Old Koskoosh listened greedily.
Though his sight had long since faded, his hearing
was still acute, and the slightest sound penetrated
to the glimmering intelligence which yet abode behind
the withered forehead, but which no longer gazed forth
upon the things of the world. Ah! that was Sit-cum-to-ha,
shrilly anathematizing the dogs as she cuffed and
beat them into the harnesses. Sit-cum-to-ha was
his daughter’s daughter, but she was too busy
to waste a thought upon her broken grandfather, sitting
alone there in the snow, forlorn and helpless.
Camp must be broken. The long trail waited while
the short day refused to linger. Life called
her, and the duties of life, not death. And he
was very close to death now.
The thought made the old man panicky
for the moment, and he stretched forth a palsied hand
which wandered tremblingly over the small heap of
dry wood beside him. Reassured that it was indeed
there, his hand returned to the shelter of his mangy
furs, and he again fell to listening. The sulky
crackling of half-frozen hides told him that the chief’s
moose-skin lodge had been struck, and even then was
being rammed and jammed into portable compass.
The chief was his son, stalwart and strong, head man
of the tribesmen, and a mighty hunter. As the
women toiled with the camp luggage, his voice rose,
chiding them for their slowness. Old Koskoosh
strained his ears. It was the last time he would
hear that voice. There went Geehow’s lodge!
And Tusken’s! Seven, eight, nine; only
the shaman’s could be still standing. There!
They were at work upon it now. He could hear the
shaman grunt as he piled it on the sled. A child
whimpered, and a woman soothed it with soft, crooning
gutturals. Little Koo-tee, the old man thought,
a fretful child, and not overstrong. It would
die soon, perhaps, and they would burn a hole through
the frozen tundra and pile rocks above to keep the
wolverines away. Well, what did it matter?
A few years at best, and as many an empty belly as
a full one. And in the end, Death waited, ever-hungry
and hungriest of them all.
What was that? Oh, the men lashing
the sleds and drawing tight the thongs. He listened,
who would listen no more. The whip-lashes snarled
and bit among the dogs. Hear them whine!
How they hated the work and the trail! They were
off! Sled after sled churned slowly away into
the silence. They were gone. They had passed
out of his life, and he faced the last bitter hour
alone. No. The snow crunched beneath a moccasin;
a man stood beside him; upon his head a hand rested
gently. His son was good to do this thing.
He remembered other old men whose sons had not waited
after the tribe. But his son had. He wandered
away into the past, till the young man’s voice
brought him back.
“Is it well with you?” he asked.
And the old man answered, “It is well.”
“There be wood beside you,”
the younger man continued, “and the fire burns
bright. The morning is gray, and the cold has
broken. It will snow presently. Even now
is it snowing.”
“Ay, even now is it snowing.”
“The tribesmen hurry. Their
bales are heavy, and their bellies flat with lack
of feasting. The trail is long and they travel
fast. I go now. It is well?”
“It is well. I am as a
last year’s leaf, clinging lightly to the stem.
The first breath that blows, and I fall. My voice
is become like an old woman’s. My eyes
no longer show me the way of my feet, and my feet
are heavy, and I am tired. It is well.”
He bowed his head in content till
the last noise of the complaining snow had died away,
and he knew his son was beyond recall. Then his
hand crept out in haste to the wood. It alone
stood between him and the eternity that yawned in
upon him. At last the measure of his life was
a handful of fagots. One by one they would
go to feed the fire, and just so, step by step, death
would creep upon him. When the last stick had
surrendered up its heat, the frost would begin to gather
strength. First his feet would yield, then his
hands; and the numbness would travel, slowly, from
the extremities to the body. His head would fall
forward upon his knees, and he would rest. It
was easy. All men must die.
He did not complain. It was the
way of life, and it was just. He had been born
close to the earth, close to the earth had he lived,
and the law thereof was not new to him. It was
the law of all flesh. Nature was not kindly to
the flesh. She had no concern for that concrete
thing called the individual. Her interest lay
in the species, the race. This was the deepest
abstraction old Koskoosh’s barbaric mind was
capable of, but he grasped it firmly. He saw it
exemplified in all life. The rise of the sap,
the bursting greenness of the willow bud, the fall
of the yellow leaf in this alone was told
the whole history. But one task did Nature set
the individual. Did he not perform it, he died.
Did he perform it, it was all the same, he died.
