Lon McFane was a bit grumpy, what
of losing his tobacco pouch, or else he might have
told me, before we got to it, something about the cabin
at Surprise Lake. All day, turn and turn about,
we had spelled each other at going to the fore and
breaking trail for the dogs. It was heavy snowshoe
work, and did not tend to make a man voluble, yet Lon
McFane might have found breath enough at noon, when
we stopped to boil coffee, with which to tell me.
But he didn’t. Surprise Lake? it was Surprise
Cabin to me. I had never heard of it before.
I confess I was a bit tired. I had been looking
for Lon to stop and make camp any time for an hour;
but I had too much pride to suggest making camp or
to ask him his intentions; and yet he was my man,
lured at a handsome wage to mush my dogs for me and
to obey my commands. I guess I was a bit grumpy
myself. He said nothing, and I was resolved to
ask nothing, even if we tramped on all night.
We came upon the cabin abruptly.
For a week of trail we had met no one, and, in my
mind, there had been little likelihood of meeting any
one for a week to come. And yet there it was,
right before my eyes, a cabin, with a dim light in
the window and smoke curling up from the chimney.
“Why didn’t you tell me ”
I began, but was interrupted by Lon, who muttered
“Surprise Lake it
lies up a small feeder half a mile on. It’s
only a pond.”
“Yes, but the cabin who lives in
it?”
“A woman,” was the answer,
and the next moment Lon had rapped on the door, and
a woman’s voice bade him enter.
“Have you seen Dave recently?” she asked.
“Nope,” Lon answered carelessly.
“I’ve been in the other direction, down
Circle City way. Dave’s up Dawson way,
ain’t he?”
The woman nodded, and Lon fell to
unharnessing the dogs, while I unlashed the sled and
carried the camp outfit into the cabin. The cabin
was a large, one-room affair, and the woman was evidently
alone in it. She pointed to the stove, where
water was already boiling, and Lon set about the preparation
of supper, while I opened the fish-bag and fed the
dogs. I looked for Lon to introduce us, and was
vexed that he did not, for they were evidently old
friends.
“You are Lon McFane, aren’t
you?” I heard her ask him. “Why,
I remember you now. The last time I saw you
it was on a steamboat, wasn’t it? I remember
. . . "
Her speech seemed suddenly to be frozen
by the spectacle of dread which, I knew, from the
tenor I saw mounting in her eyes, must be on her inner
vision. To my astonishment, Lon was affected
by her words and manner. His face showed desperate,
for all his voice sounded hearty and genial, as he
said
“The last time we met was at
Dawson, Queen’s Jubilee, or Birthday, or something don’t
you remember? the canoe races in the river,
and the obstacle races down the main street?”
The terror faded out of her eyes and
her whole body relaxed. “Oh, yes, I do
remember,” she said. “And you won
one of the canoe races.”
“How’s Dave been makin’
it lately? Strikin’ it as rich as ever,
I suppose?” Lon asked, with apparent irrelevance.
She smiled and nodded, and then, noticing
that I had unlashed the bed roll, she indicated the
end of the cabin where I might spread it. Her
own bunk, I noticed, was made up at the opposite end.
“I thought it was Dave coming
when I heard your dogs,” she said.
After that she said nothing, contenting
herself with watching Lon’s cooking operations,
and listening the while as for the sound of dogs along
the trail. I lay back on the blankets and smoked
and watched. Here was mystery; I could make
that much out, but no more could I make out.
Why in the deuce hadn’t Lon given me the tip
before we arrived? I looked at her face, unnoticed
by her, and the longer I looked the harder it was
to take my eyes away. It was a wonderfully beautiful
face, unearthly, I may say, with a light in it or
an expression or something “that was never on
land or sea.” Fear and terror had completely
vanished, and it was a placidly beautiful face if
by “placid” one can characterize that
intangible and occult something that I cannot say was
a radiance or a light any more than I can say it was
an expression.
Abruptly, as if for the first time,
she became aware of my presence.
“Have you seen Dave recently?”
she asked me. It was on the tip of my tongue
to say “Dave who?” when Lon coughed in
the smoke that arose from the sizzling bacon.
The bacon might have caused that cough, but I took
it as a hint and left my question unasked. “No,
I haven’t,” I answered. “I’m
new in this part of the country ”
“But you don’t mean to
say,” she interrupted, “that you’ve
never heard of Dave of Big Dave Walsh?”
