Man rarely places a proper valuation
upon his womankind, at least not until deprived of
them. He has no conception of the subtle atmosphere
exhaled by the sex feminine, so long as he bathes in
it; but let it be withdrawn, and an ever-growing void
begins to manifest itself in his existence, and he
becomes hungry, in a vague sort of way, for a something
so indefinite that he cannot characterize it.
If his comrades have no more experience than himself,
they will shake their heads dubiously and dose him
with strong physic. But the hunger will continue
and become stronger; he will lose interest in the things
of his everyday life and wax morbid; and one day,
when the emptiness has become unbearable, a revelation
will dawn upon him.
In the Yukon country, when this comes
to pass, the man usually provisions a poling boat,
if it is summer, and if winter, harnesses his dogs,
and heads for the Southland. A few months later,
supposing him to be possessed of a faith in the country,
he returns with a wife to share with him in that faith,
and incidentally in his hardships. This but serves
to show the innate selfishness of man. It also
brings us to the trouble of ‘Scruff’ Mackenzie,
which occurred in the old days, before the country
was stampeded and staked by a tidal-wave of the che-cha-quas,
and when the Klondike’s only claim to notice
was its salmon fisheries.
‘Scruff’ Mackenzie bore
the earmarks of a frontier birth and a frontier life.
His face was stamped with twenty-five
years of incessant struggle with Nature in her wildest
moods, the last two, the wildest and hardest
of all, having been spent in groping for the gold
which lies in the shadow of the Arctic Circle.
When the yearning sickness came upon him, he was not
surprised, for he was a practical man and had seen
other men thus stricken. But he showed no sign
of his malady, save that he worked harder. All
summer he fought mosquitoes and washed the sure-thing
bars of the Stuart River for a double grubstake.
Then he floated a raft of houselogs down the Yukon
to Forty Mile, and put together as comfortable a cabin
as any the camp could boast of. In fact, it showed
such cozy promise that many men elected to be his
partner and to come and live with him. But he
crushed their aspirations with rough speech, peculiar
for its strength and brevity, and bought a double supply
of grub from the trading-post.
As has been noted, ‘Scruff’
Mackenzie was a practical man. If he wanted a
thing he usually got it, but in doing so, went no farther
out of his way than was necessary. Though a son
of toil and hardship, he was averse to a journey of
six hundred miles on the ice, a second of two thousand
miles on the ocean, and still a third thousand miles
or so to his last stamping-grounds, all
in the mere quest of a wife. Life was too short.
So he rounded up his dogs, lashed a curious freight
to his sled, and faced across the divide whose westward
slopes were drained by the head-reaches of the Tanana.
He was a sturdy traveler, and his
wolf-dogs could work harder and travel farther on
less grub than any other team in the Yukon. Three
weeks later he strode into a hunting-camp of the Upper
Tanana Sticks. They marveled at his temerity;
for they had a bad name and had been known to kill
white men for as trifling a thing as a sharp ax or
a broken rifle.
But he went among them single-handed,
his bearing being a delicious composite of humility,
familiarity, sang-froid, and insolence. It required
a deft hand and deep knowledge of the barbaric mind
effectually to handle such diverse weapons; but he
was a past-master in the art, knowing when to conciliate
and when to threaten with Jove-like wrath.
He first made obeisance to the Chief
Thling-Tinneh, presenting him with a couple of pounds
of black tea and tobacco, and thereby winning his
most cordial regard. Then he mingled with the
men and maidens, and that night gave a potlach.
The snow was beaten down in the form
of an oblong, perhaps a hundred feet in length and
quarter as many across. Down the center a long
fire was built, while either side was carpeted with
spruce boughs. The lodges were forsaken, and
the fivescore or so members of the tribe gave tongue
to their folk-chants in honor of their guest.