Nature did not care; there were plenty who were obedient,
and it was only the obedience in this matter, not
the obedient, which lived and lived always. The
tribe of Koskoosh was very old. The old men he
had known when a boy, had known old men before them.
Therefore it was true that the tribe lived, that it
stood for the obedience of all its members, way down
into the forgotten past, whose very resting-places
were unremembered. They did not count; they were
episodes. They had passed away like clouds from
a summer sky. He also was an episode, and would
pass away. Nature did not care. To life she
set one task, gave one law. To perpetuate was
the task of life, its law was death. A maiden
was a good creature to look upon, full-breasted and
strong, with spring to her step and light in her eyes.
But her task was yet before her. The light in
her eyes brightened, her step quickened, she was now
bold with the young men, now timid, and she gave them
of her own unrest. And ever she grew fairer and
yet fairer to look upon, till some hunter, able no
longer to withhold himself, took her to his lodge
to cook and toil for him and to become the mother of
his children. And with the coming of her offspring
her looks left her. Her limbs dragged and shuffled,
her eyes dimmed and bleared, and only the little children
found joy against the withered cheek of the old squaw
by the fire. Her task was done. But a little
while, on the first pinch of famine or the first long
trail, and she would be left, even as he had been
left, in the snow, with a little pile of wood.
Such was the law.
He placed a stick carefully upon the
fire and resumed his meditations. It was the
same everywhere, with all things. The mosquitoes
vanished with the first frost. The little tree-squirrel
crawled away to die. When age settled upon the
rabbit it became slow and heavy, and could no longer
outfoot its enemies. Even the big bald-face grew
clumsy and blind and quarrelsome, in the end to be
dragged down by a handful of yelping huskies.
He remembered how he had abandoned his own father
on an upper reach of the Klondike one winter, the winter
before the missionary came with his talk-books and
his box of medicines. Many a time had Koskoosh
smacked his lips over the recollection of that box,
though now his mouth refused to moisten. The “painkiller”
had been especially good. But the missionary
was a bother after all, for he brought no meat into
the camp, and he ate heartily, and the hunters grumbled.
But he chilled his lungs on the divide by the Mayo,
and the dogs afterwards nosed the stones away and
fought over his bones.
Koskoosh placed another stick on the
fire and harked back deeper into the past. There
was the time of the Great Famine, when the old men
crouched empty-bellied to the fire, and let fall from
their lips dim traditions of the ancient day when
the Yukon ran wide open for three winters, and then
lay frozen for three summers. He had lost his
mother in that famine. In the summer the salmon
run had failed, and the tribe looked forward to the
winter and the coming of the caribou. Then the
winter came, but with it there were no caribou.
Never had the like been known, not even in the lives
of the old men. But the caribou did not come,
and it was the seventh year, and the rabbits had not
replenished, and the dogs were naught but bundles of
bones. And through the long darkness the children
wailed and died, and the women, and the old men; and
not one in ten of the tribe lived to meet the sun
when it came back in the spring. That was
a famine!
But he had seen times of plenty, too,
when the meat spoiled on their hands, and the dogs
were fat and worthless with overeating times
when they let the game go unkilled, and the women
were fertile, and the lodges were cluttered with sprawling
men-children and women-children. Then it was
the men became high-stomached, and revived ancient
quarrels, and crossed the divides to the south to kill
the Pellys, and to the west that they might sit by
the dead fires of the Tananas. He remembered,
when a boy, during a time of plenty, when he saw a
moose pulled down by the wolves. Zing-ha lay
with him in the snow and watched Zing-ha,
who later became the craftiest of hunters, and who,
in the end, fell through an air-hole on the Yukon.
They found him, a month afterward, just as he had
crawled halfway out and frozen stiff to the ice.
But the moose. Zing-ha and he
had gone out that day to play at hunting after the
manner of their fathers. On the bed of the creek
they struck the fresh track of a moose, and with it
the tracks of many wolves. “An old one,”
Zing-ha, who was quicker at reading the sign, said “an
old one who cannot keep up with the herd. The
wolves have cut him out from his brothers, and they
will never leave him.” And it was so.
It was their way. By day and by night, never
resting, snarling on his heels, snapping at his nose,
they would stay by him to the end. How Zing-ha
and he felt the blood-lust quicken! The finish
would be a sight to see!