“You see,” I apologised,
“I’m new in the country. I’ve
put in most of my time in the Lower Country, down
Nome way.”
“Tell him about Dave,” she said to Lon.
Lon seemed put out, but he began in
that hearty, genial manner that I had noticed before.
It seemed a shade too hearty and genial, and it irritated
me.
“Oh, Dave is a fine man,”
he said. “He’s a man, every inch
of him, and he stands six feet four in his socks.
His word is as good as his bond. The man lies
who ever says Dave told a lie, and that man will have
to fight with me, too, as well if there’s
anything left of him when Dave gets done with him.
For Dave is a fighter. Oh, yes, he’s a
scrapper from way back. He got a grizzly with
a ’38 popgun. He got clawed some, but
he knew what he was doin’. He went into
the cave on purpose to get that grizzly. ‘Fraid
of nothing. Free an’ easy with his money,
or his last shirt an’ match when out of money.
Why, he drained Surprise Lake here in three weeks
an’ took out ninety thousand, didn’t he?”
She flushed and nodded her head proudly. Through
his recital she had followed every word with keenest
interest. “An’ I must say,”
Lon went on, “that I was disappointed sore on
not meeting Dave here to-night.”
Lon served supper at one end of the
table of whip-sawed spruce, and we fell to eating.
A howling of the dogs took the woman to the door.
She opened it an inch and listened.
“Where is Dave Walsh?” I asked, in an
undertone.
“Dead,” Lon answered. “In
hell, maybe. I don’t know. Shut up.”
“But you just said that you
expected to meet him here to-night,” I challenged.
“Oh, shut up, can’t you,”
was Lon’s reply, in the same cautious undertone.
The woman had closed the door and
was returning, and I sat and meditated upon the fact
that this man who told me to shut up received from
me a salary of two hundred and fifty dollars a month
and his board.
Lon washed the dishes, while I smoked
and watched the woman. She seemed more beautiful
than ever strangely and weirdly beautiful,
it is true. After looking at her steadfastly
for five minutes, I was compelled to come back to
the real world and to glance at Lon McFane. This
enabled me to know, without discussion, that the woman,
too, was real. At first I had taken her for
the wife of Dave Walsh; but if Dave Walsh were dead,
as Lon had said, then she could be only his widow.
It was early to bed, for we faced
a long day on the morrow; and as Lon crawled in beside
me under the blankets, I ventured a question.
“That woman’s crazy, isn’t she?”
“Crazy as a loon,” he answered.
And before I could formulate my next
question, Lon McFane, I swear, was off to sleep.
He always went to sleep that way just crawled
into the blankets, closed his eyes, and was off, a
demure little heavy breathing rising on the air.
Lon never snored.
And in the morning it was quick breakfast,
feed the dogs, load the sled, and hit the trail.
We said good-bye as we pulled out, and the woman
stood in the doorway and watched us off. I carried
the vision of her unearthly beauty away with me, just
under my eyelids, and all I had to do, any time, was
to close them and see her again. The way was
unbroken, Surprise Lake being far off the travelled
trails, and Lon and I took turn about at beating down
the feathery snow with our big, webbed shoes so that
the dogs could travel. “But you said you
expected to meet Dave Walsh at the cabin,” trembled
on the tip of my tongue a score of times. I
did not utter it. I could wait until we knocked
off in the middle of the day. And when the middle
of the day came, we went right on, for, as Lon explained,
there was a camp of moose hunters at the forks of the
Teelee, and we could make there by dark. But
we didn’t make there by dark, for Bright, the
lead-dog, broke his shoulder-blade, and we lost an
hour over him before we shot him. Then, crossing
a timber jam on the frozen bed of the Teelee, the
sled suffered a wrenching capsize, and it was a case
of make camp and repair the runner. I cooked
supper and fed the dogs while Lon made the repairs,
and together we got in the night’s supply of
ice and firewood. Then we sat on our blankets,
our moccasins steaming on upended sticks before the
fire, and had our evening smoke.
“You didn’t know her?”
Lon queried suddenly. I shook my head.
“You noticed the colour of her
hair and eyes and her complexion, well, that’s
where she got her name she was like the
first warm glow of a golden sunrise. She was
called Flush of Gold. Ever heard of her?”
