El-Soo had been a Mission girl.
Her mother had died when she was very small, and
Sister Alberta had plucked El-Soo as a brand from the
burning, one summer day, and carried her away to Holy
Cross Mission and dedicated her to God. El-Soo
was a full-blooded Indian, yet she exceeded all the
half-breed and quarter-breed girls. Never had
the good sisters dealt with a girl so adaptable and
at the same time so spirited.
El-Soo was quick, and deft, and intelligent;
but above all she was fire, the living flame of life,
a blaze of personality that was compounded of will,
sweetness, and daring. Her father was a chief,
and his blood ran in her veins. Obedience, on
the part of El-Soo, was a matter of terms and arrangement.
She had a passion for equity, and perhaps it was
because of this that she excelled in mathematics.
But she excelled in other things.
She learned to read and write English as no girl
had ever learned in the Mission. She led the
girls in singing, and into song she carried her sense
of equity. She was an artist, and the fire of
her flowed toward creation. Had she from birth
enjoyed a more favourable environment, she would have
made literature or music.
Instead, she was El-Soo, daughter
of Klakee-Nah, a chief, and she lived in the Holy
Cross Mission where were no artists, but only pure-souled
Sisters who were interested in cleanliness and righteousness
and the welfare of the spirit in the land of immortality
that lay beyond the skies.
The years passed. She was eight
years old when she entered the Mission; she was sixteen,
and the Sisters were corresponding with their superiors
in the Order concerning the sending of El-Soo to the
United States to complete her education, when a man
of her own tribe arrived at Holy Cross and had talk
with her. El-Soo was somewhat appalled by him.
He was dirty. He was a Caliban-like creature,
primitively ugly, with a mop of hair that had never
been combed. He looked at her disapprovingly
and refused to sit down.
“Thy brother is dead,” he said shortly.
El-Soo was not particularly shocked.
She remembered little of her brother. “Thy
father is an old man, and alone,” the messenger
went on. “His house is large and empty,
and he would hear thy voice and look upon thee.”
Him she remembered Klakee-Nah,
the headman of the village, the friend of the missionaries
and the traders, a large man thewed like a giant, with
kindly eyes and masterful ways, and striding with a
consciousness of crude royalty in his carriage.
“Tell him that I will come,” was El-Soo’s
answer.
Much to the despair of the Sisters,
the brand plucked from the burning went back to the
burning. All pleading with El-Soo was vain.
There was much argument, expostulation, and weeping.
Sister Alberta even revealed to her the project of
sending her to the United States. El-Soo stared
wide-eyed into the golden vista thus opened up to her,
and shook her head. In her eyes persisted another
vista. It was the mighty curve of the Yukon
at Tana-naw Station. With the St. George Mission
on one side, and the trading post on the other, and
midway between the Indian village and a certain large
log house where lived an old man tended upon by slaves.
All dwellers on the Yukon bank for
twice a thousand miles knew the large log house, the
old man and the tending slaves; and well did the Sisters
know the house, its unending revelry, its feasting
and its fun. So there was weeping at Holy Cross
when El-Soo departed.
There was a great cleaning up in the
large house when El-Soo arrived. Klakee-Nah,
himself masterful, protested at this masterful conduct
of his young daughter; but in the end, dreaming barbarically
of magnificence, he went forth and borrowed a thousand
dollars from old Porportuk, than whom there was no
richer Indian on the Yukon. Also, Klakee-Nah
ran up a heavy bill at the trading post. El-Soo
re-created the large house. She invested it
with new splendour, while Klakee-Nah maintained its
ancient traditions of hospitality and revelry.
All this was unusual for a Yukon Indian,
but Klakee-Nah was an unusual Indian. Not alone
did he like to render inordinate hospitality, but,
what of being a chief and of acquiring much money,
he was able to do it. In the primitive trading
days he had been a power over his people, and he had
dealt profitably with the white trading companies.
Later on, with Porportuk, he had made a gold-strike
on the Koyokuk River. Klakee-Nah was by training
and nature an aristocrat. Porportuk was bourgeois,
and Porportuk bought him out of the gold-mine.
Porportuk was content to plod and accumulate.
Klakee-Nah went back to his large house and proceeded
to spend. Porportuk was known as the richest
Indian in Alaska. Klakee-Nah was known as the
whitest. Porportuk was a money-lender and a usurer.
Klakee-Nah was an anachronism a mediaeval
ruin, a fighter and a feaster, happy with wine and
song.
El-Soo adapted herself to the large
house and its ways as readily as she had adapted herself
to Holy Cross Mission and its ways. She did not
try to reform her father and direct his footsteps
toward God. It is true, she reproved him when
he drank overmuch and profoundly, but that was for
the sake of his health and the direction of his footsteps
on solid earth.
The latchstring to the large house
was always out. What with the coming and the
going, it was never still. The rafters of the
great living-room shook with the roar of wassail and
of song. At table sat men from all the world
and chiefs from distant tribes Englishmen
and Colonials, lean Yankee traders and rotund officials
of the great companies, cowboys from the Western ranges,
sailors from the sea, hunters and dog-mushers of a
score of nationalities.
El-Soo drew breath in a cosmopolitan
atmosphere. She could speak English as well
as she could her native tongue, and she sang English
songs and ballads. The passing Indian cérémonials
she knew, and the perishing traditions. The
tribal dress of the daughter of a chief she knew how
to wear upon occasion. But for the most part
she dressed as white women dress. Not for nothing
was her needlework at the Mission and her innate artistry.
She carried her clothes like a white woman, and she
made clothes that could be so carried.
