying strain, broke partnerships and dissolved life-time friendships with fellows just as good as themselves and just as strained and mad.

Work!  Old Tarwater could shame them all, despite his creaking and crackling and the nasty hacking cough he had developed.  Early and late, on trail or in camp beside the trail he was ever in evidence, ever busy at something, ever responsive to the hail of “Father Christmas.”  Weary back-trippers would rest their packs on a log or rock alongside of where he rested his, and would say: “Sing us that song of yourn, dad, about Forty-Nine.”  And, when he had wheezingly complied, they would arise under their loads, remark that it was real heartening, and hit the forward trail again.

“If ever a man worked his passage and earned it,” Big Bill confided to his two partners, “that man’s our old Skeezicks.”

“You bet,” Anson confirmed.  “He’s a valuable addition to the party, and I, for one, ain’t at all disagreeable to the notion of making him a regular partner—”

“None of that!” Charles Crayton cut in.  “When we get to Dawson we’re quit of him—that’s the agreement.  We’d only have to bury him if we let him stay on with us.  Besides, there’s going to be a famine, and every ounce of grub’ll count.  Remember, we’re feeding him out of our own supply all the way in.  And if we run short in the pinch next year, you’ll know the reason.  Steamboats can’t get up grub to Dawson till the middle of June, and that’s nine months away.”

“Well, you put as much money and outfit in as the rest of us,” Big Bill conceded, “and you’ve a say according.”

“And I’m going to have my say,” Charles asserted with increasing irritability.  “And it’s lucky for you with your fool sentiments that you’ve got somebody to think ahead for you, else you’d all starve to death.  I tell you that famine’s coming.  I’ve been studying the situation.  Flour will be two dollars a pound, or ten, and no sellers.  You mark my words.”

Across the rubble-covered flats, up the dark canyon to Sheep Camp, past the over-hanging and ever-threatening glaciers to the Scales, and from the Scales up the steep pitches of ice-scoured rock where packers climbed with hands and feet, Old Tarwater camp-cooked and packed and sang.  He blew across Chilcoot Pass, above timberline, in the first swirl of autumn snow.  Those below, without firewood, on the bitter rim of Crater Lake, heard from the driving obscurity above them a weird voice chanting:

“Like Argus of the ancient times,We leave this modern Greece,Tum-tum, tum-tum, tum, tum, tum-tum,To shear the Golden Fleece.”

And out of the snow flurries they saw appear a tall, gaunt form, with whiskers of flying white that blended with the storm, bending under a sixty-pound pack of camp dunnage.

“Father Christmas!” was the hail.  And then: “Three rousing cheers for Father Christmas!”

Two miles beyond Crater Lake lay Happy Camp—so named because here was found the uppermost fringe of the timber line, where men might warm themselves by fire again.  Scarcely could it be called timber, for it was a dwarf rock-spruce that never raised its loftiest branches higher than a foot above the moss, and that twisted and grovelled like a pig-vegetable under the moss.  Here, on the trail leading into Happy Camp, in the first sunshine of half a dozen days, Old Tarwater rested his pack against a huge boulder and caught his breath.  Around this boulder the trail passed, laden men toiling slowly forward and men with empty pack-straps limping rapidly back for fresh loads.  Twice Old Tarwater essayed to rise and go on, and each time, warned by his shakiness, sank back to recover more strength.  From around the boulder he heard voices in greeting, recognized Charles Crayton’s voice, and realized that at last they had met up with Young Liverpool.  Quickly, Charles plunged into business, and Tarwater heard with great distinctness every word of Charles’ unflattering description of him and the proposition to give him passage to Dawson.

“A dam fool proposition,” was Liverpool’s judgment, when Charles had concluded.  “An old granddad of seventy!  If he’s on his last legs, why in hell did you hook up with him?  If there’s going to be a famine, and it looks like it, we need every ounce of grub for ourselves.  We only out-fitted for four, not five.”