Somewhere I had a confused and misty
remembrance of having heard the name, yet it meant
nothing to me. “Flush of Gold,” I
repeated; “sounds like the name of a dance-house
girl.” Lon shook his head. “No,
she was a good woman, at least in that sense, though
she sinned greatly just the same.”
“But why do you speak always
of her in the past tense, as though she were dead?”
“Because of the darkness on
her soul that is the same as the darkness of death.
The Flush of Gold that I knew, that Dawson knew, and
that Forty Mile knew before that, is dead. That
dumb, lunatic creature we saw last night was not Flush
of Gold.”
“And Dave?” I queried.
“He built that cabin,”
Lon answered, “He built it for her . . . and
for himself. He is dead. She is waiting
for him there. She half believes he is not dead.
But who can know the whim of a crazed mind?
Maybe she wholly believes he is not dead. At
any rate, she waits for him there in the cabin he
built. Who would rouse the dead? Then who
would rouse the living that are dead? Not I,
and that is why I let on to expect to meet Dave Walsh
there last night. I’ll bet a stack that
I’d a been more surprised than she if I had
met him there last night.”
“I do not understand,”
I said. “Begin at the beginning, as a white
man should, and tell me the whole tale.”
And Lon began. “Victor
Chauvet was an old Frenchman born in the
south of France. He came to California in the
days of gold. He was a pioneer. He found
no gold, but, instead, became a maker of bottled sunshine in
short, a grape-grower and wine-maker. Also, he
followed gold excitements. That is what brought
him to Alaska in the early days, and over the Chilcoot
and down the Yukon long before the Carmack strike.
The old town site of Ten Mile was Chauvet’s.
He carried the first mail into Arctic City.
He staked those coal-mines on the Porcupine a dozen
years ago. He grubstaked Loftus into the Nippennuck
Country. Now it happened that Victor Chauvet
was a good Catholic, loving two things in this world,
wine and woman. Wine of all kinds he loved, but
of woman, only one, and she was the mother of Marie
Chauvet.”
Here I groaned aloud, having meditated
beyond self-control over the fact that I paid this
man two hundred and fifty dollars a month.
“What’s the matter now?” he demanded.
“Matter?” I complained.
“I thought you were telling the story of Flush
of Gold. I don’t want a biography of your
old French wine-bibber.”
Lon calmly lighted his pipe, took
one good puff, then put the pipe aside. “And
you asked me to begin at the beginning,” he said.
“Yes,” said I; “the beginning.”
“And the beginning of Flush
of Gold is the old French wine-bibber, for he was
the father of Marie Chauvet, and Marie Chauvet was
the Flush of Gold. What more do you want?
Victor Chauvet never had much luck to speak of.
He managed to live, and to get along, and to take good
care of Marie, who resembled the one woman he had
loved. He took very good care of her. Flush
of Gold was the pet name he gave her. Flush of
Gold Creek was named after her Flush of
Gold town site, too. The old man was great on
town sites, only he never landed them.
“Now, honestly,” Lon said,
with one of his lightning changes, “you’ve
seen her, what do you think of her of her
looks, I mean? How does she strike your beauty
sense?”
“She is remarkably beautiful,”
I said. “I never saw anything like her
in my life. In spite of the fact, last night,
that I guessed she was mad, I could not keep my eyes
off of her. It wasn’t curiosity.
It was wonder, sheer wonder, she was so strangely
beautiful.”
“She was more strangely beautiful
before the darkness fell upon her,” Lon said
softly. “She was truly the Flush of Cold.
She turned all men’s hearts . . . and heads.
She recalls, with an effort, that I once won a canoe
race at Dawson I, who once loved her, and
was told by her of her love for me. It was her
beauty that made all men love her. She’d
‘a’ got the apple from Paris, on application,
and there wouldn’t have been any Trojan War,
and to top it off she’d have thrown Paris down.
And now she lives in darkness, and she who was always
fickle, for the first time is constant and
constant to a shade, to a dead man she does not realize
is dead.
“And this is the way it was.
You remember what I said last night of Dave Walsh Big
Dave Walsh? He was all that I said, and more,
many times more. He came into this country in
the late eighties that’s a pioneer
for you. He was twenty years old then.