In her way she was as unusual as her
father, and the position she occupied was as unique
as his. She was the one Indian woman who was
the social equal with the several white women at Tana-naw
Station. She was the one Indian woman to whom
white men honourably made proposals of marriage.
And she was the one Indian woman whom no white man
ever insulted.
For El-Soo was beautiful not
as white women are beautiful, not as Indian women
are beautiful. It was the flame of her, that
did not depend upon feature, that was her beauty.
So far as mere line and feature went, she was the
classic Indian type. The black hair and the fine
bronze were hers, and the black eyes, brilliant and
bold, keen as sword-light, proud; and hers the delicate
eagle nose with the thin, quivering nostrils, the
high cheek-bones that were not broad apart, and the
thin lips that were not too thin. But over all
and through all poured the flame of her the
unanalysable something that was fire and that was the
soul of her, that lay mellow-warm or blazed in her
eyes, that sprayed the cheeks of her, that distended
the nostrils, that curled the lips, or, when the lip
was in repose, that was still there in the lip, the
lip palpitant with its presence.
And El-Soo had wit rarely
sharp to hurt, yet quick to search out forgivable
weakness. The laughter of her mind played like
lambent flame over all about her, and from all about
her arose answering laughter. Yet she was never
the centre of things. This she would not permit.
The large house, and all of which it was significant,
was her father’s; and through it, to the last,
moved his heroic figure host, master of
the revels, and giver of the law. It is true,
as the strength oozed from him, that she caught up
responsibilities from his failing hands. But
in appearance he still ruled, dozing, ofttimes at
the board, a bacchanalian ruin, yet in all seeming
the ruler of the feast.
And through the large house moved
the figure of Porportuk, ominous, with shaking head,
coldly disapproving, paying for it all. Not that
he really paid, for he compounded interest in weird
ways, and year by year absorbed the properties of
Klakee-Nah. Porportuk once took it upon himself
to chide El-Soo upon the wasteful way of life in the
large house it was when he had about absorbed
the last of Klakee-Nah’s wealth but
he never ventured so to chide again. El-Soo,
like her father, was an aristocrat, as disdainful
of money as he, and with an equal sense of honour as
finely strung.
Porportuk continued grudgingly to
advance money, and ever the money flowed in golden
foam away. Upon one thing El-Soo was resolved her
father should die as he had lived. There should
be for him no passing from high to low, no diminution
of the revels, no lessening of the lavish hospitality.
When there was famine, as of old, the Indians came
groaning to the large house and went away content.
When there was famine and no money, money was borrowed
from Porportuk, and the Indians still went away content.
El-Soo might well have repeated, after the aristocrats
of another time and place, that after her came the
deluge. In her case the deluge was old Porportuk.
With every advance of money, he looked upon her with
a more possessive eye, and felt bourgeoning within
him ancient fires.
But El-Soo had no eyes for him.
Nor had she eyes for the white men who wanted to
marry her at the Mission with ring and priest and book.
For at Tana-naw Station was a young man, Akoon, of
her own blood, and tribe, and village. He was
strong and beautiful to her eyes, a great hunter, and,
in that he had wandered far and much, very poor; he
had been to all the unknown wastes and places; he
had journeyed to Sitka and to the United States; he
had crossed the continent to Hudson Bay and back again,
and as seal-hunter on a ship he had sailed to Siberia
and for Japan.
When he returned from the gold-strike
in Klondike he came, as was his wont, to the large
house to make report to old Klakee-Nah of all the
world that he had seen; and there he first saw El-Soo,
three years back from the Mission. Thereat,
Akoon wandered no more. He refused a wage of
twenty dollars a day as pilot on the big steamboats.
He hunted some and fished some, but never far from
Tana-naw Station, and he was at the large house often
and long. And El-Soo measured him against many
men and found him good. He sang songs to her,
and was ardent and glowed until all Tana-naw Station
knew he loved her. And Porportuk but grinned
and advanced more money for the upkeep of the large
house.
Then came the death table of Klakee-Nah.
He sat at feast, with death in his
throat, that he could not drown with wine. And
laughter and joke and song went around, and Akoon told
a story that made the rafters echo. There were
no tears or sighs at that table. It was no more
than fit that Klakee-Nah should die as he had lived,
and none knew this better than El-Soo, with her artist
sympathy. The old roystering crowd was there,
and, as of old, three frost-bitten sailors were there,
fresh from the long traverse from the Arctic, survivors
of a ship’s company of seventy-four. At
Klakee-Nah’s back were four old men, all that
were left him of the slaves of his youth. With
rheumy eyes they saw to his needs, with palsied hands
filling his glass or striking him on the back between
the shoulders when death stirred and he coughed and
gasped.
It was a wild night, and as the hours
passed and the fun laughed and roared along, death
stirred more restlessly in Klakee-Nah’s throat.
Then it was that he sent for Porportuk. And
Porportuk came in from the outside frost to look with
disapproving eyes upon the meat and wine on the table
for which he had paid. But as he looked down
the length of flushed faces to the far end and saw
the face of El-Soo, the light in his eyes flared up,
and for a moment the disapproval vanished.
Place was made for him at Klakee-Nah’s
side, and a glass placed before him. Klakee-Nah,
with his own hands, filled the glass with fervent
spirits. “Drink!” he cried.
“Is it not good?”
And Porportuk’s eyes watered
as he nodded his head and smacked his lips.
“When, in your own house, have
you had such drink?” Klakee-Nah demanded.
“I will not deny that the drink
is good to this old throat of mine,” Porportuk
made answer, and hesitated for the speech to complete
the thought.
“But it costs overmuch,”
Klakee-Nah roared, completing it for him.
