Thirty days from the time it left
Dawson, the Salt Water Mail, with Buck and his mates
at the fore, arrived at Skaguay. They were in
a wretched state, worn out and worn down. Buck’s
one hundred and forty pounds had dwindled to one hundred
and fifteen. The rest of his mates, though lighter
dogs, had relatively lost more weight than he.
Pike, the malingerer, who, in his lifetime of deceit,
had often successfully feigned a hurt leg, was now
limping in earnest. Sol-leks was limping, and
Dub was suffering from a wrenched shoulder-blade.
They were all terribly footsore.
No spring or rebound was left in them. Their
feet fell heavily on the trail, jarring their bodies
and doubling the fatigue of a day’s travel.
There was nothing the matter with them except that
they were dead tired. It was not the dead-tiredness
that comes through brief and excessive effort, from
which recovery is a matter of hours; but it was the
dead-tiredness that comes through the slow and prolonged
strength drainage of months of toil. There was
no power of recuperation left, no reserve strength
to call upon. It had been all used, the last
least bit of it. Every muscle, every fibre, every
cell, was tired, dead tired. And there was reason
for it. In less than five months they had travelled
twenty-five hundred miles, during the last eighteen
hundred of which they had had but five days’
rest. When they arrived at Skaguay they were
apparently on their last legs. They could barely
keep the traces taut, and on the down grades just
managed to keep out of the way of the sled.
“Mush on, poor sore feets,”
the driver encouraged them as they tottered down the
main street of Skaguay. “Dis is
de las’. Den we get one long
res’. Eh? For sure. One bully
long res’.”
The drivers confidently expected a
long stopover. Themselves, they had covered twelve
hundred miles with two days’ rest, and in the
nature of reason and common justice they deserved
an interval of loafing. But so many were the
men who had rushed into the Klondike, and so many were
the sweethearts, wives, and kin that had not rushed
in, that the congested mail was taking on Alpine proportions;
also, there were official orders. Fresh batches
of Hudson Bay dogs were to take the places of those
worthless for the trail. The worthless ones were
to be got rid of, and, since dogs count for little
against dollars, they were to be sold.
Three days passed, by which time Buck
and his mates found how really tired and weak they
were. Then, on the morning of the fourth day,
two men from the States came along and bought them,
harness and all, for a song. The men addressed
each other as “Hal” and “Charles.”
Charles was a middle-aged, lightish-colored man, with
weak and watery eyes and a mustache that twisted fiercely
and vigorously up, giving the lie to the limply drooping
lip it concealed. Hal was a youngster of nineteen
or twenty, with a big Colt’s revolver and a
hunting-knife strapped about him on a belt that fairly
bristled with cartridges. This belt was the most
salient thing about him. It advertised his callowness a
callowness sheer and unutterable. Both men were
manifestly out of place, and why such as they should
adventure the North is part of the mystery of things
that passes understanding.
Buck heard the chaffering, saw the
money pass between the man and the Government agent,
and knew that the Scotch half-breed and the mail-train
drivers were passing out of his life on the heels of
Perrault and Francois and the others who had gone
before. When driven with his mates to the new
owners’ camp, Buck saw a slipshod and slovenly
affair, tent half stretched, dishes unwashed, everything
in disorder; also, he saw a woman. “Mercedes”
the men called her. She was Charles’s wife
and Hal’s sister a nice family party.
Buck watched them apprehensively as
they proceeded to take down the tent and load the
sled. There was a great deal of effort about their
manner, but no businesslike method. The tent
was rolled into an awkward bundle three times as large
as it should have been. The tin dishes were packed
away unwashed. Mercedes continually fluttered
in the way of her men and kept up an unbroken chattering
of remonstrance and advice. When they put a clothes-sack
on the front of the sled, she suggested it should go
on the back; and when they had put it on the back,
and covered it over with a couple of other bundles,
she discovered overlooked articles which could abide
nowhere else but in that very sack, and they unloaded
again.
Three men from a neighboring tent
came out and looked on, grinning and winking at one
another.
“You’ve got a right smart
load as it is,” said one of them; “and
it’s not me should tell you your business, but
I wouldn’t tote that tent along if I was you.”
“Undreamed of!” cried
Mercedes, throwing up her hands in dainty dismay.
“However in the world could I manage without
a tent?”
“It’s springtime, and
you won’t get any more cold weather,” the
man replied.