‘Scruff’ Mackenzie’s
two years had taught him the not many hundred words
of their vocabulary, and he had likewise conquered
their deep gutturals, their Japanese idioms, constructions,
and honorific and agglutinative particles. So
he made oration after their manner, satisfying their
instinctive poetry-love with crude flights of eloquence
and metaphorical contortions. After Thling-Tinneh
and the Shaman had responded in kind, he made trifling
presents to the menfolk, joined in their singing,
and proved an expert in their fifty-two-stick gambling
game.
And they smoked his tobacco and were
pleased. But among the younger men there was
a defiant attitude, a spirit of braggadocio, easily
understood by the raw insinuations of the toothless
squaws and the giggling of the maidens.
They had known few white men, ’Sons of the Wolf,’
but from those few they had learned strange lessons.
Nor had ‘Scruff’ Mackenzie,
for all his seeming carelessness, failed to note these
phenomena. In truth, rolled in his sleeping-furs,
he thought it all over, thought seriously, and emptied
many pipes in mapping out a campaign. One maiden
only had caught his fancy, none other than
Zarinska, daughter to the chief. In features,
form, and poise, answering more nearly to the white
man’s type of beauty, she was almost an anomaly
among her tribal sisters. He would possess her,
make her his wife, and name her ah, he
would name her Gertrude! Having thus decided,
he rolled over on his side and dropped off to sleep,
a true son of his all-conquering race, a Samson among
the Philistines.
It was slow work and a stiff game;
but ‘Scruff’ Mackenzie maneuvered cunningly,
with an unconcern which served to puzzle the Sticks.
He took great care to impress the men that he was
a sure shot and a mighty hunter, and the camp rang
with his plaudits when he brought down a moose at
six hundred yards. Of a night he visited in Chief
Thling-Tinneh’s lodge of moose and cariboo skins,
talking big and dispensing tobacco with a lavish hand.
Nor did he fail to likewise honor the Shaman; for
he realized the medicine-man’s influence with
his people, and was anxious to make of him an ally.
But that worthy was high and mighty, refused to be
propitiated, and was unerringly marked down as a prospective
enemy.
Though no opening presented for an
interview with Zarinska, Mackenzie stole many a glance
to her, giving fair warning of his intent. And
well she knew, yet coquettishly surrounded herself
with a ring of women whenever the men were away and
he had a chance. But he was in no hurry; besides,
he knew she could not help but think of him, and a
few days of such thought would only better his suit.
At last, one night, when he deemed
the time to be ripe, he abruptly left the chief’s
smoky dwelling and hastened to a neighboring lodge.
As usual, she sat with squaws and maidens about
her, all engaged in sewing moccasins and beadwork.
They laughed at his entrance, and badinage, which
linked Zarinska to him, ran high. But one after
the other they were unceremoniously bundled into the
outer snow, whence they hurried to spread the tale
through all the camp.
His cause was well pleaded, in her
tongue, for she did not know his, and at the end of
two hours he rose to go.
’So Zarinska will come to the
White Man’s lodge? Good! I go now to
have talk with thy father, for he may not be so minded.
And I will give him many tokens; but he must not ask
too much. If he say no? Good! Zarinska
shall yet come to the White Man’s lodge.’
He had already lifted the skin flap
to depart, when a low exclamation brought him back
to the girl’s side. She brought herself
to her knees on the bearskin mat, her face aglow with
true Eve-light, and shyly unbuckled his heavy belt.
He looked down, perplexed, suspicious, his ears alert
for the slightest sound without.
But her next move disarmed his doubt,
and he smiled with pleasure. She took from her
sewing bag a moosehide sheath, brave with bright beadwork,
fantastically designed. She drew his great hunting-knife,
gazed reverently along the keen edge, half tempted
to try it with her thumb, and shot it into place in
its new home. Then she slipped the sheath along
the belt to its customary resting-place, just above
the hip. For all the world, it was like a scene
of olden time, a lady and her knight.