“It’s all right,” Tarwater heard Charles assuring the other.  “Don’t get excited.  The old codger agreed to leave the final decision to you when we caught up with you.  All you’ve got to do is put your foot down and say no.”

“You mean it’s up to me to turn the old one down, after your encouraging him and taking advantage of his work clear from Dyea here?”

“It’s a hard trail, Liverpool, and only the men that are hard will get through,” Charles strove to palliate.

“And I’m to do the dirty work?” Liverpool complained, while Tarwater’s heart sank.

“That’s just about the size of it,” Charles said.  “You’ve got the deciding.”

Then old Tarwater’s heart uprose again as the air was rent by a cyclone of profanity, from the midst of which crackled sentences like:—“Dirty skunks! . . . See you in hell first! . . . My mind’s made up! . . . Hell’s fire and corruption! . . . The old codger goes down the Yukon with us, stack on that, my hearty! . . . Hard?  You don’t know what hard is unless I show you! . . . I’ll bust the whole outfit to hell and gone if any of you try to side-track him! . . . Just try to side-track him, that is all, and you’ll think the Day of Judgment and all God’s blastingness has hit the camp in one chunk!”

Such was the invigoratingness of Liverpool’s flow of speech that, quite without consciousness of effort, the old man arose easily under his load and strode on toward Happy Camp.

From Happy Camp to Long Lake, from Long Lake to Deep Lake, and from Deep Lake up over the enormous hog-back and down to Linderman, the man-killing race against winter kept on.  Men broke their hearts and backs and wept beside the trail in sheer exhaustion.  But winter never faltered.  The fall gales blew, and amid bitter soaking rains and ever-increasing snow flurries, Tarwater and the party to which he was attached piled the last of their outfit on the beach.

There was no rest.  Across the lake, a mile above a roaring torrent, they located a patch of spruce and built their saw-pit.  Here, by hand, with an inadequate whipsaw, they sawed the spruce-trunks into lumber.  They worked night and day.  Thrice, on the night-shift, underneath in the saw-pit, Old Tarwater fainted.  By day he cooked as well, and, in the betweenwhiles, helped Anson in the building of the boat beside the torrent as the green planks came down.

The days grew shorter.  The wind shifted into the north and blew unending gales.  In the mornings the weary men crawled from their blankets and in their socks thawed out their frozen shoes by the fire Tarwater always had burning for them.  Ever arose the increasing tale of famine on the Inside.  The last grub steamboats up from Bering Sea were stalled by low water at the beginning of the Yukon Flats hundreds of miles north of Dawson.  In fact, they lay at the old Hudson Bay Company’s post at Fort Yukon inside the Arctic Circle.  Flour in Dawson was up to two dollars a pound, but no one would sell.  Bonanza and Eldorado Kings, with money to burn, were leaving for the Outside because they could buy no grub.  Miners’ Committees were confiscating all grub and putting the population on strict rations.  A man who held out an ounce of grub was shot like a dog.  A score had been so executed already.

And, under a strain which had broken so many younger men, Old Tarwater began to break.  His cough had become terrible, and had not his exhausted comrades slept like the dead, he would have kept them awake nights.  Also, he began to take chills, so that he dressed up to go to bed.  When he had finished so dressing, not a rag of garment remained in his clothes bag.  All he possessed was on his back and swathed around his gaunt old form.

“Gee!” said Big Bill.  “If he puts all he’s got on now, when it ain’t lower than twenty above, what’ll he do later on when it goes down to fifty and sixty below?”

They lined the rough-made boat down the mountain torrent, nearly losing it a dozen times, and rowed across the south end of Lake Linderman in the thick of a fall blizzard.  Next morning they planned to load and start, squarely into the teeth of the north, on their perilous traverse of half a thousand miles of lakes and rapids and box canyons.  But before he went to bed that night, Young Liverpool was out over the camp.  He returned to find his whole party asleep.  Rousing Tarwater, he talked with him in low tones.