Porportuk winced at the laughter that
went down the table. His eyes burned malevolently.
“We were boys together, of the same age,”
he said. “In your throat is death.
I am still alive and strong.”
An ominous murmur arose from the company.
Klakee-Nah coughed and strangled, and the old slaves
smote him between the shoulders. He emerged
gasping, and waved his hand to still the threatening
rumble.
“You have grudged the very fire
in your house because the wood cost overmuch!”
he cried. “You have grudged life.
To live cost overmuch, and you have refused to pay
the price. Your life has been like a cabin where
the fire is out and there are no blankets on the floor.”
He signalled to a slave to fill his glass, which
he held aloft. “But I have lived.
And I have been warm with life as you have never
been warm. It is true, you shall live long.
But the longest nights are the cold nights when a
man shivers and lies awake. My nights have been
short, but I have slept warm.”
He drained the glass. The shaking
hand of a slave failed to catch it as it crashed to
the floor. Klakee-Nah sank back, panting, watching
the upturned glasses at the lips of the drinkers,
his own lips slightly smiling to the applause.
At a sign, two slaves attempted to help him sit upright
again. But they were weak, his frame was mighty,
and the four old men tottered and shook as they helped
him forward.
“But manner of life is neither
here nor there,” he went on. “We
have other business, Porportuk, you and I, to-night.
Debts are mischances, and I am in mischance with
you. What of my debt, and how great is it?”
Porportuk searched in his pouch and
brought forth a memorandum. He sipped at his
glass and began. “There is the note of
August, 1889, for three hundred dollars. The
interest has never been paid. And the note of
the next year for five hundred dollars. This
note was included in the note of two months later
for a thousand dollars. Then there is the note ”
“Never mind the many notes!”
Klakee-Nah cried out impatiently. “They
make my head go around and all the things inside my
head. The whole! The round whole!
How much is it?”
Porportuk referred to his memorandum.
“Fifteen thousand nine hundred and sixty-seven
dollars and seventy-five cents,” he read with
careful precision.
“Make it sixteen thousand, make
it sixteen thousand,” Klakee-Nah said grandly.
“Odd numbers were ever a worry. And now and
it is for this that I have sent for you make
me out a new note for sixteen thousand, which I shall
sign. I have no thought of the interest.
Make it as large as you will, and make it payable
in the next world, when I shall meet you by the fire
of the Great Father of all Indians. Then the
note will be paid. This I promise you.
It is the word of Klakee-Nah.”
Porportuk looked perplexed, and loudly
the laughter arose and shook the room. Klakee-Nah
raised his hands. “Nay,” he cried.
“It is not a joke. I but speak in fairness.
It was for this I sent for you, Porportuk. Make
out the note.”
“I have no dealings with the
next world,” Porportuk made answer slowly.
“Have you no thought to meet
me before the Great Father!” Klakee-Nah demanded.
Then he added, “I shall surely be there.”
“I have no dealings with the
next world,” Porportuk repeated sourly.
The dying man regarded him with frank amazement.
“I know naught of the next world,”
Porportuk explained. “I do business in
this world.”
Klakee-Nah’s face cleared.
“This comes of sleeping cold of nights,”
he laughed. He pondered for a space, then said,
“It is in this world that you must be paid.
There remains to me this house. Take it, and
burn the debt in the candle there.”
“It is an old house and not
worth the money,” Porportuk made answer.
“There are my mines on the Twisted Salmon.”
“They have never paid to work,” was the
reply.
“There is my share in the steamer Koyokuk.
I am half owner.”
“She is at the bottom of the Yukon.”
Klakee-Nah started. “True,
I forgot. It was last spring when the ice went
out.” He mused for a time while the glasses
remained untasted, and all the company waited upon
his utterance.
“Then it would seem I owe you
a sum of money which I cannot pay . . . in this world?”
Porportuk nodded and glanced down the table.
“Then it would seem that you,
Porportuk, are a poor business man,” Klakee-Nah
said slyly. And boldly Porportuk made answer,
“No; there is security yet untouched.”
“What!” cried Klakee-Nah.
“Have I still property? Name it, and it
is yours, and the debt is no more.”
“There it is.” Porportuk pointed
at El-Soo.
Klakee-Nah could not understand.
He peered down the table, brushed his eyes, and peered
again.
“Your daughter, El-Soo her
will I take and the debt be no more. I will
burn the debt there in the candle.”
Klakee-Nah’s great chest began
to heave. “Ho! ho! a joke.
Ho! ho! ho!” he laughed Homerically.
“And with your cold bed and daughters old enough
to be the mother of El-Soo! Ho! ho! ho!”
He began to cough and strangle, and the old slaves
smote him on the back. “Ho! ho!”
he began again, and went off into another paroxysm.
Porportuk waited patiently, sipping
from his glass and studying the double row of faces
down the board. “It is no joke,”
he said finally. “My speech is well meant.”
Klakee-Nah sobered and looked at him,
then reached for his glass, but could not touch it.
A slave passed it to him, and glass and liquor he
flung into the face of Porportuk.
“Turn him out!” Klakee-Nah
thundered to the waiting table that strained like
a pack of hounds in leash. “And roll him
in the snow!”
As the mad riot swept past him and
out of doors, he signalled to the slaves, and the
four tottering old men supported him on his feet as
he met the returning revellers, upright, glass in
hand, pledging them a toast to the short night when
a man sleeps warm.
It did not take long to settle the
estate of Klakee-Nah. Tommy, the little Englishman,
clerk at the trading post, was called in by El-Soo
to help. There was nothing but debts, notes
overdue, mortgaged properties, and properties mortgaged
but worthless. Notes and mortgages were held
by Porportuk. Tommy called him a robber many
times as he pondered the compounding of the interest.