Mackenzie drew her up full height
and swept her red lips with his moustache, the, to
her, foreign caress of the Wolf. It was a meeting
of the stone age and the steel; but she was none the
less a woman, as her crimson cheeks and the luminous
softness of her eyes attested.
There was a thrill of excitement in
the air as ‘Scruff’ Mackenzie, a bulky
bundle under his arm, threw open the flap of Thling-Tinneh’s
tent. Children were running about in the open,
dragging dry wood to the scene of the potlach, a babble
of women’s voices was growing in intensity,
the young men were consulting in sullen groups, while
from the Shaman’s lodge rose the eerie sounds
of an incantation.
The chief was alone with his blear-eyed
wife, but a glance sufficed to tell Mackenzie that
the news was already told. So he plunged at once
into the business, shifting the beaded sheath prominently
to the fore as advertisement of the betrothal.
’O Thling-Tinneh, mighty chief
of the Sticks And the land of the Tanana, ruler of
the salmon and the bear, the moose and the cariboo!
The White Man is before thee with a great purpose.
Many moons has his lodge been empty, and he is lonely.
And his heart has eaten itself in silence, and grown
hungry for a woman to sit beside him in his lodge,
to meet him from the hunt with warm fire and good food.
He has heard strange things, the patter of baby moccasins
and the sound of children’s voices. And
one night a vision came upon him, and he beheld the
Raven, who is thy father, the great Raven, who is the
father of all the Sticks. And the Raven spake
to the lonely White Man, saying: “Bind
thou thy moccasins upon thee, and gird thy snow-shoes
on, and lash thy sled with food for many sleeps and
fine tokens for the Chief Thling-Tinneh. For
thou shalt turn thy face to where the mid-spring sun
is wont to sink below the land and journey to this
great chief’s hunting-grounds. There thou
shalt make big presents, and Thling-Tinneh, who is
my son, shall become to thee as a father. In his
lodge there is a maiden into whom I breathed the breath
of life for thee. This maiden shalt thou take
to wife.” ’O Chief, thus spake the
great Raven; thus do I lay many presents at thy feet;
thus am I come to take thy daughter!’ The old
man drew his furs about him with crude consciousness
of royalty, but delayed reply while a youngster crept
in, delivered a quick message to appear before the
council, and was gone.
’O White Man, whom we have named
Moose-Killer, also known as the Wolf, and the Son
of the Wolf! We know thou comest of a mighty race;
we are proud to have thee our potlach-guest; but the
king-salmon does not mate with the dogsalmon, nor
the Raven with the Wolf.’ ‘Not so!’
cried Mackenzie. ’The daughters of the
Raven have I met in the camps of the Wolf, the
squaw of Mortimer, the squaw of Tregidgo, the squaw
of Barnaby, who came two ice-runs back, and I have
heard of other squaws, though my eyes beheld
them not.’ ’Son, your words are true;
but it were evil mating, like the water with the sand,
like the snow-flake with the sun. But met you
one Mason and his squaw’ No?
He came ten ice-runs ago, the
first of all the Wolves. And with him there was
a mighty man, straight as a willow-shoot, and tall;
strong as the bald-faced grizzly, with a heart like
the full summer moon; his-’ ‘Oh!’
interrupted Mackenzie, recognizing the well-known Northland
figure, ‘Malemute Kid!’ ’The same, a
mighty man. But saw you aught of the squaw?
She was full sister to Zarinska.’ ’Nay,
Chief; but I have heard. Mason far,
far to the north, a spruce-tree, heavy with years,
crushed out his life beneath. But his love was
great, and he had much gold. With this, and her
boy, she journeyed countless sleeps toward the winter’s
noonday sun, and there she yet lives, no
biting frost, no snow, no summer’s midnight
sun, no winter’s noonday night.’
A second messenger interrupted with
imperative summons from the council.
As Mackenzie threw him into the snow,
he caught a glimpse of the swaying forms before the
council-fire, heard the deep basses of the men in
rhythmic chant, and knew the Shaman was fanning the
anger of his people. Time pressed. He turned
upon the chief.