She shook her head decidedly, and
Charles and Hal put the last odds and ends on top
the mountainous load.
“Think it’ll ride?” one of the men
asked.
“Why shouldn’t it?” Charles demanded
rather shortly.
“Oh, that’s all right,
that’s all right,” the man hastened meekly
to say. “I was just a-wonderin’,
that is all. It seemed a mite top-heavy.”
Charles turned his back and drew the
lashings down as well as he could, which was not in
the least well.
“An’ of course the dogs
can hike along all day with that contraption behind
them,” affirmed a second of the men.
“Certainly,” said Hal,
with freezing politeness, taking hold of the gee-pole
with one hand and swinging his whip from the other.
“Mush!” he shouted. “Mush on
there!”
The dogs sprang against the breast-bands,
strained hard for a few moments, then relaxed.
They were unable to move the sled.
“The lazy brutes, I’ll
show them,” he cried, preparing to lash out at
them with the whip.
But Mercedes interfered, crying, “Oh,
Hal, you mustn’t,” as she caught hold
of the whip and wrenched it from him. “The
poor dears! Now you must promise you won’t
be harsh with them for the rest of the trip, or I
won’t go a step.”
“Precious lot you know about
dogs,” her brother sneered; “and I wish
you’d leave me alone. They’re lazy,
I tell you, and you’ve got to whip them to get
anything out of them. That’s their way.
You ask any one. Ask one of those men.”
Mercedes looked at them imploringly,
untold repugnance at sight of pain written in her
pretty face.
“They’re weak as water,
if you want to know,” came the reply from one
of the men. “Plum tuckered out, that’s
what’s the matter. They need a rest.”
“Rest be blanked,” said
Hal, with his beardless lips; and Mercedes said, “Oh!”
in pain and sorrow at the oath.
But she was a clannish creature, and
rushed at once to the defence of her brother.
“Never mind that man,” she said pointedly.
“You’re driving our dogs, and you do what
you think best with them.”
Again Hal’s whip fell upon the
dogs. They threw themselves against the breast-bands,
dug their feet into the packed snow, got down low to
it, and put forth all their strength. The sled
held as though it were an anchor. After two efforts,
they stood still, panting. The whip was whistling
savagely, when once more Mercedes interfered.
She dropped on her knees before Buck, with tears in
her eyes, and put her arms around his neck.
“You poor, poor dears,”
she cried sympathetically, “why don’t you
pull hard? then you wouldn’t be whipped.”
Buck did not like her, but he was feeling too miserable
to resist her, taking it as part of the day’s
miserable work.
One of the onlookers, who had been
clenching his teeth to suppress hot speech, now spoke
up:
“It’s not that I care
a whoop what becomes of you, but for the dogs’
sakes I just want to tell you, you can help them a
mighty lot by breaking out that sled. The runners
are froze fast. Throw your weight against the
gee-pole, right and left, and break it out.”
A third time the attempt was made,
but this time, following the advice, Hal broke out
the runners which had been frozen to the snow.
The overloaded and unwieldy sled forged ahead, Buck
and his mates struggling frantically under the rain
of blows. A hundred yards ahead the path turned
and sloped steeply into the main street. It would
have required an experienced man to keep the top-heavy
sled upright, and Hal was not such a man. As
they swung on the turn the sled went over, spilling
half its load through the loose lashings. The
dogs never stopped. The lightened sled bounded
on its side behind them. They were angry because
of the ill treatment they had received and the unjust
load. Buck was raging. He broke into a run,
the team following his lead. Hal cried “Whoa!
whoa!” but they gave no heed. He tripped
and was pulled off his feet. The capsized sled
ground over him, and the dogs dashed on up the street,
adding to the gayety of Skaguay as they scattered the
remainder of the outfit along its chief thoroughfare.
Kind-hearted citizens caught the dogs
and gathered up the scattered belongings. Also,
they gave advice. Half the load and twice the
dogs, if they ever expected to reach Dawson, was what
was said. Hal and his sister and brother-in-law
listened unwillingly, pitched tent, and overhauled
the outfit. Canned goods were turned out that
made men laugh, for canned goods on the Long Trail
is a thing to dream about. “Blankets for
a hotel” quoth one of the men who laughed and
helped. “Half as many is too much; get
rid of them. Throw away that tent, and all those
dishes, who’s going to wash them,
anyway? Good Lord, do you think you’re
travelling on a Pullman?”
