When Big Jim Belden ventured the apparently
innocuous proposition that mush-ice was ‘rather
pecooliar,’ he little dreamed of what it would
lead to.
Neither did Lon McFane, when he affirmed
that anchor-ice was even more so; nor did Bettles,
as he instantly disagreed, declaring the very existence
of such a form to be a bugaboo.
‘An’ ye’d be tellin’
me this,’ cried Lon, ’after the years ye’ve
spint in the land! An’ we atin’ out
the same pot this many’s the day!’ ’But
the thing’s agin reasin,’ insisted Bettles.
‘Look you, water’s warmer
than ice ’ ‘An’ little
the difference, once ye break through.’
‘Still it’s warmer, because
it ain’t froze. An’ you say it freezes
on the bottom?’ ‘Only the anchor-ice,
David, only the anchor-ice. An’ have ye
niver drifted along, the water clear as glass, whin
suddin, belike a cloud over the sun, the mushy-ice
comes bubblin’ up an’ up till from bank
to bank an’ bind to bind it’s drapin’
the river like a first snowfall?’ ’Unh,
hunh! more’n once when I took a doze at the
steering-oar. But it allus come out the nighest
side-channel, an’ not bubblin’ up an’
up.’ ‘But with niver a wink at the
helm?’
‘No; nor you. It’s
agin reason. I’ll leave it to any man!’
Bettles appealed to the circle about the stove, but
the fight was on between himself and Lon McFane.
‘Reason or no reason, it’s
the truth I’m tellin’ ye. Last fall,
a year gone, ‘twas Sitka Charley and meself
saw the sight, droppin’ down the riffle ye’ll
remember below Fort Reliance. An’ regular
fall weather it was the glint o’
the sun on the golden larch an’ the quakin’
aspens; an’ the glister of light on ivery ripple;
an’ beyand, the winter an’ the blue haze
of the North comin’ down hand in hand. It’s
well ye know the same, with a fringe to the river
an’ the ice formin’ thick in the eddies an’
a snap an’ sparkle to the air, an’ ye a-feelin’
it through all yer blood, a-takin’ new lease
of life with ivery suck of it. ’Tis then,
me boy, the world grows small an’ the wandtherlust
lays ye by the heels.
‘But it’s meself as wandthers.
As I was sayin’, we a-paddlin’, with niver
a sign of ice, barrin’ that by the eddies, when
the Injun lifts his paddle an’ sings out, “Lon
McFane! Look ye below!” So have I heard,
but niver thought to see! As ye know, Sitka Charley,
like meself, niver drew first breath in the land;
so the sight was new. Then we drifted, with a
head over ayther side, peerin’ down through the
sparkly water. For the world like the days I
spint with the pearlers, watchin’ the coral
banks a-growin’ the same as so many gardens under
the sea. There it was, the anchor-ice, clingin’
an’ clusterin’ to ivery rock, after the
manner of the white coral.
‘But the best of the sight was
to come. Just after clearin’ the tail of
the riffle, the water turns quick the color of milk,
an’ the top of it in wee circles, as when the
graylin’ rise in the spring, or there’s
a splatter of wet from the sky. ‘Twas the
anchor-ice comin’ up. To the right, to
the lift, as far as iver a man cud see, the water was
covered with the same.
An’ like so much porridge it
was, slickin’ along the bark of the canoe, stickin’
like glue to the paddles. It’s many’s
the time I shot the self-same riffle before, and it’s
many’s the time after, but niver a wink of the
same have I seen. ‘Twas the sight of a lifetime.’
’Do tell!’ dryly commented Bettles.
’D’ye think I’d b’lieve such
a yarn? I’d ruther say the glister of light’d
gone to your eyes, and the snap of the air to your
tongue.’ ‘’Twas me own eyes that
beheld it, an’ if Sitka Charley was here, he’d
be the lad to back me.’ ’But facts
is facts, an’ they ain’t no gettin’
round ’em. It ain’t in the nature
of things for the water furtherest away from the air
to freeze first.’ ‘But me own eyes-’
‘Don’t git het up over it,’ admonished
Bettles, as the quick Celtic anger began to mount.
‘Then yer not after belavin’
me?’ ’Sence you’re so blamed forehanded
about it, no; I’d b’lieve nature first,
and facts.’
‘Is it the lie ye’d be
givin’ me?’ threatened Lon. ’Ye’d
better be askin’ that Siwash wife of yours.