’Come! I wish thy child.
And now, see! Here are tobacco, tea, many cups
of sugar, warm blankets, handkerchiefs, both good and
large; and here, a true rifle, with many bullets and
much powder.’ ‘Nay,’ replied
the old man, struggling against the great wealth spread
before him. ’Even now are my people come
together. They will not have this marriage.’
‘But thou art chief.’
’Yet do my young men rage because the Wolves
have taken their maidens so that they may not marry.’
’Listen, O Thling-Tinneh! Ere the night
has passed into the day, the Wolf shall face his dogs
to the Mountains of the East and fare forth to the
Country of the Yukon. And Zarinska shall break
trail for his dogs.’ ’And ere the
night has gained its middle, my young men may fling
to the dogs the flesh of the Wolf, and his bones be
scattered in the snow till the springtime lay them
bare.’ It was threat and counter-threat.
Mackenzie’s bronzed face flushed darkly.
He raised his voice. The old squaw, who till
now had sat an impassive spectator, made to creep by
him for the door.
The song of the men broke suddenly
and there was a hubbub of many voices as he whirled
the old woman roughly to her couch of skins.
’Again I cry listen,
O Thling-Tinneh! The Wolf dies with teeth fast-locked,
and with him there shall sleep ten of thy strongest
men, men who are needed, for the hunting
is not begun, and the fishing is not many moons away.
And again, of what profit should I die? I know
the custom of thy people; thy share of my wealth shall
be very small. Grant me thy child, and it shall
all be thine. And yet again, my brothers will
come, and they are many, and their maws are never filled;
and the daughters of the Raven shall bear children
in the lodges of the Wolf. My people are greater
than thy people. It is destiny. Grant, and
all this wealth is thine.’ Moccasins were
crunching the snow without. Mackenzie threw his
rifle to cock, and loosened the twin Colts in his
belt.
‘Grant, O Chief!’ ‘And
yet will my people say no.’ ’Grant,
and the wealth is thine. Then shall I deal with
thy people after.’ ’The Wolf will
have it so. I will take his tokens, but
I would warn him.’ Mackenzie passed over
the goods, taking care to clog the rifle’s ejector,
and capping the bargain with a kaleidoscopic silk kerchief.
The Shaman and half a dozen young braves entered, but
he shouldered boldly among them and passed out.
‘Pack!’ was his laconic
greeting to Zarinska as he passed her lodge and hurried
to harness his dogs. A few minutes later he swept
into the council at the head of the team, the woman
by his side. He took his place at the upper end
of the oblong, by the side of the chief. To his
left, a step to the rear, he stationed Zarinska, her
proper place. Besides, the time was ripe for
mischief, and there was need to guard his back.
On either side, the men crouched to
the fire, their voices lifted in a folk-chant out
of the forgotten past. Full of strange, halting
cadences and haunting recurrences, it was not beautiful.
‘Fearful’ may inadequately express it.
At the lower end, under the eye of the Shaman, danced
half a score of women. Stern were his reproofs
of those who did not wholly abandon themselves to
the ecstasy of the rite. Half hidden in their
heavy masses of raven hair, all dishevelled and falling
to their waists, they slowly swayed to and fro, their
forms rippling to an ever-changing rhythm.
It was a weird scene; an anachronism.
To the south, the nineteenth century was reeling off
the few years of its last decade; here flourished
man primeval, a shade removed from the prehistoric
cave-dweller, forgotten fragment of the Elder World.
The tawny wolf-dogs sat between their skin-clad masters
or fought for room, the firelight cast backward from
their red eyes and dripping fangs. The woods,
in ghostly shroud, slept on unheeding.
The White Silence, for the moment
driven to the rimming forest, seemed ever crushing
inward; the stars danced with great leaps, as is their
wont in the time of the Great Cold; while the Spirits
of the Pole trailed their robes of glory athwart the
heavens.