And so it went, the inexorable elimination
of the superfluous. Mercedes cried when her clothes-bags
were dumped on the ground and article after article
was thrown out. She cried in general, and she
cried in particular over each discarded thing.
She clasped hands about knees, rocking back and forth
broken-heartedly. She averred she would not go
an inch, not for a dozen Charleses. She appealed
to everybody and to everything, finally wiping her
eyes and proceeding to cast out even articles of apparel
that were imperative necessaries. And in her zeal,
when she had finished with her own, she attacked the
belongings of her men and went through them like a
tornado.
This accomplished, the outfit, though
cut in half, was still a formidable bulk. Charles
and Hal went out in the evening and bought six Outside
dogs. These, added to the six of the original
team, and Teek and Koona, the huskies obtained at
the Rink Rapids on the record trip, brought the team
up to fourteen. But the Outside dogs, though
practically broken in since their landing, did not
amount to much. Three were short-haired pointers,
one was a Newfoundland, and the other two were mongrels
of indeterminate breed. They did not seem to know
anything, these newcomers. Buck and his comrades
looked upon them with disgust, and though he speedily
taught them their places and what not to do, he could
not teach them what to do. They did not take kindly
to trace and trail. With the exception of the
two mongrels, they were bewildered and spirit-broken
by the strange savage environment in which they found
themselves and by the ill treatment they had received.
The two mongrels were without spirit at all; bones
were the only things breakable about them.
With the newcomers hopeless and forlorn,
and the old team worn out by twenty-five hundred miles
of continuous trail, the outlook was anything but
bright. The two men, however, were quite cheerful.
And they were proud, too. They were doing the
thing in style, with fourteen dogs. They had
seen other sleds depart over the Pass for Dawson, or
come in from Dawson, but never had they seen a sled
with so many as fourteen dogs. In the nature
of Arctic travel there was a reason why fourteen dogs
should not drag one sled, and that was that one sled
could not carry the food for fourteen dogs. But
Charles and Hal did not know this. They had worked
the trip out with a pencil, so much to a dog, so many
dogs, so many days, Q.E.D. Mercedes looked over
their shoulders and nodded comprehensively, it was
all so very simple.
Late next morning Buck led the long
team up the street. There was nothing lively
about it, no snap or go in him and his fellows.
They were starting dead weary. Four times he
had covered the distance between Salt Water and Dawson,
and the knowledge that, jaded and tired, he was facing
the same trail once more, made him bitter. His
heart was not in the work, nor was the heart of any
dog. The Outsides were timid and frightened,
the Insides without confidence in their masters.
Buck felt vaguely that there was no
depending upon these two men and the woman. They
did not know how to do anything, and as the days went
by it became apparent that they could not learn.
They were slack in all things, without order or discipline.
It took them half the night to pitch a slovenly camp,
and half the morning to break that camp and get the
sled loaded in fashion so slovenly that for the rest
of the day they were occupied in stopping and rearranging
the load. Some days they did not make ten miles.
On other days they were unable to get started at all.
And on no day did they succeed in making more than
half the distance used by the men as a basis in their
dog-food computation.
It was inevitable that they should
go short on dog-food. But they hastened it by
overfeeding, bringing the day nearer when underfeeding
would commence. The Outside dogs, whose digestions
had not been trained by chronic famine to make the
most of little, had voracious appetites. And
when, in addition to this, the worn-out huskies pulled
weakly, Hal decided that the orthodox ration was too
small. He doubled it. And to cap it all,
when Mercedes, with tears in her pretty eyes and a
quaver in her throat, could not cajole him into giving
the dogs still more, she stole from the fish-sacks
and fed them slyly. But it was not food that
Buck and the huskies needed, but rest. And though
they were making poor time, the heavy load they dragged
sapped their strength severely.
Then came the underfeeding. Hal
awoke one day to the fact that his dog-food was half
gone and the distance only quarter covered; further,
that for love or money no additional dog-food was to
be obtained. So he cut down even the orthodox
ration and tried to increase the day’s travel.
His sister and brother-in-law seconded him; but they
were frustrated by their heavy outfit and their own
incompetence. It was a simple matter to give
the dogs less food; but it was impossible to make
the dogs travel faster, while their own inability to
get under way earlier in the morning prevented them
from travelling longer hours. Not only did they
not know how to work dogs, but they did not know how
to work themselves.