He was a young bull. When he was twenty-five
he could lift clear of the ground thirteen fifty-pound
sacks of flour. At first, each fall of the year,
famine drove him out. It was a lone land in those
days. No river steamboats, no grub, nothing
but salmon bellies and rabbit tracks. But after
famine chased him out three years, he said he’d
had enough of being chased; and the next year he stayed.
He lived on straight meat when he was lucky enough
to get it; he ate eleven dogs that winter; but he
stayed. And the next winter he stayed, and the
next. He never did leave the country again.
He was a bull, a great bull. He could kill
the strongest man in the country with hard work.
He could outpack a Chilcat Indian, he could outpaddle
a Stick, and he could travel all day with wet feet
when the thermometer registered fifty below zero,
and that’s going some, I tell you, for vitality.
You’d freeze your feet at twenty-five below
if you wet them and tried to keep on.
“Dave Walsh was a bull for strength.
And yet he was soft and easy-natured. Anybody
could do him, the latest short-horn in camp could
lie his last dollar out of him. ‘But it
doesn’t worry me,’ he had a way of laughing
off his softness; ‘it doesn’t keep me awake
nights.’ Now don’t get the idea that
he had no backbone. You remember about the bear
he went after with the popgun. When it came to
fighting Dave was the blamedest ever. He was
the limit, if by that I may describe his unlimitedness
when he got into action, he was easy and kind with
the weak, but the strong had to give trail when he
went by. And he was a man that men liked, which
is the finest word of all, a man’s man.
“Dave never took part in the
big stampede to Dawson when Carmack made the Bonanza
strike. You see, Dave was just then over on Mammon
Creek strikin’ it himself. He discovered
Mammon Creek. Cleaned eighty-four thousand up
that winter, and opened up the claim so that it promised
a couple of hundred thousand for the next winter.
Then, summer bein’ on and the ground sloshy,
he took a trip up the Yukon to Dawson to see what
Carmack’s strike looked like. And there
he saw Flush of Gold. I remember the night.
I shall always remember. It was something sudden,
and it makes one shiver to think of a strong man with
all the strength withered out of him by one glance
from the soft eyes of a weak, blond, female creature
like Flush of Gold. It was at her dad’s
cabin, old Victor Chauvet’s. Some friend
had brought Dave along to talk over town sites on
Mammon Creek. But little talking did he do, and
what he did was mostly gibberish. I tell you
the sight of Flush of Gold had sent Dave clean daffy.
Old Victor Chauvet insisted after Dave left that he
had been drunk. And so he had. He was
drunk, but Flush of Gold was the strong drink that
made him so.
“That settled it, that first
glimpse he caught of her. He did not start back
down the Yukon in a week, as he had intended.
He lingered on a month, two months, all summer.
And we who had suffered understood, and wondered
what the outcome would be. Undoubtedly, in our
minds, it seemed that Flush of Gold had met her master.
And why not? There was romance sprinkled all
over Dave Walsh. He was a Mammon King, he had
made the Mammon Creek strike; he was an old sour dough,
one of the oldest pioneers in the land men
turned to look at him when he went by, and said to
one another in awed undertones, ‘There goes
Dave Walsh.’ And why not? He stood
six feet four; he had yellow hair himself that curled
on his neck; and he was a bull a yellow-maned
bull just turned thirty-one.
“And Flush of Gold loved him,
and, having danced him through a whole summer’s
courtship, at the end their engagement was made known.
The fall of the year was at hand, Dave had to be
back for the winter’s work on Mammon Creek,
and Flush of Gold refused to be married right away.
Dave put Dusky Burns in charge of the Mammon Creek
claim, and himself lingered on in Dawson. Little
use. She wanted her freedom a while longer; she
must have it, and she would not marry until next year.
And so, on the first ice, Dave Walsh went alone down
the Yukon behind his dogs, with the understanding
that the marriage would take place when he arrived
on the first steamboat of the next year.
“Now Dave was as true as the
Pole Star, and she was as false as a magnetic needle
in a cargo of loadstone. Dave was as steady and
solid as she was fickle and fly-away, and in some
way Dave, who never doubted anybody, doubted her.
It was the jealousy of his love, perhaps, and maybe
it was the message ticked off from her soul to his;
but at any rate Dave was worried by fear of her inconstancy.