I’ll lave it to her, for the truth I spake.’
Bettles flared up in sudden wrath. The Irishman
had unwittingly wounded him; for his wife was the
half-breed daughter of a Russian fur-trader, married
to him in the Greek Mission of Nulato, a thousand
miles or so down the Yukon, thus being of much higher
caste than the common Siwash, or native, wife.
It was a mere Northland nuance, which none but the
Northland adventurer may understand.
‘I reckon you kin take it that
way,’ was his deliberate affirmation.
The next instant Lon McFane had stretched
him on the floor, the circle was broken up, and half
a dozen men had stepped between.
Bettles came to his feet, wiping the
blood from his mouth. ’It hain’t
new, this takin’ and payin’ of blows, and
don’t you never think but that this will be
squared.’ ‘An’ niver in me life
did I take the lie from mortal man,’ was the
retort courteous. ‘An’ it’s
an avil day I’ll not be to hand, waitin’
an’ willin’ to help ye lift yer debts,
barrin’ no manner of way.’
‘Still got that 38-55?’ Lon nodded.
’But you’d better git
a more likely caliber. Mine’ll rip holes
through you the size of walnuts.’
‘Niver fear; it’s me own
slugs smell their way with soft noses, an’ they’ll
spread like flapjacks against the coming out beyand.
An’ when’ll I have the pleasure of waitin’
on ye? The waterhole’s a strikin’
locality.’ ’’Tain’t bad.
Jest be there in an hour, and you won’t set
long on my coming.’ Both men mittened and
left the Post, their ears closed to the remonstrances
of their comrades. It was such a little thing;
yet with such men, little things, nourished by quick
tempers and stubborn natures, soon blossomed into big
things.
Besides, the art of burning to bedrock
still lay in the womb of the future, and the men of
Forty-Mile, shut in by the long Arctic winter, grew
high-stomached with overeating and enforced idleness,
and became as irritable as do the bees in the fall
of the year when the hives are overstocked with honey.
There was no law in the land.
The mounted police was also a thing of the future.
Each man measured an offense, and meted out the punishment
inasmuch as it affected himself.
Rarely had combined action been necessary,
and never in all the dreary history of the camp had
the eighth article of the Decalogue been violated.
Big Jim Belden called an impromptu
meeting. Scruff Mackenzie was placed as temporary
chairman, and a messenger dispatched to solicit Father
Roubeau’s good offices. Their position was
paradoxical, and they knew it. By the right of
might could they interfere to prevent the duel; yet
such action, while in direct line with their wishes,
went counter to their opinions. While their rough-hewn,
obsolete ethics recognized the individual prerogative
of wiping out blow with blow, they could not bear
to think of two good comrades, such as Bettles and
McFane, meeting in deadly battle. Deeming the
man who would not fight on provocation a dastard,
when brought to the test it seemed wrong that he should
fight.
But a scurry of moccasins and loud
cries, rounded off with a pistol-shot, interrupted
the discussion. Then the storm-doors opened and
Malemute Kid entered, a smoking Colt’s in his
hand, and a merry light in his eye.
‘I got him.’ He replaced
the empty shell, and added, ’Your dog, Scruff.’
‘Yellow Fang?’
Mackenzie asked.
‘No; the lop-eared one.’
‘The devil! Nothing the matter with him.’
‘Come out and take a look.’ ’That’s
all right after all. Buess he’s got ’em,
too. Yellow Fang came back this morning and took
a chunk out of him, and came near to making a widower
of me. Made a rush for Zarinska, but she whisked
her skirts in his face and escaped with the loss of
the same and a good roll in the snow. Then he
took to the woods again. Hope he don’t
come back. Lost any yourself?’ ’One the
best one of the pack Shookum. Started
amuck this morning, but didn’t get very far.
Ran foul of Sitka Charley’s team, and they scattered
him all over the street. And now two of them
are loose, and raging mad; so you see he got his work
in. The dog census will be small in the spring
if we don’t do something.’
‘And the man census, too.’
‘How’s that? Who’s in trouble
now?’ ’Oh, Bettles and Lon McFane had
an argument, and they’ll be down by the waterhole
in a few minutes to settle it.’ The incident
was repeated for his benefit, and Malemute Kid, accustomed
to an obedience which his fellow men never failed
to render, took charge of the affair. His quickly
formulated plan was explained, and they promised to
follow his lead implicitly.