‘Scruff’ Mackenzie dimly
realized the wild grandeur of the setting as his eyes
ranged down the fur-fringed sides in quest of missing
faces. They rested for a moment on a newborn
babe, suckling at its mother’s naked breast.
It was forty below, seven and odd degrees
of frost. He thought of the tender women of his
own race and smiled grimly. Yet from the loins
of some such tender woman had he sprung with a kingly
inheritance, an inheritance which gave to
him and his dominance over the land and sea, over
the animals and the peoples of all the zones.
Single-handed against fivescore, girt by the Arctic
winter, far from his own, he felt the prompting of
his heritage, the desire to possess, the wild danger love,
the thrill of battle, the power to conquer or to die.
The singing and the dancing ceased,
and the Shaman flared up in rude eloquence.
Through the sinuosities of their vast
mythology, he worked cunningly upon the credulity
of his people. The case was strong. Opposing
the creative principles as embodied in the Crow and
the Raven, he stigmatized Mackenzie as the Wolf, the
fighting and the destructive principle. Not only
was the combat of these forces spiritual, but men
fought, each to his totem. They were the children
of Jelchs, the Raven, the Promethean fire-bringer;
Mackenzie was the child of the Wolf, or in other words,
the Devil. For them to bring a truce to this perpetual
warfare, to marry their daughters to the arch-enemy,
were treason and blasphemy of the highest order.
No phrase was harsh nor figure vile enough in branding
Mackenzie as a sneaking interloper and emissary of
Satan. There was a subdued, savage roar in the
deep chests of his listeners as he took the swing
of his peroration.
’Aye, my brothers, Jelchs is
all-powerful! Did he not bring heaven-borne fire
that we might be warm? Did he not draw the sun,
moon, and stars, from their holes that we might see?
Did he not teach us that we might fight the Spirits
of Famine and of Frost? But now Jelchs is angry
with his children, and they are grown to a handful,
and he will not help.
’For they have forgotten him,
and done evil things, and trod bad trails, and taken
his enemies into their lodges to sit by their fires.
And the Raven is sorrowful at the wickedness of his
children; but when they shall rise up and show they
have come back, he will come out of the darkness to
aid them. O brothers! the Fire-Bringer has whispered
messages to thy Shaman; the same shall ye hear.
Let the young men take the young women to their lodges;
let them fly at the throat of the Wolf; let them be
undying in their enmity! Then shall their women
become fruitful and they shall multiply into a mighty
people! And the Raven shall lead great tribes
of their fathers and their fathers’ fathers
from out of the North; and they shall beat back the
Wolves till they are as last year’s campfires;
and they shall again come to rule over all the land!
‘Tis the message of Jelchs, the Raven.’
This foreshadowing of the Messiah’s coming brought
a hoarse howl from the Sticks as they leaped to their
feet. Mackenzie slipped the thumbs of his mittens
and waited. There was a clamor for the ‘Fox,’
not to be stilled till one of the young men stepped
forward to speak.
’Brothers! The Shaman has
spoken wisely. The Wolves have taken our women,
and our men are childless. We are grown to a handful.
The Wolves have taken our warm furs and given for
them evil spirits which dwell in bottles, and clothes
which come not from the beaver or the lynx, but are
made from the grass.
And they are not warm, and our men
die of strange sicknesses. I, the Fox, have taken
no woman to wife; and why? Twice have the maidens
which pleased me gone to the camps of the Wolf.
Even now have I laid by skins of the beaver, of the
moose, of the cariboo, that I might win favor in the
eyes of Thling-Tinneh, that I might marry Zarinska,
his daughter. Even now are her snow-shoes bound
to her feet, ready to break trail for the dogs of
the Wolf. Nor do I speak for myself alone.
As I have done, so has the Bear.
He, too, had fain been the father of her children,
and many skins has he cured thereto. I speak for
all the young men who know not wives. The Wolves
are ever hungry. Always do they take the choice
meat at the killing. To the Ravens are left the
leavings.