Eager-footed, they took the trail,
and even he, Koskoosh, slow of sight and an unversed
tracker, could have followed it blind, it was so wide.
Hot were they on the heels of the chase, reading the
grim tragedy, fresh-written, at every step. Now
they came to where the moose had made a stand.
Thrice the length of a grown man’s body, in
every direction, had the snow been stamped about and
uptossed. In the midst were the deep impressions
of the splay-hoofed game, and all about, everywhere,
were the lighter footmarks of the wolves. Some,
while their brothers harried the kill, had lain to
one side and rested. The full-stretched impress
of their bodies in the snow was as perfect as though
made the moment before. One wolf had been caught
in a wild lunge of the maddened victim and trampled
to death. A few bones, well picked, bore witness.
Again, they ceased the uplift of their
snowshoes at a second stand. Here the great animal
had fought desperately. Twice had he been dragged
down, as the snow attested, and twice had he shaken
his assailants clear and gained footing once more.
He had done his task long since, but none the less
was life dear to him. Zing-ha said it was a strange
thing, a moose once down to get free again; but this
one certainly had. The shaman would see signs
and wonders in this when they told him.
And yet again, they come to where
the moose had made to mount the bank and gain the
timber. But his foes had laid on from behind,
till he reared and fell back upon them, crushing two
deep into the snow. It was plain the kill was
at hand, for their brothers had left them untouched.
Two more stands were hurried past, brief in time-length
and very close together. The trail was red now,
and the clean stride of the great beast had grown
short and slovenly. Then they heard the first
sounds of the battle not the full-throated
chorus of the chase, but the short, snappy bark which
spoke of close quarters and teeth to flesh. Crawling
up the wind, Zing-ha bellied it through the snow, and
with him crept he, Koskoosh, who was to be chief of
the tribesmen in the years to come. Together
they shoved aside the under branches of a young spruce
and peered forth. It was the end they saw.
The picture, like all of youth’s
impressions, was still strong with him, and his dim
eyes watched the end played out as vividly as in that
far-off time. Koskoosh marvelled at this, for
in the days which followed, when he was a leader of
men and a head of councillors, he had done great deeds
and made his name a curse in the mouths of the Pellys,
to say naught of the strange white man he had killed,
knife to knife, in open fight.
For long he pondered on the days of
his youth, till the fire died down and the frost bit
deeper. He replenished it with two sticks this
time, and gauged his grip on life by what remained.
If Sit-cum-to-ha had only remembered her grandfather,
and gathered a larger armful, his hours would have
been longer. It would have been easy. But
she was ever a careless child, and honored not her
ancestors from the time the Beaver, son of the son
of Zing-ha, first cast eyes upon her. Well, what
mattered it? Had he not done likewise in his own
quick youth? For a while he listened to the silence.
Perhaps the heart of his son might soften, and he
would come back with the dogs to take his old father
on with the tribe to where the caribou ran thick and
the fat hung heavy upon them.
He strained his ears, his restless
brain for the moment stilled. Not a stir, nothing.
He alone took breath in the midst of the great silence.
It was very lonely. Hark! What was that?
A chill passed over his body. The familiar, long-drawn
howl broke the void, and it was close at hand.
Then on his darkened eyes was projected the vision
of the moose the old bull moose the
torn flanks and bloody sides, the riddled mane, and
the great branching horns, down low and tossing to
the last. He saw the flashing forms of gray, the
gleaming eyes, the lolling tongues, the slavered fangs.
And he saw the inexorable circle close in till it
became a dark point in the midst of the stamped snow.
A cold muzzle thrust against his cheek,
and at its touch his soul leaped back to the present.
His hand shot into the fire and dragged out a burning
faggot. Overcome for the nonce by his hereditary
fear of man, the brute retreated, raising a prolonged
call to his brothers; and greedily they answered,
till a ring of crouching, jaw-slobbered gray was stretched
round about. The old man listened to the drawing
in of this circle. He waved his brand wildly,
and sniffs turned to snarls; but the panting brutes
refused to scatter. Now one wormed his chest
forward, dragging his haunches after, now a second,
now a third; but never a one drew back. Why should
he cling to life? he asked, and dropped the blazing
stick into the snow. It sizzled and went out.
The circle grunted uneasily, but held its own.
Again he saw the last stand of the old bull moose,
and Koskoosh dropped his head wearily upon his knees.
What did it matter after all? Was it not the law
of life?