‘So you see,’ he concluded,
’we do not actually take away their privilege
of fighting; and yet I don’t believe they’ll
fight when they see the beauty of the scheme.
Life’s a game and men the gamblers. They’ll
stake their whole pile on the one chance in a thousand.
‘Take away that one chance,
and they won’t play.’ He
turned to the man in charge of the Post. ’Storekeeper,
weight out three fathoms of your best half-inch manila.
’We’ll establish a precedent
which will last the men of Forty-Mile to the end of
time,’ he prophesied. Then he coiled the
rope about his arm and led his followers out of doors,
just in time to meet the principals.
‘What danged right’d he
to fetch my wife in?’ thundered Bettles to the
soothing overtures of a friend. ‘’Twa’n’t
called for,’ he concluded decisively. ‘’Twa’n’t
called for,’ he reiterated again and again,
pacing up and down and waiting for Lon McFane.
And Lon McFane his face
was hot and tongue rapid as he flaunted insurrection
in the face of the Church. ‘Then, father,’
he cried, ’it’s with an aisy heart
I’ll roll in me flamy blankets, the broad of
me back on a bed of coals. Niver shall it be
said that Lon McFane took a lie ‘twixt the teeth
without iver liftin’ a hand! An’ I’ll
not ask a blessin’. The years have been
wild, but it’s the heart was in the right place.’
‘But it’s not the heart, Lon,’ interposed
Father Roubeau; ’It’s pride that bids
you forth to slay your fellow man.’ ‘Yer
Frinch,’ Lon replied. And then, turning
to leave him, ‘An’ will ye say a mass if
the luck is against me?’ But the priest smiled,
thrust his moccasined feet to the fore, and went out
upon the white breast of the silent river. A
packed trail, the width of a sixteen-inch sled, led
out to the waterhole. On either side lay the
deep, soft snow. The men trod in single file,
without conversation; and the black-stoled priest in
their midst gave to the function the solemn aspect
of a funeral. It was a warm winter’s day
for Forty-Mile a day in which the sky, filled
with heaviness, drew closer to the earth, and the
mercury sought the unwonted level of twenty below.
But there was no cheer in the warmth. There was
little air in the upper strata, and the clouds hung
motionless, giving sullen promise of an early snowfall.
And the earth, unresponsive, made no preparation,
content in its hibernation.
When the waterhole was reached, Bettles,
having evidently reviewed the quarrel during the silent
walk, burst out in a final ’’Twa’n’t
called for,’ while Lon McFane kept grim silence.
Indignation so choked him that he could not speak.
Yet deep down, whenever their own
wrongs were not uppermost, both men wondered at their
comrades. They had expected opposition, and this
tacit acquiescence hurt them. It seemed more was
due them from the men they had been so close with,
and they felt a vague sense of wrong, rebelling at
the thought of so many of their brothers coming out,
as on a gala occasion, without one word of protest,
to see them shoot each other down. It appeared
their worth had diminished in the eyes of the community.
The proceedings puzzled them.
‘Back to back, David. An’
will it be fifty paces to the man, or double the quantity?’
‘Fifty,’ was the sanguinary
reply, grunted out, yet sharply cut.
But the new manila, not prominently
displayed, but casually coiled about Malemute Kid’s
arm, caught the quick eye of the Irishman, and thrilled
him with a suspicious fear.
‘An’ what are ye doin’
with the rope?’ ‘Hurry up!’ Malemute
Kid glanced at his watch.
’I’ve a batch of bread
in the cabin, and I don’t want it to fall.
Besides, my feet are getting cold.’ The
rest of the men manifested their impatience in various
suggestive ways.
‘But the rope, Kid’ It’s
bran’ new, an’ sure yer bread’s not
that heavy it needs raisin’ with the like of
that?’ Bettles by this time had faced around.
Father Roubeau, the humor of the situation just dawning
on him, hid a smile behind his mittened hand.
‘No, Lon; this rope was made
for a man.’ Malemute Kid could be very
impressive on occasion.
‘What man?’ Bettles was
becoming aware of a personal interest.
‘The other man.’
‘An’ which is the one ye’d mane by
that?’ ’Listen, Lon and you,
too, Bettles! We’ve been talking this little
trouble of yours over, and we’ve come to one
conclusion. We know we have no right to stop
your fighting-’ ‘True for ye, me lad!’