‘There is Gugkla,’ he
cried, brutally pointing out one of the women, who
was a cripple.
’Her legs are bent like the
ribs of a birch canoe. She cannot gather wood
nor carry the meat of the hunters. Did the Wolves
choose her?’ ‘Ai! aï!’ vociferated
his tribesmen.
’There is Moyri, whose eyes
are crossed by the Evil Spirit. Even the babes
are affrighted when they gaze upon her, and it is said
the bald-face gives her the trail.
‘Was she chosen?’ Again the cruel applause
rang out.
’And there sits Pischet.
She does not hearken to my words. Never has she
heard the cry of the chit-chat, the voice of her husband,
the babble of her child.
’She lives in the White Silence.
Cared the Wolves aught for her? No! Theirs
is the choice of the kill; ours is the leavings.
’Brothers, it shall not be!
No more shall the Wolves slink among our campfires.
The time is come.’ A great streamer of fire,
the aurora borealis, purple, green, and
yellow, shot across the zenith, bridging horizon to
horizon. With head thrown back and arms extended,
he swayed to his climax.
’Behold! The spirits of
our fathers have arisen and great deeds are afoot
this night!’ He stepped back, and another young
man somewhat diffidently came forward, pushed on by
his comrades. He towered a full head above them,
his broad chest defiantly bared to the frost.
He swung tentatively from one foot to the other.
Words halted upon his tongue, and
he was ill at ease. His face was horrible to
look upon, for it had at one time been half torn away
by some terrific blow. At last he struck his
breast with his clenched fist, drawing sound as from
a drum, and his voice rumbled forth as does the surf
from an ocean cavern.
’I am the Bear, the
Silver-Tip and the Son of the Silver-Tip! When
my voice was yet as a girl’s, I slew the lynx,
the moose, and the cariboo; when it whistled like
the wolverines from under a cache, I crossed the Mountains
of the South and slew three of the White Rivers; when
it became as the roar of the Chinook, I met the bald-faced
grizzly, but gave no trail.’ At this he
paused, his hand significantly sweeping across his
hideous scars.
’I am not as the Fox. My
tongue is frozen like the river. I cannot make
great talk. My words are few. The Fox says
great deeds are afoot this night. Good!
Talk flows from his tongue like the freshets of the
spring, but he is chary of deeds.
’This night shall I do battle
with the Wolf. I shall slay him, and Zarinska
shall sit by my fire. The Bear has spoken.’
Though pandemonium raged about him, ‘Scruff’
Mackenzie held his ground.
Aware how useless was the rifle at
close quarters, he slipped both holsters to the fore,
ready for action, and drew his mittens till his hands
were barely shielded by the elbow gauntlets. He
knew there was no hope in attack en masse,
but true to his boast, was prepared to die with teeth
fast-locked. But the Bear restrained his comrades,
beating back the more impetuous with his terrible
fist. As the tumult began to die away, Mackenzie
shot a glance in the direction of Zarinska. It
was a superb picture. She was leaning forward
on her snow-shoes, lips apart and nostrils quivering,
like a tigress about to spring. Her great black
eyes were fixed upon her tribesmen, in fear and defiance.
So extreme the tension, she had forgotten to breathe.
With one hand pressed spasmodically against her breast
and the other as tightly gripped about the dog-whip,
she was as turned to stone. Even as he looked,
relief came to her. Her muscles loosened; with
a heavy sigh she settled back, giving him a look of
more than love of worship.
Thling-Tinneh was trying to speak,
but his people drowned his voice. Then Mackenzie
strode forward. The Fox opened his mouth to a
piercing yell, but so savagely did Mackenzie whirl
upon him that he shrank back, his larynx all agurgle
with suppressed sound. His discomfiture was greeted
with roars of laughter, and served to soothe his fellows
to a listening mood.