He was afraid to trust her till the next year, he
had so to trust her, and he was pretty well beside
himself. Some of it I got from old Victor Chauvet
afterwards, and from all that I have pieced together
I conclude that there was something of a scene before
Dave pulled north with his dogs. He stood up
before the old Frenchman, with Flush of Gold beside
him, and announced that they were plighted to each
other. He was very dramatic, with fire in his
eyes, old Victor said. He talked something about
‘until death do us part’; and old Victor
especially remembered that at one place Dave took her
by the shoulder with his great paw and almost shook
her as he said: ’Even unto death are you
mine, and I would rise from the grave to claim you.’
Old Victor distinctly remembered those words ’Even
unto death are you mine, and I would rise from the
grave to claim you.’ And he told me afterwards
that Flush of Gold was pretty badly frightened, and
that he afterwards took Dave to one side privately
and told him that that wasn’t the way to hold
Flush of Gold that he must humour her and
gentle her if he wanted to keep her.
“There is no discussion in my
mind but that Flush of Gold was frightened. She
was a savage herself in her treatment of men, while
men had always treated her as a soft and tender and
too utterly-utter something that must not be hurt.
She didn’t know what harshness was . . . until
Dave Walsh, standing his six feet four, a big bull,
gripped her and pawed her and assured her that she
was his until death, and then some. And besides,
in Dawson, that winter, was a music-player one
of those macaroni-eating, greasy-tenor-Eye-talian-dago
propositions and Flush of Gold lost her
heart to him. Maybe it was only fascination I
don’t know. Sometimes it seems to me that
she really did love Dave Walsh. Perhaps it was
because he had frightened her with that even-unto-death,
rise-from-the-grave stunt of his that she in the
end inclined to the dago music-player. But
it is all guesswork, and the facts are, sufficient.
He wasn’t a dago; he was a Russian count this
was straight; and he wasn’t a professional piano-player
or anything of the sort. He played the violin
and the piano, and he sang sang well but
it was for his own pleasure and for the pleasure of
those he sang for. He had money, too and
right here let me say that Flush of Gold never cared
a rap for money. She was fickle, but she was
never sordid.
“But to be getting along.
She was plighted to Dave, and Dave was coming up
on the first steamboat to get her that was
the summer of ’98, and the first steamboat was
to be expected the middle of June. And Flush
of Gold was afraid to throw Dave down and face him
afterwards. It was all planned suddenly.
The Russian music-player, the Count, was her obedient
slave. She planned it, I know. I learned
as much from old Victor afterwards. The Count
took his orders from her, and caught that first steamboat
down. It was the Golden Rocket.
And so did Flush of Gold catch it. And so did
I. I was going to Circle City, and I was flabbergasted
when I found Flush of Gold on board. I didn’t
see her name down on the passenger list. She
was with the Count fellow all the time, happy and
smiling, and I noticed that the Count fellow was down
on the list as having his wife along. There
it was, state-room, number, and all. The first
I knew that he was married, only I didn’t see
anything of the wife . . . unless Flush of Gold was
so counted. I wondered if they’d got married
ashore before starting. There’d been talk
about them in Dawson, you see, and bets had been laid
that the Count fellow had cut Dave out.
“I talked with the purser.
He didn’t know anything more about it than I
did; he didn’t know Flush of Gold, anyway, and
besides, he was almost rushed to death. You
know what a Yukon steamboat is, but you can’t
guess what the Golden Rocket was when it left
Dawson that June of 1898. She was a hummer.
Being the first steamer out, she carried all the scurvy
patients and hospital wrecks. Then she must have
carried a couple of millions of Klondike dust and
nuggets, to say nothing of a packed and jammed passenger
list, deck passengers galore, and bucks and squaws
and dogs without end. And she was loaded down
to the guards with freight and baggage. There
was a mountain of the same on the fore-lower-deck,
and each little stop along the way added to it.
I saw the box come aboard at Teelee Portage, and
I knew it for what it was, though I little guessed
the joker that was in it. And they piled it on
top of everything else on the fore-lower-deck, and
they didn’t pile it any too securely either.
The mate expected to come back to it again, and then
forgot about it. I thought at the time that
there was something familiar about the big husky dog
that climbed over the baggage and freight and lay down
next to the box. And then we passed the Glendale,
bound up for Dawson. As she saluted us, I thought
of Dave on board of her and hurrying to Dawson to
Flush of Gold. I turned and looked at her where
she stood by the rail. Her eyes were bright,
but she looked a bit frightened by the sight of the
other steamer, and she was leaning closely to the Count
fellow as for protection. She needn’t
have leaned so safely against him, and I needn’t
have been so sure of a disappointed Dave Walsh arriving
at Dawson. For Dave Walsh wasn’t on the
Glendale. There were a lot of things I
didn’t know, but was soon to know for
instance, that the pair were not yet married.