The first to go was Dub. Poor
blundering thief that he was, always getting caught
and punished, he had none the less been a faithful
worker. His wrenched shoulder-blade, untreated
and unrested, went from bad to worse, till finally
Hal shot him with the big Colt’s revolver.
It is a saying of the country that an Outside dog
starves to death on the ration of the husky, so the
six Outside dogs under Buck could do no less than
die on half the ration of the husky. The Newfoundland
went first, followed by the three short-haired pointers,
the two mongrels hanging more grittily on to life,
but going in the end.
By this time all the amenities and
gentlenesses of the Southland had fallen away from
the three people. Shorn of its glamour and romance,
Arctic travel became to them a reality too harsh for
their manhood and womanhood. Mercedes ceased
weeping over the dogs, being too occupied with weeping
over herself and with quarrelling with her husband
and brother. To quarrel was the one thing they
were never too weary to do. Their irritability
arose out of their misery, increased with it, doubled
upon it, outdistanced it. The wonderful patience
of the trail which comes to men who toil hard and
suffer sore, and remain sweet of speech and kindly,
did not come to these two men and the woman. They
had no inkling of such a patience. They were
stiff and in pain; their muscles ached, their bones
ached, their very hearts ached; and because of this
they became sharp of speech, and hard words were first
on their lips in the morning and last at night.
Charles and Hal wrangled whenever
Mercedes gave them a chance. It was the cherished
belief of each that he did more than his share of the
work, and neither forbore to speak this belief at every
opportunity. Sometimes Mercedes sided with her
husband, sometimes with her brother. The result
was a beautiful and unending family quarrel. Starting
from a dispute as to which should chop a few sticks
for the fire (a dispute which concerned only Charles
and Hal), presently would be lugged in the rest of
the family, fathers, mothers, uncles, cousins, people
thousands of miles away, and some of them dead.
That Hal’s views on art, or the sort of society
plays his mother’s brother wrote, should have
anything to do with the chopping of a few sticks of
firewood, passes comprehension; nevertheless the quarrel
was as likely to tend in that direction as in the
direction of Charles’s political prejudices.
And that Charles’s sister’s tale-bearing
tongue should be relevant to the building of a Yukon
fire, was apparent only to Mercedes, who disburdened
herself of copious opinions upon that topic, and incidentally
upon a few other traits unpleasantly peculiar to her
husband’s family. In the meantime the fire
remained unbuilt, the camp half pitched, and the dogs
unfed.
Mercedes nursed a special grievance the
grievance of sex. She was pretty and soft, and
had been chivalrously treated all her days. But
the present treatment by her husband and brother was
everything save chivalrous. It was her custom
to be helpless. They complained. Upon which
impeachment of what to her was her most essential sex-prerogative,
she made their lives unendurable. She no longer
considered the dogs, and because she was sore and
tired, she persisted in riding on the sled. She
was pretty and soft, but she weighed one hundred and
twenty pounds a lusty last straw to the
load dragged by the weak and starving animals.
She rode for days, till they fell in the traces and
the sled stood still. Charles and Hal begged
her to get off and walk, pleaded with her, entreated,
the while she wept and importuned Heaven with a recital
of their brutality.
On one occasion they took her off
the sled by main strength. They never did it
again. She let her legs go limp like a spoiled
child, and sat down on the trail. They went on
their way, but she did not move. After they had
travelled three miles they unloaded the sled, came
back for her, and by main strength put her on the
sled again.
In the excess of their own misery
they were callous to the suffering of their animals.
Hal’s theory, which he practised on others, was
that one must get hardened. He had started out
preaching it to his sister and brother-in-law.
Failing there, he hammered it into the dogs with a
club. At the Five Fingers the dog-food gave out,
and a toothless old squaw offered to trade them a
few pounds of frozen horse-hide for the Colt’s
revolver that kept the big hunting-knife company at
Hal’s hip. A poor substitute for food was
this hide, just as it had been stripped from the starved
horses of the cattlemen six months back. In its
frozen state it was more like strips of galvanized
iron, and when a dog wrestled it into his stomach
it thawed into thin and innutritious leathery strings
and into a mass of short hair, irritating and indigestible.
And through it all Buck staggered
along at the head of the team as in a nightmare.