’Brothers! The White Man,
whom ye have chosen to call the Wolf, came among you
with fair words. He was not like the Innuit; he
spoke not lies. He came as a friend, as one who
would be a brother. But your men have had their
say, and the time for soft words is past.
’First, I will tell you that
the Shaman has an evil tongue and is a false prophet,
that the messages he spake are not those of the Fire-Bringer.
His ears are locked to the voice of the Raven, and
out of his own head he weaves cunning fancies, and
he has made fools of you. He has no power.
’When the dogs were killed and
eaten, and your stomachs were heavy with untanned
hide and strips of moccasins; when the old men died,
and the old women died, and the babes at the dry dugs
of the mothers died; when the land was dark, and ye
perished as do the salmon in the fall; aye, when the
famine was upon you, did the Shaman bring reward to
your hunters? did the Shaman put meat in your bellies?
Again I say, the Shaman is without power. Thus
I spit upon his face!’ Though taken aback by
the sacrilege, there was no uproar. Some of the
women were even frightened, but among the men there
was an uplifting, as though in preparation or anticipation
of the miracle. All eyes were turned upon the
two central figures. The priest realized the crucial
moment, felt his power tottering, opened his mouth
in denunciation, but fled backward before the truculent
advance, upraised fist, and flashing eyes, of Mackenzie.
He sneered and resumed.
’Was I stricken dead? Did
the lightning burn me? Did the stars fall from
the sky and crush me? Pish! I have done with
the dog. Now will I tell you of my people, who
are the mightiest of all the peoples, who rule in
all the lands. At first we hunt as I hunt, alone.
’After that we hunt in packs;
and at last, like the cariboo-run, we sweep across
all the land.
’Those whom we take into our
lodges live; those who will not come die. Zarinska
is a comely maiden, full and strong, fit to become
the mother of Wolves. Though I die, such shall
she become; for my brothers are many, and they will
follow the scent of my dogs.
’Listen to the Law of the Wolf:
Whoso taketh the life of one Wolf, the forfeit shall
ten of his people pay. In many lands has the price
been paid; in many lands shall it yet be paid.
’Now will I deal with the Fox
and the Bear. It seems they have cast eyes upon
the maiden. So? Behold, I have bought her!
Thling-Tinneh leans upon the rifle; the goods of purchase
are by his fire. Yet will I be fair to the young
men. To the Fox, whose tongue is dry with many
words, will I give of tobacco five long plugs.
’Thus will his mouth be wetted
that he may make much noise in the council. But
to the Bear, of whom I am well proud, will I give of
blankets two; of flour, twenty cups; of tobacco, double
that of the Fox; and if he fare with me over the Mountains
of the East, then will I give him a rifle, mate to
Thling-Tinneh’s. If not? Good!
The Wolf is weary of speech. Yet once again will
he say the Law: Whoso taketh the life of one
Wolf, the forfeit shall ten of his people pay.’
Mackenzie smiled as he stepped back
to his old position, but at heart he was full of trouble.
The night was yet dark. The girl came to his
side, and he listened closely as she told of the Bear’s
battle-tricks with the knife.
The decision was for war. In
a trice, scores of moccasins were widening the space
of beaten snow by the fire. There was much chatter
about the seeming defeat of the Shaman; some averred
he had but withheld his power, while others conned
past events and agreed with the Wolf. The Bear
came to the center of the battle-ground, a long naked
hunting-knife of Russian make in his hand. The
Fox called attention to Mackenzie’s revolvers;
so he stripped his belt, buckling it about Zarinska,
into whose hands he also entrusted his rifle.
She shook her head that she could not shoot, small
chance had a woman to handle such precious things.
’Then, if danger come by my
back, cry aloud, “My husband!” No; thus,
“My husband!"’
He laughed as she repeated it, pinched
her cheek, and reentered the circle. Not only
in reach and stature had the Bear the advantage of
him, but his blade was longer by a good two inches.