Inside half an hour preparations for the marriage
took place. What of the sick men in the main
cabin, and of the crowded condition of the Golden
Rocket, the likeliest place for the ceremony was
found forward, on the lower deck, in an open space
next to the rail and gang-plank and shaded by the
mountain of freight with the big box on top and the
sleeping dog beside it. There was a missionary
on board, getting off at Eagle City, which was the
next step, so they had to use him quick. That’s
what they’d planned to do, get married on the
boat.
“But I’ve run ahead of
the facts. The reason Dave Walsh wasn’t
on the Glendale was because he was on the Golden
Rocket. It was this way. After loiterin’
in Dawson on account of Flush of Gold, he went down
to Mammon Creek on the ice. And there he found
Dusky Burns doing so well with the claim, there was
no need for him to be around. So he put some
grub on the sled, harnessed the dogs, took an Indian
along, and pulled out for Surprise Lake. He
always had a liking for that section. Maybe
you don’t know how the creek turned out to be
a four-flusher; but the prospects were good at the
time, and Dave proceeded to build his cabin and hers.
That’s the cabin we slept in. After he
finished it, he went off on a moose hunt to the forks
of the Teelee, takin’ the Indian along.
“And this is what happened.
Came on a cold snap. The juice went down forty,
fifty, sixty below zero. I remember that snap I
was at Forty Mile; and I remember the very day.
At eleven o’clock in the morning the spirit
thermometer at the N. A. T. & T. Company’s store
went down to seventy-five below zero. And that
morning, near the forks of the Teelee, Dave Walsh
was out after moose with that blessed Indian of his.
I got it all from the Indian afterwards we
made a trip over the ice together to Dyea. That
morning Mr. Indian broke through the ice and wet himself
to the waist. Of course he began to freeze right
away. The proper thing was to build a fire.
But Dave Walsh was a bull. It was only half
a mile to camp, where a fire was already burning.
What was the good of building another? He threw
Mr. Indian over his shoulder and ran with
him half a mile with the thermometer
at seventy-five below. You know what that means.
Suicide. There’s no other name for it.
Why, that buck Indian weighed over two hundred himself,
and Dave ran half a mile with him. Of course
he froze his lungs. Must have frozen them near
solid. It was a tomfool trick for any man to
do. And anyway, after lingering horribly for
several weeks, Dave Walsh died.
“The Indian didn’t know
what to do with the corpse. Ordinarily he’d
have buried him and let it go at that. But he
knew that Dave Walsh was a big man, worth lots of
money, a hi-yu skookum chief. Likewise
he’d seen the bodies of other hi-yu skookums
carted around the country like they were worth something.
So he decided to take Dave’s body to Forty Mile,
which was Dave’s headquarters. You know
how the ice is on the grass roots in this country well,
the Indian planted Dave under a foot of soil in
short, he put Dave on ice. Dave could have stayed
there a thousand years and still been the same old
Dave. You understand just the same
as a refrigerator. Then the Indian brings over
a whipsaw from the cabin at Surprise Lake and makes
lumber enough for the box. Also, waiting for
the thaw, he goes out and shoots about ten thousand
pounds of moose. This he keeps on ice, too.
Came the thaw. The Teelee broke. He built
a raft and loaded it with the meat, the big box with
Dave inside, and Dave’s team of dogs, and away
they went down the Teelee.
“The raft got caught on a timber
jam and hung up two days. It was scorching hot
weather, and Mr. Indian nearly lost his moose meat.
So when he got to Teelee Portage he figured a steamboat
would get to Forty Mile quicker than his raft.
He transferred his cargo, and there you are, fore-lower
deck of the Golden Rocket, Flush of Gold being
married, and Dave Walsh in his big box casting the
shade for her. And there’s one thing I
clean forgot. No wonder I thought the husky dog
that came aboard at Teelee Portage was familiar.
It was Pee-lat, Dave Walsh’s lead-dog and favourite a
terrible fighter, too. He was lying down beside
the box.