“Listen, dad,” he said.—“You’ve got a passage in our boat, and if ever a man earned a passage you have.  But you know yourself you’re pretty well along in years, and your health right now ain’t exciting.  If you go on with us you’ll croak surer’n hell.—Now wait till I finish, dad.  The price for a passage has jumped to five hundred dollars.  I’ve been throwing my feet and I’ve hustled a passenger.  He’s an official of the Alaska Commercial and just has to get in.  He’s bid up to six hundred to go with me in our boat.  Now the passage is yours.  You sell it to him, poke the six hundred into your jeans, and pull South for California while the goin’s good.  You can be in Dyea in two days, and in California in a week more.  What d’ye say?”

Tarwater coughed and shivered for a space, ere he could get freedom of breath for speech.

“Son,” he said, “I just want to tell you one thing.  I drove my four yoke of oxen across the Plains in Forty-nine and lost nary a one.  I drove them plumb to Californy, and I freighted with them afterward out of Sutter’s Fort to American Bar.  Now I’m going to Klondike.  Ain’t nothing can stop me, ain’t nothing at all.  I’m going to ride that boat, with you at the steering sweep, clean to Klondike, and I’m going to shake three hundred thousand out of the moss-roots.  That being so, it’s contrary to reason and common sense for me to sell out my passage.  But I thank you kindly, son, I thank you kindly.”

The young sailor shot out his hand impulsively and gripped the old man’s.

“By God, dad!” he cried.  “You’re sure going to go then.  You’re the real stuff.”  He looked with undisguised contempt across the sleepers to where Charles Crayton snored in his red beard.  “They don’t seem to make your kind any more, dad.”

Into the north they fought their way, although old-timers, coming out, shook their heads and prophesied they would be frozen in on the lakes.  That the freeze-up might come any day was patent, and delays of safety were no longer considered.  For this reason, Liverpool decided to shoot the rapid stream connecting Linderman to Lake Bennett with the fully loaded boat.  It was the custom to line the empty boats down and to portage the cargoes across.  Even then many empty boats had been wrecked.  But the time was past for such precaution.

“Climb out, dad,” Liverpool commanded as he prepared to swing from the bank and enter the rapids.

Old Tarwater shook his white head.

“I’m sticking to the outfit,” he declared.  “It’s the only way to get through.  You see, son, I’m going to Klondike.  If I stick by the boat, then the boat just naturally goes to Klondike, too.  If I get out, then most likely you’ll lose the boat.”

“Well, there’s no use in overloading,” Charles announced, springing abruptly out on the bank as the boat cast off.

“Next time you wait for my orders!” Liverpool shouted ashore as the current gripped the boat.  “And there won’t be any more walking around rapids and losing time waiting to pick you up!”

What took them ten minutes by river, took Charles half an hour by land, and while they waited for him at the head of Lake Bennett they passed the time of day with several dilapidated old-timers on their way out.  The famine news was graver than ever.  The North-west Mounted Police, stationed at the foot of Lake Marsh where the gold-rushers entered Canadian territory, were refusing to let a man past who did not carry with him seven hundred pounds of grub.  In Dawson City a thousand men, with dog-teams, were waiting the freeze-up to come out over the ice.  The trading companies could not fill their grub-contracts, and partners were cutting the cards to see which should go and which should stay and work the claims.

“That settles it,” Charles announced, when he learned of the action of the mounted police on the boundary.  “Old Man, you might as well start back now.”

“Climb aboard!”  Liverpool commanded.  “We’re going to Klondike, and old dad is going along.”

A shift of gale to the south gave them a fair wind down Lake Bennett, before which they ran under a huge sail made by Liverpool.  The heavy weight of outfit gave such ballast that he cracked on as a daring sailor should when moments counted.  A shift of four points into the south-west, coming just at the right time as they entered upon Caribou Crossing, drove them down that connecting link to lakes Tagish and Marsh.  In stormy sunset and twilight—they made the dangerous crossing of Great Windy Arm, wherein they beheld two other boat-loads of gold-rushers capsize and drown.