“Is it a debt, Tommy?” El-Soo asked.
“It is a robbery,” Tommy answered.
“Nevertheless, it is a debt,” she persisted.
The winter wore away, and the early
spring, and still the claims of Porportuk remained
unpaid. He saw El-Soo often and explained to
her at length, as he had explained to her father,
the way the debt could be cancelled. Also, he
brought with him old medicine-men, who elaborated to
her the everlasting damnation of her father if the
debt were not paid. One day, after such an elaboration,
El-Soo made final announcement to Porportuk.
“I shall tell you two things,”
she said. “First I shall not be your wife.
Will you remember that? Second, you shall be
paid the last cent of the sixteen thousand dollars ”
“Fifteen thousand nine hundred
and sixty-seven dollars and seventy-five cents,”
Porportuk corrected.
“My father said sixteen thousand,”
was her reply. “You shall be paid.”
“How?”
“I know not how, but I shall
find out how. Now go, and bother me no more.
If you do” she hesitated to find
fitting penalty “if you do, I shall
have you rolled in the snow again as soon as the first
snow flies.”
This was still in the early spring,
and a little later El-Soo surprised the country.
Word went up and down the Yukon from Chilcoot to the
Delta, and was carried from camp to camp to the farthermost
camps, that in June, when the first salmon ran, El-Soo,
daughter of Klakee-Nah, would sell herself at public
auction to satisfy the claims of Porportuk. Vain
were the attempts to dissuade her. The missionary
at St. George wrestled with her, but she replied
“Only the debts to God are settled
in the next world. The debts of men are of this
world, and in this world are they settled.”
Akoon wrestled with her, but she replied,
“I do love thee, Akoon; but honour is greater
than love, and who am I that I should blacken my father?”
Sister Alberta journeyed all the way up from Holy
Cross on the first steamer, and to no better end.
“My father wanders in the thick
and endless forests,” said El-Soo. “And
there will he wander, with the lost souls crying, till
the debt be paid. Then, and not until then, may
he go on to the house of the Great Father.”
“And you believe this?” Sister Alberta
asked.
“I do not know,” El-Soo made answer.
“It was my father’s belief.”
Sister Alberta shrugged her shoulders incredulously.
“Who knows but that the things
we believe come true?” El-Soo went on.
“Why not? The next world to you may be
heaven and harps . . . because you have believed heaven
and harps; to my father the next world may be a large
house where he will sit always at table feasting with
God.”
“And you?” Sister Alberta asked.
“What is your next world?”
El-Soo hesitated but for a moment.
“I should like a little of both,” she
said. “I should like to see your face as
well as the face of my father.”
The day of the auction came.
Tana-naw Station was populous. As was their
custom, the tribes had gathered to await the salmon-run,
and in the meantime spent the time in dancing and
frolicking, trading and gossiping. Then there
was the ordinary sprinkling of white adventurers, traders,
and prospectors, and, in addition, a large number
of white men who had come because of curiosity or
interest in the affair.
It had been a backward spring, and
the salmon were late in running. This delay
but keyed up the interest. Then, on the day of
the auction, the situation was made tense by Akoon.
He arose and made public and solemn announcement
that whosoever bought El-Soo would forthwith and immediately
die. He flourished the Winchester in his hand
to indicate the manner of the taking-off. El-Soo
was angered thereat; but he refused to speak with
her, and went to the trading post to lay in extra ammunition.
The first salmon was caught at ten
o’clock in the evening, and at midnight the
auction began. It took place on top of the high
bank alongside the Yukon. The sun was due north
just below the horizon, and the sky was lurid red.
A great crowd gathered about the table and the two
chairs that stood near the edge of the bank.
To the fore were many white men and several chiefs.
And most prominently to the fore, rifle in hand,
stood Akoon. Tommy, at El-Soo’s request,
served as auctioneer, but she made the opening speech
and described the goods about to be sold. She
was in native costume, in the dress of a chief’s
daughter, splendid and barbaric, and she stood on
a chair, that she might be seen to advantage.
“Who will buy a wife?”
she asked. “Look at me. I am twenty
years old and a maid. I will be a good wife
to the man who buys me. If he is a white man,
I shall dress in the fashion of white women; if he
is an Indian, I shall dress as” she
hesitated a moment “a squaw.
I can make my own clothes, and sew, and wash, and
mend. I was taught for eight years to do these
things at Holy Cross Mission. I can read and
write English, and I know how to play the organ.
Also I can do arithmetic and some algebra a
little. I shall be sold to the highest bidder,
and to him I will make out a bill of sale of myself.
I forgot to say that I can sing very well, and that
I have never been sick in my life. I weigh one
hundred and thirty-two pounds; my father is dead and
I have no relatives. Who wants me?”
She looked over the crowd with flaming
audacity and stepped down. At Tommy’s
request she stood upon the chair again, while he mounted
the second chair and started the bidding.
Surrounding El-Soo stood the four
old slaves of her father. They were age-twisted
and palsied, faithful to their meat, a generation out
of the past that watched unmoved the antics of younger
life. In the front of the crowd were several
Eldorado and Bonanza kings from the Upper Yukon, and
beside them, on crutches, swollen with scurvy, were
two broken prospectors. From the midst of the
crowd, thrust out by its own vividness, appeared the
face of a wild-eyed squaw from the remote regions
of the Upper Tana-naw; a strayed Sitkan from the coast
stood side by side with a Stick from Lake Le Barge,
and, beyond, a half-dozen French-Canadian voyageurs,
grouped by themselves. From afar came the faint
cries of myriads of wild-fowl on the nesting-grounds.