“Flush of Gold caught sight
of me, called me over, shook hands with me, and introduced
me to the Count. She was beautiful. I was
as mad for her then as ever. She smiled into
my eyes and said I must sign as one of the witnesses.
And there was no refusing her. She was ever
a child, cruel as children are cruel. Also,
she told me she was in possession of the only two
bottles of champagne in Dawson or that had
been in Dawson the night before; and before I knew
it I was scheduled to drink her and the Count’s
health. Everybody crowded round, the captain
of the steamboat, very prominent, trying to ring in
on the wine, I guess. It was a funny wedding.
On the upper deck the hospital wrecks, with various
feet in the grave, gathered and looked down to see.
There were Indians all jammed in the circle, too,
big bucks, and their squaws and kids, to say nothing
of about twenty-five snarling wolf-dogs. The
missionary lined the two of them up and started in
with the service. And just then a dog-fight
started, high up on the pile of freight Pee-lat
lying beside the big box, and a white-haired brute
belonging to one of the Indians. The fight wasn’t
explosive at all. The brutes just snarled at
each other from a distance tapping at each
other long-distance, you know, saying dast and dassent,
dast and dassent. The noise was rather disturbing,
but you could hear the missionary’s voice above
it.
“There was no particularly easy
way of getting at the two dogs, except from the other
side of the pile. But nobody was on that side everybody
watching the ceremony, you see. Even then everything
might have been all right if the captain hadn’t
thrown a club at the dogs. That was what precipitated
everything. As I say, if the captain hadn’t
thrown that club, nothing might have happened.
“The missionary had just reached
the point where he was saying ’In sickness and
in health,’ and ‘Till death us do part.’
And just then the captain threw the club. I
saw the whole thing. It landed on Pee-lat, and
at that instant the white brute jumped him. The
club caused it. Their two bodies struck the box,
and it began to slide, its lower end tilting down.
It was a long oblong box, and it slid down slowly
until it reached the perpendicular, when it came down
on the run. The onlookers on that side the circle
had time to get out from under. Flush of Gold
and the Count, on the opposite side of the circle,
were facing the box; the missionary had his back to
it. The box must have fallen ten feet straight
up and down, and it hit end on.
“Now mind you, not one of us
knew that Dave Walsh was dead. We thought he
was on the Glendale, bound for Dawson.
The missionary had edged off to one side, and so
Flush of Gold faced the box when it struck. It
was like in a play. It couldn’t have been
better planned. It struck on end, and on the
right end; the whole front of the box came off; and
out swept Dave Walsh on his feet, partly wrapped in
a blanket, his yellow hair flying and showing bright
in the sun. Right out of the box, on his feet,
he swept upon Flush of Gold. She didn’t
know he was dead, but it was unmistakable, after hanging
up two days on a timber jam, that he was rising all
right from the dead to claim her. Possibly that
is what she thought. At any rate, the sight
froze her. She couldn’t move. She
just sort of wilted and watched Dave Walsh coming
for her! And he got her. It looked almost
as though he threw his arms around her, but whether
or not this happened, down to the deck they went together.
We had to drag Dave Walsh’s body clear before
we could get hold of her. She was in a faint,
but it would have been just as well if she had never
come out of that faint; for when she did, she fell
to screaming the way insane people do. She kept
it up for hours, till she was exhausted. Oh,
yes, she recovered. You saw her last night,
and know how much recovered she is. She is not
violent, it is true, but she lives in darkness.
She believes that she is waiting for Dave Walsh,
and so she waits in the cabin he built for her.
She is no longer fickle. It is nine years now
that she has been faithful to Dave Walsh, and the
outlook is that she’ll be faithful to him to
the end.”
Lon McFane pulled down the top of
the blankets and prepared to crawl in.
“We have her grub hauled to
her each year,” he added, “and in general
keep an eye on her. Last night was the first
time she ever recognized me, though.”
“Who are the we?” I asked.
“Oh,” was the answer,
“the Count and old Victor Chauvet and me.
Do you know, I think the Count is the one to be really
sorry for. Dave Walsh never did know that she
was false to him. And she does not suffer.
Her darkness is merciful to her.”
I lay silently under the blankets
for the space of a minute.
“Is the Count still in the country?” I
asked.
But there was a gentle sound of heavy
breathing, and I knew Lon McFane was asleep.