Charles was for beaching for the night, but Liverpool held on, steering down Tagish by the sound of the surf on the shoals and by the occasional shore-fires that advertised wrecked or timid argonauts.  At four in the morning, he aroused Charles.  Old Tarwater, shiveringly awake, heard Liverpool order Crayton aft beside him at the steering-sweep, and also heard the one-sided conversation.

“Just listen, friend Charles, and keep your own mouth shut,” Liverpool began.  “I want you to get one thing into your head and keep it there:old dad’s going by the police.Understand?He’s going by.  When they examine our outfit, old dad’s got a fifth share in it, savvee?  That’ll put us all ’way under what we ought to have, but we can bluff it through.  Now get this, and get it hard:there ain’t going to be any fall-down on this bluff—”

“If you think I’d give away on the old codger—” Charles began indignantly.

“You thought that,” Liverpool checked him, “because I never mentioned any such thing.  Now—get me and get me hard: I don’t care what you’ve been thinking.  It’s what you’re going to think.  We’ll make the police post some time this afternoon, and we’ve got to get ready to pull the bluff without a hitch, and a word to the wise is plenty.”

“If you think I’ve got it in my mind—” Charles began again.

“Look here,” Liverpool shut him off.  “I don’t know what’s in your mind.  I don’t want to know.  I want you to know what’s in my mind.  If there’s any slip-up, if old dad gets turned back by the police, I’m going to pick out the first quiet bit of landscape and take you ashore on it.  And then I’m going to beat you up to the Queen’s taste.  Get me, and get me hard.  It ain’t going to be any half-way beating, but a real, two-legged, two-fisted, he-man beating.  I don’t expect I’ll kill you, but I’ll come damn near to half-killing you.”

“But what can I do?” Charles almost whimpered.

“Just one thing,” was Liverpool’s final word.  “You just pray.  You pray so hard that old dad gets by the police that he does get by.  That’s all.  Go back to your blankets.”

Before they gained Lake Le Barge, the land was sheeted with snow that would not melt for half a year.  Nor could they lay their boat at will against the bank, for the rim-ice was already forming.  Inside the mouth of the river, just ere it entered Lake Le Barge, they found a hundred storm-bound boats of the argonauts.  Out of the north, across the full sweep of the great lake, blew an unending snow gale.  Three mornings they put out and fought it and the cresting seas it drove that turned to ice as they fell in-board.  While the others broke their hearts at the oars, Old Tarwater managed to keep up just sufficient circulation to survive by chopping ice and throwing it overboard.

Each day for three days, beaten to helplessness, they turned tail on the battle and ran back into the sheltering river.  By the fourth day, the hundred boats had increased to three hundred, and the two thousand argonauts on board knew that the great gale heralded the freeze-up of Le Barge.  Beyond, the rapid rivers would continue to run for days, but unless they got beyond, and immediately, they were doomed to be frozen in for six months to come.

“This day we go through,” Liverpool announced.  “We turn back for nothing.  And those of us that dies at the oars will live again and go on pulling.”

And they went through, winning half the length of the lake by nightfall and pulling on through all the night hours as the wind went down, falling asleep at the oars and being rapped awake by Liverpool, toiling on through an age-long nightmare while the stars came out and the surface of the lake turned to the unruffledness of a sheet of paper and froze skin-ice that tinkled like broken glass as their oar-blades shattered it.

As day broke clear and cold, they entered the river, with behind them a sea of ice.  Liverpool examined his aged passenger and found him helpless and almost gone.  When he rounded the boat to against the rim-ice to build a fire and warm up Tarwater inside and out, Charles protested against such loss of time.

“This ain’t business, so don’t you come horning in,” Liverpool informed him.  “I’m running the boat trip.  So you just climb out and chop firewood, and plenty of it.  I’ll take care of dad.  You, Anson, make a fire on the bank.  And you, Bill, set up the Yukon stove in the boat.  Old dad ain’t as young as the rest of us, and for the rest of this voyage he’s going to have a fire on board to sit by.”