He pulled when he could; when he could no longer pull,
he fell down and remained down till blows from whip
or club drove him to his feet again. All the
stiffness and gloss had gone out of his beautiful
furry coat. The hair hung down, limp and draggled,
or matted with dried blood where Hal’s club
had bruised him. His muscles had wasted away
to knotty strings, and the flesh pads had disappeared,
so that each rib and every bone in his frame were
outlined cleanly through the loose hide that was wrinkled
in folds of emptiness. It was heartbreaking,
only Buck’s heart was unbreakable. The man
in the red sweater had proved that.
As it was with Buck, so was it with
his mates. They were perambulating skeletons.
There were seven all together, including him.
In their very great misery they had become insensible
to the bite of the lash or the bruise of the club.
The pain of the beating was dull and distant, just
as the things their eyes saw and their ears heard seemed
dull and distant. They were not half living,
or quarter living. They were simply so many bags
of bones in which sparks of life fluttered faintly.
When a halt was made, they dropped down in the traces
like dead dogs, and the spark dimmed and paled and
seemed to go out. And when the club or whip fell
upon them, the spark fluttered feebly up, and they
tottered to their feet and staggered on.
There came a day when Billee, the
good-natured, fell and could not rise. Hal had
traded off his revolver, so he took the axe and knocked
Billee on the head as he lay in the traces, then cut
the carcass out of the harness and dragged it to one
side. Buck saw, and his mates saw, and they knew
that this thing was very close to them. On the
next day Koona went, and but five of them remained:
Joe, too far gone to be malignant; Pike, crippled
and limping, only half conscious and not conscious
enough longer to malinger; Sol-leks, the one-eyed,
still faithful to the toil of trace and trail, and
mournful in that he had so little strength with which
to pull; Teek, who had not travelled so far that winter
and who was now beaten more than the others because
he was fresher; and Buck, still at the head of the
team, but no longer enforcing discipline or striving
to enforce it, blind with weakness half the time and
keeping the trail by the loom of it and by the dim
feel of his feet.
It was beautiful spring weather, but
neither dogs nor humans were aware of it. Each
day the sun rose earlier and set later. It was
dawn by three in the morning, and twilight lingered
till nine at night. The whole long day was a
blaze of sunshine. The ghostly winter silence
had given way to the great spring murmur of awakening
life. This murmur arose from all the land, fraught
with the joy of living. It came from the things
that lived and moved again, things which had been
as dead and which had not moved during the long months
of frost. The sap was rising in the pines.
The willows and aspens were bursting out in young buds.
Shrubs and vines were putting on fresh garbs of green.
Crickets sang in the nights, and in the days all manner
of creeping, crawling things rustled forth into the
sun. Partridges and woodpeckers were booming and
knocking in the forest. Squirrels were chattering,
birds singing, and overhead honked the wild-fowl driving
up from the south in cunning wedges that split the
air.
From every hill slope came the trickle
of running water, the music of unseen fountains.
All things were thawing, bending, snapping. The
Yukon was straining to break loose the ice that bound
it down. It ate away from beneath; the sun ate
from above. Air-holes formed, fissures sprang
and spread apart, while thin sections of ice fell through
bodily into the river. And amid all this bursting,
rending, throbbing of awakening life, under the blazing
sun and through the soft-sighing breezes, like wayfarers
to death, staggered the two men, the woman, and the
huskies.
With the dogs falling, Mercedes weeping
and riding, Hal swearing innocuously, and Charles’s
eyes wistfully watering, they staggered into John
Thornton’s camp at the mouth of White River.
When they halted, the dogs dropped down as though
they had all been struck dead. Mercedes dried
her eyes and looked at John Thornton. Charles
sat down on a log to rest. He sat down very slowly
and painstakingly what of his great stiffness.
Hal did the talking. John Thornton was whittling
the last touches on an axe-handle he had made from
a stick of birch. He whittled and listened, gave
monosyllabic replies, and, when it was asked, terse
advice. He knew the breed, and he gave his advice
in the certainty that it would not be followed.
“They told us up above that
the bottom was dropping out of the trail and that
the best thing for us to do was to lay over,”
Hal said in response to Thornton’s warning to
take no more chances on the rotten ice. “They
told us we couldn’t make White River, and here
we are.” This last with a sneering ring
of triumph in it.
“And they told you true,”
John Thornton answered. “The bottom’s
likely to drop out at any moment. Only fools,
with the blind luck of fools, could have made it.