Swallows were skimming up overhead from the placid
surface of the Yukon, and robins were singing.
The oblique rays of the hidden sun shot through the
smoke, high-dissipated from forest fires a thousand
miles away, and turned the heavens to sombre red,
while the earth shone red in the reflected glow.
This red glow shone in the faces of all, and made
everything seem unearthly and unreal.
The bidding began slowly. The
Sitkan, who was a stranger in the land and who had
arrived only half an hour before, offered one hundred
dollars in a confident voice, and was surprised when
Akoon turned threateningly upon him with the rifle.
The bidding dragged. An Indian from the Tozikakat,
a pilot, bid one hundred and fifty, and after some
time a gambler, who had been ordered out of the Upper
Country, raised the bid to two hundred. El-Soo
was saddened; her pride was hurt; but the only effect
was that she flamed more audaciously upon the crowd.
There was a disturbance among the
onlookers as Porportuk forced his way to the front.
“Five hundred dollars!” he bid in a loud
voice, then looked about him proudly to note the effect.
He was minded to use his great wealth
as a bludgeon with which to stun all competition at
the start. But one of the voyageurs, looking
on El-Soo with sparkling eyes, raised the bid a hundred.
“Seven hundred!” Porportuk returned promptly.
And with equal promptness came the “Eight hundred”
of the voyageur.
Then Porportuk swung his club again.
“Twelve hundred!” he shouted.
With a look of poignant disappointment,
the voyageur succumbed. There was no further
bidding. Tommy worked hard, but could not elicit
a bid.
El-Soo spoke to Porportuk. “It
were good, Porportuk, for you to weigh well your bid.
Have you forgotten the thing I told you that
I would never marry you!”
“It is a public auction,”
he retorted. “I shall buy you with a bill
of sale. I have offered twelve hundred dollars.
You come cheap.”
“Too damned cheap!” Tommy
cried. “What if I am auctioneer?
That does not prevent me from bidding. I’ll
make it thirteen hundred.”
“Fourteen hundred,” from Porportuk.
“I’ll buy you in to be
my my sister,” Tommy whispered to
El-Soo, then called aloud, “Fifteen hundred!”
At two thousand one of the Eldorado
kings took a hand, and Tommy dropped out.
A third time Porportuk swung the club
of his wealth, making a clean raise of five hundred
dollars. But the Eldorado king’s pride
was touched. No man could club him. And
he swung back another five hundred.
El-Soo stood at three thousand.
Porportuk made it thirty-five hundred, and gasped
when the Eldorado king raised it a thousand dollars.
Porportuk again raised it five hundred, and again
gasped when the king raised a thousand more.
Porportuk became angry. His
pride was touched; his strength was challenged, and
with him strength took the form of wealth. He
would not be ashamed for weakness before the world.
El-Soo became incidental. The savings and scrimpings
from the cold nights of all his years were ripe to
be squandered. El-Soo stood at six thousand.
He made it seven thousand. And then, in thousand-dollar
bids, as fast as they could be uttered, her price
went up. At fourteen thousand the two men stopped
for breath.
Then the unexpected happened.
A still heavier club was swung. In the pause
that ensued, the gambler, who had scented a speculation
and formed a syndicate with several of his fellows,
bid sixteen thousand dollars.
“Seventeen thousand,” Porportuk said weakly.
“Eighteen thousand,” said the king.
Porportuk gathered his strength. “Twenty
thousand.”
The syndicate dropped out. The
Eldorado king raised a thousand, and Porportuk raised
back; and as they bid, Akoon turned from one to the
other, half menacingly, half curiously, as though to
see what manner of man it was that he would have to
kill. When the king prepared to make his next
bid, Akoon having pressed closer, the king first loosed
the revolver at his hip, then said:
“Twenty-three thousand.”
“Twenty-four thousand,”
said Porportuk. He grinned viciously, for the
certitude of his bidding had at last shaken the king.
The latter moved over close to El-Soo. He studied
her carefully for a long while.
“And five hundred,” he said at last.
“Twenty-five thousand,” came Porportuk’s
raise.
The king looked for a long space,
and shook his head. He looked again, and said
reluctantly, “And five hundred.”
“Twenty-six thousand,” Porportuk snapped.
The king shook his head and refused
to meet Tommy’s pleading eye. In the meantime
Akoon had edged close to Porportuk. El-Soo’s
quick eye noted this, and, while Tommy wrestled with
the Eldorado king for another bid, she bent, and spoke
in a low voice in the ear of a slave. And while
Tommy’s “Going going going ”
dominated the air, the slave went up to Akoon and
spoke in a low voice in his ear. Akoon made no
sign that he had heard, though El-Soo watched him
anxiously.
“Gone!” Tommy’s
voice rang out. “To Porportuk, for twenty-six
thousand dollars.”
Porportuk glanced uneasily at Akoon.
All eyes were centred upon Akoon, but he did nothing.
“Let the scales be brought,” said El-Soo.
“I shall make payment at my house,” said
Porportuk.
“Let the scales be brought,”
El-Soo repeated. “Payment shall be made
here where all can see.”
So the gold scales were brought from
the trading post, while Porportuk went away and came
back with a man at his heels, on whose shoulders was
a weight of gold-dust in moose-hide sacks. Also,
at Porportuk’s back, walked another man with
a rifle, who had eyes only for Akoon.
“Here are the notes and mortgages,”
said Porportuk, “for fifteen thousand nine hundred
and sixty-seven dollars and seventy-five cents.”
El-Soo received them into her hands
and said to Tommy, “Let them be reckoned as
sixteen thousand.”