‘Scruff’ Mackenzie had looked into the
eyes of men before, and he knew it was a man who stood
against him; yet he quickened to the glint of light
on the steel, to the dominant pulse of his race.
Time and again he was forced to the
edge of the fire or the deep snow, and time and again,
with the foot tactics of the pugilist, he worked back
to the center. Not a voice was lifted in encouragement,
while his antagonist was heartened with applause,
suggestions, and warnings. But his teeth only
shut the tighter as the knives clashed together, and
he thrust or eluded with a coolness born of conscious
strength. At first he felt compassion for his
enemy; but this fled before the primal instinct of
life, which in turn gave way to the lust of slaughter.
The ten thousand years of culture fell from him, and
he was a cave-dweller, doing battle for his female.
Twice he pricked the Bear, getting
away unscathed; but the third time caught, and to
save himself, free hands closed on fighting hands,
and they came together.
Then did he realize the tremendous
strength of his opponent. His muscles were knotted
in painful lumps, and cords and tendons threatened
to snap with the strain; yet nearer and nearer came
the Russian steel. He tried to break away, but
only weakened himself. The fur-clad circle closed
in, certain of and anxious to see the final stroke.
But with wrestler’s trick, swinging partly to
the side, he struck at his adversary with his head.
Involuntarily the Bear leaned back, disturbing his
center of gravity. Simultaneous with this, Mackenzie
tripped properly and threw his whole weight forward,
hurling him clear through the circle into the deep
snow. The Bear floundered out and came back full
tilt.
‘O my husband!’ Zarinska’s
voice rang out, vibrant with danger.
To the twang of a bow-string, Mackenzie
swept low to the ground, and a bonebarbed arrow passed
over him into the breast of the Bear, whose momentum
carried him over his crouching foe. The next instant
Mackenzie was up and about. The bear lay motionless,
but across the fire was the Shaman, drawing a second
arrow. Mackenzie’s knife leaped short in
the air. He caught the heavy blade by the point.
There was a flash of light as it spanned the fire.
Then the Shaman, the hilt alone appearing without
his throat, swayed and pitched forward into the glowing
embers.
Click! Click! the
Fox had possessed himself of Thling-Tinneh’s
rifle and was vainly trying to throw a shell into
place. But he dropped it at the sound of Mackenzie’s
laughter.
’So the Fox has not learned
the way of the plaything? He is yet a woman.
‘Come! Bring it, that I
may show thee!’ The Fox hesitated.
‘Come, I say!’ He slouched forward like
a beaten cur.
‘Thus, and thus; so the thing
is done.’ A shell flew into place and the
trigger was at cock as Mackenzie brought it to shoulder.
’The Fox has said great deeds
were afoot this night, and he spoke true. There
have been great deeds, yet least among them were those
of the Fox. Is he still intent to take Zarinska
to his lodge? Is he minded to tread the trail
already broken by the Shaman and the Bear?
‘No? Good!’
Mackenzie turned contemptuously and
drew his knife from the priest’s throat.
’Are any of the young men so
minded? If so, the Wolf will take them by two
and three till none are left. No? Good!
Thling-Tinneh, I now give thee this rifle a second
time. If, in the days to come, thou shouldst
journey to the Country of the Yukon, know thou that
there shall always be a place and much food by the
fire of the Wolf. The night is now passing into
the day. I go, but I may come again. And
for the last time, remember the Law of the Wolf!’
He was supernatural in their sight as he rejoined
Zarinska. She took her place at the head of the
team, and the dogs swung into motion. A few moments
later they were swallowed up by the ghostly forest.
Till now Mackenzie had waited; he slipped into his
snow-shoes to follow.
‘Has the Wolf forgotten the
five long plugs?’ Mackenzie turned upon the
Fox angrily; then the humor of it struck him.
‘I will give thee one short
plug.’ ‘As the Wolf sees fit,’
meekly responded the Fox, stretching out his hand.