I tell you straight, I wouldn’t risk my carcass
on that ice for all the gold in Alaska.”
“That’s because you’re
not a fool, I suppose,” said Hal. “All
the same, we’ll go on to Dawson.”
He uncoiled his whip. “Get up there, Buck!
Hi! Get up there! Mush on!”
Thornton went on whittling. It
was idle, he knew, to get between a fool and his folly;
while two or three fools more or less would not alter
the scheme of things.
But the team did not get up at the
command. It had long since passed into the stage
where blows were required to rouse it. The whip
flashed out, here and there, on its merciless errands.
John Thornton compressed his lips. Sol-leks was
the first to crawl to his feet. Teek followed.
Joe came next, yelping with pain. Pike made painful
efforts. Twice he fell over, when half up, and
on the third attempt managed to rise. Buck made
no effort. He lay quietly where he had fallen.
The lash bit into him again and again, but he neither
whined nor struggled. Several times Thornton
started, as though to speak, but changed his mind.
A moisture came into his eyes, and, as the whipping
continued, he arose and walked irresolutely up and
down.
This was the first time Buck had failed,
in itself a sufficient reason to drive Hal into a
rage. He exchanged the whip for the customary
club. Buck refused to move under the rain of
heavier blows which now fell upon him. Like his
mates, he was barely able to get up, but, unlike them,
he had made up his mind not to get up. He had
a vague feeling of impending doom. This had been
strong upon him when he pulled in to the bank, and
it had not departed from him. What of the thin
and rotten ice he had felt under his feet all day,
it seemed that he sensed disaster close at hand, out
there ahead on the ice where his master was trying
to drive him. He refused to stir. So greatly
had he suffered, and so far gone was he, that the
blows did not hurt much. And as they continued
to fall upon him, the spark of life within flickered
and went down. It was nearly out. He felt
strangely numb. As though from a great distance,
he was aware that he was being beaten. The last
sensations of pain left him. He no longer felt
anything, though very faintly he could hear the impact
of the club upon his body. But it was no longer
his body, it seemed so far away.
And then, suddenly, without warning,
uttering a cry that was inarticulate and more like
the cry of an animal, John Thornton sprang upon the
man who wielded the club. Hal was hurled backward,
as though struck by a falling tree. Mercedes
screamed. Charles looked on wistfully, wiped
his watery eyes, but did not get up because of his
stiffness.
John Thornton stood over Buck, struggling
to control himself, too convulsed with rage to speak.
“If you strike that dog again,
I’ll kill you,” he at last managed to say
in a choking voice.
“It’s my dog,” Hal
replied, wiping the blood from his mouth as he came
back. “Get out of my way, or I’ll
fix you. I’m going to Dawson.”
Thornton stood between him and Buck,
and evinced no intention of getting out of the way.
Hal drew his long hunting-knife. Mercedes screamed,
cried, laughed, and manifested the chaotic abandonment
of hysteria. Thornton rapped Hal’s knuckles
with the axe-handle, knocking the knife to the ground.
He rapped his knuckles again as he tried to pick it
up. Then he stooped, picked it up himself, and
with two strokes cut Buck’s traces.
Hal had no fight left in him.
Besides, his hands were full with his sister, or his
arms, rather; while Buck was too near dead to be of
further use in hauling the sled. A few minutes
later they pulled out from the bank and down the river.
Buck heard them go and raised his head to see, Pike
was leading, Sol-leks was at the wheel, and between
were Joe and Teek. They were limping and staggering.
Mercedes was riding the loaded sled. Hal guided
at the gee-pole, and Charles stumbled along in the
rear.
As Buck watched them, Thornton knelt
beside him and with rough, kindly hands searched for
broken bones. By the time his search had disclosed
nothing more than many bruises and a state of terrible
starvation, the sled was a quarter of a mile away.
Dog and man watched it crawling along over the ice.
Suddenly, they saw its back end drop down, as into
a rut, and the gee-pole, with Hal clinging to it,
jerk into the air. Mercedes’s scream came
to their ears. They saw Charles turn and make
one step to run back, and then a whole section of
ice give way and dogs and humans disappear. A
yawning hole was all that was to be seen. The
bottom had dropped out of the trail.
John Thornton and Buck looked at each other.
“You poor devil,” said John Thornton,
and Buck licked his hand.