All of which came to pass; and the boat, in the grip of the current, like a river steamer with smoke rising from the two joints of stove-pipe, grounded on shoals, hung up on split currents, and charged rapids and canyons, as it drove deeper into the Northland winter.  The Big and Little Salmon rivers were throwing mush-ice into the main river as they passed, and, below the riffles, anchor-ice arose from the river bottom and coated the surface with crystal scum.  Night and day the rim-ice grew, till, in quiet places, it extended out a hundred yards from shore.  And Old Tarwater, with all his clothes on, sat by the stove and kept the fire going.  Night and day, not daring to stop for fear of the imminent freeze-up, they dared to run, an increasing mushiness of ice running with them.

“What ho, old hearty?” Liverpool would call out at times.

“Cheer O,” Old Tarwater had learned to respond.

“What can I ever do for you, son, in payment?” Tarwater, stoking the fire, would sometimes ask Liverpool, beating now one released hand and now the other as he fought for circulation where he steered in the freezing stern-sheets.

“Just break out that regular song of yours, old Forty-Niner,” was the invariable reply.

And Tarwater would lift his voice in the cackling chant, as he lifted it at the end, when the boat swung in through driving cake-ice and moored to the Dawson City bank, and all waterfront Dawson pricked its ears to hear the triumphant pæan:

Like Argus of the ancient times,We leave this modern Greece,Tum-tum, tum-tum, tum, tum, tum-tum,To shear the Golden Fleece,

Charles did it, but he did it so discreetly that none of his party, least of all the sailor, ever learned of it.  He saw two great open barges being filled up with men, and, on inquiry, learned that these were grubless ones being rounded up and sent down the Yukon by the Committee of Safety.  The barges were to be towed by the last little steamboat in Dawson, and the hope was that Fort Yukon, where lay the stranded steamboats, would be gained before the river froze.  At any rate, no matter what happened to them, Dawson would be relieved of their grub-consuming presence.  So to the Committee of Safety Charles went, privily to drop a flea in its ear concerning Tarwater’s grubless, moneyless, and aged condition.  Tarwater was one of the last gathered in, and when Young Liverpool returned to the boat, from the bank he saw the barges in a run of cake-ice, disappearing around the bend below Moose-hide Mountain.

Running in cake-ice all the way, and several times escaping jams in the Yukon Flats, the barges made their hundreds of miles of progress farther into the north and froze up cheek by jowl with the grub-fleet.  Here, inside the Arctic Circle, Old Tarwater settled down to pass the long winter.  Several hours’ work a day, chopping firewood for the steamboat companies, sufficed to keep him in food.  For the rest of the time there was nothing to do but hibernate in his log cabin.

Warmth, rest, and plenty to eat, cured his hacking cough and put him in as good physical condition as was possible for his advanced years.  But, even before Christmas, the lack of fresh vegetables caused scurvy to break out, and disappointed adventurer after disappointed adventurer took to his bunk in abject surrender to this culminating misfortune.  Not so Tarwater.  Even before the first symptoms appeared on him, he was putting into practice his one prescription, namely, exercise.  From the junk of the old trading post he resurrected a number of rusty traps, and from one of the steamboat captains he borrowed a rifle.

Thus equipped, he ceased from wood-chopping, and began to make more than a mere living.  Nor was he downhearted when the scurvy broke out on his own body.  Ever he ran his trap-lines and sang his ancient chant.  Nor could the pessimist shake his surety of the three hundred thousand of Alaskan gold he as going to shake out of the moss-roots.

“But this ain’t gold-country,” they told him.

“Gold is where you find it, son, as I should know who was mining before you was born, ’way back in Forty-Nine,” was his reply.  “What was Bonanza Creek but a moose-pasture?  No miner’d look at it; yet they washed five-hundred-dollar pans and took out fifty million dollars.  Eldorado was just as bad.  For all you know, right under this here cabin, or right over the next hill, is millions just waiting for a lucky one like me to come and shake it out.”


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