“There remains ten thousand
dollars to be paid in gold,” Tommy said.
Porportuk nodded, and untied the mouths
of the sacks. El-Soo, standing at the edge of
the bank, tore the papers to shreds and sent them
fluttering out over the Yukon. The weighing began,
but halted.
“Of course, at seventeen dollars,”
Porportuk had said to Tommy, as he adjusted the scales.
“At sixteen dollars,” El-Soo said sharply.
“It is the custom of all the
land to reckon gold at seventeen dollars for each
ounce,” Porportuk replied. “And this
is a business transaction.”
El-Soo laughed. “It is
a new custom,” she said. “It began
this spring. Last year, and the years before,
it was sixteen dollars an ounce. When my father’s
debt was made, it was sixteen dollars. When he
spent at the store the money he got from you, for
one ounce he was given sixteen dollars’ worth
of flour, not seventeen. Wherefore, shall you
pay for me at sixteen, and not at seventeen.”
Porportuk grunted and allowed the weighing to proceed.
“Weigh it in three piles, Tommy,”
she said. “A thousand dollars here, three
thousand here, and here six thousand.”
It was slow work, and, while the weighing
went on, Akoon was closely watched by all.
“He but waits till the money
is paid,” one said; and the word went around
and was accepted, and they waited for what Akoon should
do when the money was paid. And Porportuk’s
man with the rifle waited and watched Akoon.
The weighing was finished, and the
gold-dust lay on the table in three dark-yellow heaps.
“There is a debt of my father to the Company
for three thousand dollars,” said El-Soo.
“Take it, Tommy, for the Company. And
here are four old men, Tommy. You know them.
And here is one thousand dollars. Take it,
and see that the old men are never hungry and never
without tobacco.”
Tommy scooped the gold into separate
sacks. Six thousand dollars remained on the
table. El-Soo thrust the scoop into the heap,
and with a sudden turn whirled the contents out and
down to the Yukon in a golden shower. Porportuk
seized her wrist as she thrust the scoop a second time
into the heap.
“It is mine,” she said
calmly. Porportuk released his grip, but he
gritted his teeth and scowled darkly as she continued
to scoop the gold into the river till none was left.
The crowd had eyes for naught but
Akoon, and the rifle of Porportuk’s man lay
across the hollow of his arm, the muzzle directed at
Akoon a yard away, the man’s thumb on the hammer.
But Akoon did nothing.
“Make out the bill of sale,” Porportuk
said grimly.
And Tommy made out the till of sale,
wherein all right and title in the woman El-Soo was
vested in the man Porportuk. El-Soo signed the
document, and Porportuk folded it and put it away in
his pouch. Suddenly his eyes flashed, and in
sudden speech he addressed El-Soo.
“But it was not your father’s
debt,” he said, “What I paid was the price
for you. Your sale is business of to-day and
not of last year and the years before. The ounces
paid for you will buy at the post to-day seventeen
dollars of flour, and not sixteen. I have lost
a dollar on each ounce. I have lost six hundred
and twenty-five dollars.”
El-Soo thought for a moment, and saw
the error she had made. She smiled, and then
she laughed.
“You are right,” she laughed,
“I made a mistake. But it is too late.
You have paid, and the gold is gone. You did
not think quick. It is your loss. Your
wit is slow these days, Porportuk. You are getting
old.”
He did not answer. He glanced
uneasily at Akoon, and was reassured. His lips
tightened, and a hint of cruelty came into his face.
“Come,” he said, “we will go to
my house.”
“Do you remember the two things
I told you in the spring?” El-Soo asked, making
no movement to accompany him.
“My head would be full with
the things women say, did I heed them,” he answered.
“I told you that you would be
paid,” El-Soo went on carefully. “And
I told you that I would never be your wife.”
“But that was before the bill
of sale.” Porportuk crackled the paper
between his fingers inside the pouch. “I
have bought you before all the world. You belong
to me. You will not deny that you belong to me.”
“I belong to you,” El-Soo said steadily.
“I own you.”
“You own me.”
Porportuk’s voice rose slightly and triumphantly.
“As a dog, I own you.”
“As a dog you own me,”
El-Soo continued calmly. “But, Porportuk,
you forget the thing I told you. Had any other
man bought me, I should have been that man’s
wife. I should have been a good wife to that
man. Such was my will. But my will with
you was that I should never be your wife. Wherefore,
I am your dog.”
Porportuk knew that he played with
fire, and he resolved to play firmly. “Then
I speak to you, not as El-Soo, but as a dog,”
he said; “and I tell you to come with me.”
He half reached to grip her arm, but with a gesture
she held him back.
“Not so fast, Porportuk.
You buy a dog. The dog runs away. It is
your loss. I am your dog. What if I run
away?”
“As the owner of the dog, I shall beat you ”
“When you catch me?”
“When I catch you.”
“Then catch me.”
He reached swiftly for her, but she
eluded him. She laughed as she circled around
the table. “Catch her!” Porportuk
commanded the Indian with the rifle, who stood near
to her. But as the Indian stretched forth his
arm to her, the Eldorado king felled him with a fist
blow under the ear. The rifle clattered to the
ground. Then was Akoon’s chance.
His eyes glittered, but he did nothing.
Porportuk was an old man, but his
cold nights retained for him his activity. He
did not circle the table. He came across suddenly,
over the top of the table. El-Soo was taken
off her guard. She sprang back with a sharp
cry of alarm, and Porportuk would have caught her had
it not been for Tommy. Tommy’s leg went
out, Porportuk tripped and pitched forward on the
ground. El-Soo got her start.