’And we’re not going to. But this
much we can do, and shall do make this the
only duel in the history of Forty-Mile, set an example
for every che-cha-qua that comes up or down the
Yukon. The man who escapes killing shall be hanged
to the nearest tree. Now, go ahead!’
Lon smiled dubiously, then his face
lighted up. ’Pace her off, David fifty
paces, wheel, an’ niver a cease firin’
till a lad’s down for good. ‘Tis
their hearts’ll niver let them do the deed, an’
it’s well ye should know it for a true Yankee
bluff.’
He started off with a pleased grin
on his face, but Malemute Kid halted him.
‘Lon! It’s a long
while since you first knew me?’ ‘Many’s
the day.’ ‘And you, Bettles?’
‘Five year next June high water.’
’And have you once, in all that time, known
me to break my word’ Or heard of me breaking
it?’ Both men shook their heads, striving to
fathom what lay beyond.
‘Well, then, what do you think
of a promise made by me?’ ’As good as
your bond,’ from Bettles.
‘The thing to safely sling yer
hopes of heaven by,’ promptly endorsed Lon McFane.
’Listen! I, Malemute Kid,
give you my word and you know what that
means that the man who is not shot stretches rope within
ten minutes after the shooting.’ He stepped
back as Pilate might have done after washing his hands.
A pause and a silence came over the
men of Forty-Mile. The sky drew still closer,
sending down a crystal flight of frost little
geometric designs, perfect, evanescent as a breath,
yet destined to exist till the returning sun had covered
half its northern journey.
Both men had led forlorn hopes in
their time led with a curse or a jest on
their tongues, and in their souls an unswerving faith
in the God of Chance. But that merciful deity
had been shut out from the present deal. They
studied the face of Malemute Kid, but they studied
as one might the Sphinx. As the quiet minutes
passed, a feeling that speech was incumbent on them
began to grow. At last the howl of a wolf-dog
cracked the silence from the direction of Forty-Mile.
The weird sound swelled with all the pathos of a breaking
heart, then died away in a long-drawn sob.
‘Well I be danged!’ Bettles
turned up the collar of his mackinaw jacket and stared
about him helplessly.
‘It’s a gloryus game yer
runnin’, Kid,’ cried Lon McFane. ’All
the percentage of the house an’ niver a bit
to the man that’s buckin’. The Devil
himself’d niver tackle such a cinch and
damned if I do.’ There were chuckles, throttled
in gurgling throats, and winks brushed away with the
frost which rimed the eyelashes, as the men climbed
the ice-notched bank and started across the street
to the Post. But the long howl had drawn nearer,
invested with a new note of menace. A woman screamed
round the corner. There was a cry of, ‘Here
he comes!’ Then an Indian boy, at the head of
half a dozen frightened dogs, racing with death, dashed
into the crowd. And behind came Yellow Fang, a
bristle of hair and a flash of gray. Everybody
but the Yankee fled.
The Indian boy had tripped and fallen.
Bettles stopped long enough to grip him by the slack
of his furs, then headed for a pile of cordwood already
occupied by a number of his comrades. Yellow Fang,
doubling after one of the dogs, came leaping back.
The fleeing animal, free of the rabies, but crazed
with fright, whipped Bettles off his feet and flashed
on up the street. Malemute Kid took a flying shot
at Yellow Fang. The mad dog whirled a half airspring,
came down on his back, then, with a single leap, covered
half the distance between himself and Bettles.
But the fatal spring was intercepted.
Lon McFane leaped from the woodpile, countering him
in midair. Over they rolled, Lon holding him
by the throat at arm’s length, blinking under
the fetid slaver which sprayed his face. Then
Bettles, revolver in hand and coolly waiting a chance,
settled the combat.
‘’Twas a square game,
Kid,’ Lon remarked, rising to his feet and shaking
the snow from out his sleeves; ’with a fair percentage
to meself that bucked it.’ That night,
while Lon McFane sought the forgiving arms of the
Church in the direction of Father Roubeau’s
cabin, Malemute Kid talked long to little purpose.
‘But would you,’ persisted
Mackenzie, ‘supposing they had fought?’
‘Have I ever broken my word?’ ’No;
but that isn’t the point. Answer the question.
Would you?’ Malemute Kid straightened up.
’Scruff, I’ve been asking myself that
question ever since, and ’
‘Well?’
‘Well, as yet, I haven’t found the answer.’