“Then catch me,” she laughed over her
shoulder, as she fled away.
She ran lightly and easily, but Porportuk
ran swiftly and savagely. He outran her.
In his youth he had been swiftest of all the young
men. But El-Soo dodged in a willowy, elusive
way. Being in native dress, her feet were not
cluttered with skirts, and her pliant body curved a
flight that defied the gripping fingers of Porportuk.
With laughter and tumult, the great
crowd scattered out to see the chase. It led
through the Indian encampment; and ever dodging, circling,
and reversing, El-Soo and Porportuk appeared and disappeared
among the tents. El-Soo seemed to balance herself
against the air with her arms, now one side, now on
the other, and sometimes her body, too, leaned out
upon the air far from the perpendicular as she achieved
her sharpest curves. And Porportuk, always a
leap behind, or a leap this side or that, like a lean
hound strained after her.
They crossed the open ground beyond
the encampment and disappeared in the forest.
Tana-naw Station waited their reappearance, and long
and vainly it waited.
In the meantime Akoon ate and slept,
and lingered much at the steamboat landing, deaf to
the rising resentment of Tana-naw Station in that he
did nothing. Twenty-four hours later Porportuk
returned. He was tired and savage. He
spoke to no one but Akoon, and with him tried to pick
a quarrel. But Akoon shrugged his shoulders
and walked away. Porportuk did not waste time.
He outfitted half a dozen of the young men, selecting
the best trackers and travellers, and at their head
plunged into the forest.
Next day the steamer Seattle,
bound up river, pulled in to the shore and wooded
up. When the lines were cast off and she churned
out from the bank, Akoon was on board in the pilot-house.
Not many hours afterward, when it was his turn at
the wheel, he saw a small birch-bark canoe put off
from the shore. There was only one person in
it. He studied it carefully, put the wheel over,
and slowed down.
The captain entered the pilot-house.
“What’s the matter?” he demanded.
“The water’s good.”
Akoon grunted. He saw a larger
canoe leaving the bank, and in it were a number of
persons. As the Seattle lost headway,
he put the wheel over some more.
The captain fumed. “It’s only a
squaw,” he protested.
Akoon did not grunt. He was
all eyes for the squaw and the pursuing canoe.
In the latter six paddles were flashing, while the
squaw paddled slowly.
“You’ll be aground,”
the captain protested, seizing the wheel.
But Akoon countered his strength on
the wheel and looked him in the eyes. The captain
slowly released the spokes.
“Queer beggar,” he sniffed to himself.
Akoon held the Seattle on the
edge of the shoal water and waited till he saw the
squaw’s fingers clutch the forward rail.
Then he signalled for full speed ahead and ground
the wheel over. The large canoe was very near,
but the gap between it and the steamer was widening.
The squaw laughed and leaned over the rail.
“Then catch me, Porportuk!” she cried.
Akoon left the steamer at Fort Yukon.
He outfitted a small poling-boat and went up the
Porcupine River. And with him went El-Soo.
It was a weary journey, and the way led across the
backbone of the world; but Akoon had travelled it
before. When they came to the head-waters of
the Porcupine, they left the boat and went on foot
across the Rocky Mountains.
Akoon greatly liked to walk behind
El-Soo and watch the movements of her. There
was a music in it that he loved. And especially
he loved the well-rounded calves in their sheaths
of soft-tanned leather, the slim ankles, and the small
moccasined feet that were tireless through the longest
days.
“You are light as air,”
he said, looking up at her. “It is no labour
for you to walk. You almost float, so lightly
do your feet rise and fall. You are like a deer,
El-Soo; you are like a deer, and your eyes are like
deer’s eyes, sometimes when you look at me, or
when you hear a quick sound and wonder if it be danger
that stirs. Your eyes are like a deer’s
eyes now as you look at me.”
And El-Soo, luminous and melting, bent and kissed
Akoon.
“When we reach the Mackenzie,
we will not delay,” Akoon said later. “We
will go south before the winter catches us. We
will go to the sunlands where there is no snow.
But we will return. I have seen much of the
world, and there is no land like Alaska, no sun like
our sun, and the snow is good after the long summer.”
“And you will learn to read,” said El-Soo.
And Akoon said, “I will surely
learn to read.” But there was delay when
they reached the Mackenzie. They fell in with
a band of Mackenzie Indians, and, hunting, Akoon was
shot by accident. The rifle was in the hands
of a youth. The bullet broke Akoon’s right
arm and, ranging farther, broke two of his ribs.
Akoon knew rough surgery, while El-Soo had learned
some refinements at Holy Cross. The bones were
finally set, and Akoon lay by the fire for them to
knit. Also, he lay by the fire so that the smoke
would keep the mosquitoes away.
Then it was that Porportuk, with his
six young men, arrived. Akoon groaned in his
helplessness and made appeal to the Mackenzies.
But Porportuk made demand, and the Mackenzies were
perplexed. Porportuk was for seizing upon El-Soo,
but this they would not permit. Judgment must
be given, and, as it was an affair of man and woman,
the council of the old men was called this
that warm judgment might not be given by the young
men, who were warm of heart.
The old men sat in a circle about
the smudge-fire. Their faces were lean and wrinkled,
and they gasped and panted for air. The smoke
was not good for them. Occasionally they struck
with withered hands at the mosquitoes that braved
the smoke. After such exertion they coughed hollowly
and painfully. Some spat blood, and one of them
sat a bit apart with head bowed forward, and bled
slowly and continuously at the mouth; the coughing
sickness had gripped them. They were as dead
men; their time was short. It was a judgment
of the dead.
“And I paid for her a heavy
price,” Porportuk concluded his complaint.
“Such a price you have never seen. Sell
all that is yours sell your spears and
arrows and rifles, sell your skins and furs, sell your
tents and boats and dogs, sell everything, and you
will not have maybe a thousand dollars. Yet
did I pay for the woman, El-Soo, twenty-six times
the price of all your spears and arrows and rifles,
your skins and furs, your tents and boats and dogs.
It was a heavy price.”
The old men nodded gravely, though
their weazened eye-slits widened with wonder that
any woman should be worth such a price. The one
that bled at the mouth wiped his lips. “Is
it true talk?” he asked each of Porportuk’s
six young men. And each answered that it was
true.
“Is it true talk?” he
asked El-Soo, and she answered, “It is true.”
“But Porportuk has not told
that he is an old man,” Akoon said, “and
that he has daughters older than El-Soo.”
“It is true, Porportuk is an old man,”
said El-Soo.
“It is for Porportuk to measure
the strength his age,” said he who bled at the
mouth. “We be old men. Behold!
Age is never so old as youth would measure it.”
And the circle of old men champed
their gums, and nodded approvingly, and coughed.
“I told him that I would never be his wife,”
said El-Soo.
“Yet you took from him twenty-six
times all that we possess?” asked a one-eyed
old man.
El-Soo was silent.
“It is true?” And his
one eye burned and bored into her like a fiery gimlet.
“It is true,” she said.
“But I will run away again,”
she broke out passionately, a moment later. “Always
will I run away.”
“That is for Porportuk to consider,”
said another of the old men. “It is for
us to consider the judgment.”
“What price did you pay for her?” was
demanded of Akoon.
“No price did I pay for her,”
he answered. “She was above price.
I did not measure her in gold-dust, nor in dogs,
and tents, and furs.”
The old men debated among themselves
and mumbled in undertones. “These old
men are ice,” Akoon said in English. “I
will not listen to their judgment, Porportuk.
If you take El-Soo, I will surely kill you.”
The old men ceased and regarded him
suspiciously. “We do not know the speech
you make,” one said.
“He but said that he would kill
me,” Porportuk volunteered. “So it
were well to take from him his rifle, and to have
some of your young men sit by him, that he may not
do me hurt. He is a young man, and what are
broken bones to youth!”
Akoon, lying helpless, had rifle and
knife taken from him, and to either side of his shoulders
sat young men of the Mackenzies. The one-eyed
old man arose and stood upright. “We marvel
at the price paid for one mere woman,” he began;
“but the wisdom of the price is no concern of
ours. We are here to give judgment, and judgment
we give. We have no doubt. It is known
to all that Porportuk paid a heavy price for the woman
El-Soo. Wherefore does the woman El-Soo belong
to Porportuk and none other.” He sat down
heavily, and coughed. The old men nodded and
coughed.
“I will kill you,” Akoon cried in English.
Porportuk smiled and stood up.
“You have given true judgment,” he said
to the council, “and my young men will give to
you much tobacco. Now let the woman be brought
to me.”
Akoon gritted his teeth. The
young men took El-Soo by the arms. She did not
resist, and was led, her face a sullen flame, to Porportuk.
“Sit there at my feet till I
have made my talk,” he commanded. He paused
a moment. “It is true,” he said,
“I am an old man. Yet can I understand
the ways of youth. The fire has not all gone
out of me. Yet am I no longer young, nor am
I minded to run these old legs of mine through all
the years that remain to me. El-Soo can run fast
and well. She is a deer. This I know,
for I have seen and run after her. It is not
good that a wife should run so fast. I paid
for her a heavy price, yet does she run away from
me. Akoon paid no price at all, yet does she
run to him.
“When I came among you people
of the Mackenzie, I was of one mind. As I listened
in the council and thought of the swift legs of El-Soo,
I was of many minds. Now am I of one mind again
but it is a different mind from the one I brought
to the council. Let me tell you my mind.
When a dog runs once away from a master, it will
run away again. No matter how many times it
is brought back, each time it will run away again.
When we have such dogs, we sell them. El-Soo
is like a dog that runs away. I will sell her.
Is there any man of the council that will buy?”
The old men coughed and remained silent
“Akoon would buy,” Porportuk
went on, “but he has no money. Wherefore
I will give El-Soo to him, as he said, without price.
Even now will I give her to him.”
Reaching down, he took El-Soo by the
hand and led her across the space to where Akoon lay
on his back.
“She has a bad habit, Akoon,”
he said, seating her at Akoon’s feet. “As
she has run away from me in the past, in the days to
come she may run away from you. But there is
no need to fear that she will ever run away, Akoon.
I shall see to that. Never will she run away
from you this is the word of Porportuk.
She has great wit. I know, for often has it
bitten into me. Yet am I minded myself to give
my wit play for once. And by my wit will I secure
her to you, Akoon.”
Stooping, Porportuk crossed El-Soo’s
feet, so that the instep of one lay over that of the
other; and then, before his purpose could be divined,
he discharged his rifle through the two ankles.
As Akoon struggled to rise against the weight of
the young men, there was heard the crunch of the broken
bone rebroken.
“It is just,” said the old men, one to
another.
El-Soo made no sound. She sat
and looked at her shattered ankles, on which she would
never walk again.
“My legs are strong, El-Soo,”
Akoon said. “But never will they bear me
away from you.”
El-Soo looked at him, and for the
first time in all the time he had known her, Akoon
saw tears in her eyes.
“Your eyes are like deer’s eyes, El-Soo,”
he said.
“Is it just?” Porportuk
asked, and grinned from the edge of the smoke as he
prepared to depart.
“It is just,” the old
men said. And they sat on in the silence.