When a man journeys into a far country,
he must be prepared to forget many of the things he
has learned, and to acquire such customs as are inherent
with existence in the new land; he must abandon the
old ideals and the old gods, and oftentimes he must
reverse the very codes by which his conduct has hitherto
been shaped. To those who have the protean faculty
of adaptability, the novelty of such change may even
be a source of pleasure; but to those who happen to
be hardened to the ruts in which they were created,
the pressure of the altered environment is unbearable,
and they chafe in body and in spirit under the new
restrictions which they do not understand. This
chafing is bound to act and react, producing divers
evils and leading to various misfortunes. It
were better for the man who cannot fit himself to the
new groove to return to his own country; if he delay
too long, he will surely die.
The man who turns his back upon the
comforts of an elder civilization, to face the savage
youth, the primordial simplicity of the North, may
estimate success at an inverse ratio to the quantity
and quality of his hopelessly fixed habits. He
will soon discover, if he be a fit candidate, that
the material habits are the less important. The
exchange of such things as a dainty menu for rough
fare, of the stiff leather shoe for the soft, shapeless
moccasin, of the feather bed for a couch in the snow,
is after all a very easy matter. But his pinch
will come in learning properly to shape his mind’s
attitude toward all things, and especially toward
his fellow man. For the courtesies of ordinary
life, he must substitute unselfishness, forbearance,
and tolerance. Thus, and thus only, can he gain
that pearl of great price true comradeship.
He must not say ‘thank you’; he must mean
it without opening his mouth, and prove it by responding
in kind. In short, he must substitute the deed
for the word, the spirit for the letter.
When the world rang with the tale
of Arctic gold, and the lure of the North gripped
the heartstrings of men, Carter Weatherbee threw up
his snug clerkship, turned the half of his savings
over to his wife, and with the remainder bought an
outfit. There was no romance in his nature the
bondage of commerce had crushed all that; he was simply
tired of the ceaseless grind, and wished to risk great
hazards in view of corresponding returns. Like
many another fool, disdaining the old trails used
by the Northland pioneers for a score of years, he
hurried to Edmonton in the spring of the year; and
there, unluckily for his soul’s welfare, he
allied himself with a party of men.
There was nothing unusual about this
party, except its plans. Even its goal, like
that of all the other parties, was the Klondike.
But the route it had mapped out to attain that goal
took away the breath of the hardiest native, born
and bred to the vicissitudes of the Northwest.
Even Jacques Baptiste, born of a Chippewa woman and
a renegade voyageur (having raised his first whimpers
in a deerskin lodge north of the sixty-fifth parallel,
and had the same hushed by blissful sucks of raw tallow),
was surprised. Though he sold his services to
them and agreed to travel even to the never-opening
ice, he shook his head ominously whenever his advice
was asked.
Percy Cuthfert’s evil star must
have been in the ascendant, for he, too, joined this
company of argonauts. He was an ordinary man,
with a bank account as deep as his culture, which
is saying a good deal. He had no reason to embark
on such a venture no reason in the world
save that he suffered from an abnormal development
of sentimentality. He mistook this for the true
spirit of romance and adventure. Many another
man has done the like, and made as fatal a mistake.
The first break-up of spring found
the party following the ice-run of Elk River.
It was an imposing fleet, for the outfit was large,
and they were accompanied by a disreputable contingent
of half-breed voyageurs with their women and children.
Day in and day out, they labored with the bateaux
and canoes, fought mosquitoes and other kindred pests,
or sweated and swore at the portages. Severe
toil like this lays a man naked to the very roots
of his soul, and ere Lake Athabasca was lost in the
south, each member of the party had hoisted his true
colors.
The two shirks and chronic grumblers
were Carter Weatherbee and Percy Cuthfert. The
whole party complained less of its aches and pains
than did either of them. Not once did they volunteer
for the thousand and one petty duties of the camp.
A bucket of water to be brought, an extra armful of
wood to be chopped, the dishes to be washed and wiped,
a search to be made through the outfit for some suddenly
indispensable article and these two effete
scions of civilization discovered sprains or blisters
requiring instant attention.
They were the first to turn in at
night, with score of tasks yet undone; the last to
turn out in the morning, when the start should be
in readiness before the breakfast was begun.
They were the first to fall to at
mealtime, the last to have a hand in the cooking;
the first to dive for a slim delicacy, the last to
discover they had added to their own another man’s
share. If they toiled at the oars, they slyly
cut the water at each stroke and allowed the boat’s
momentum to float up the blade. They thought nobody
noticed; but their comrades swore under their breaths
and grew to hate them, while Jacques Baptiste sneered
openly and damned them from morning till night.
But Jacques Baptiste was no gentleman.
At the Great Slave, Hudson Bay dogs
were purchased, and the fleet sank to the guards with
its added burden of dried fish and pemican. Then
canoe and bateau answered to the swift current of the
Mackenzie, and they plunged into the Great Barren
Ground. Every likely-looking ‘feeder’
was prospected, but the elusive ‘pay-dirt’
danced ever to the north. At the Great Bear,
overcome by the common dread of the Unknown Lands,
their voyageurs began to desert, and Fort of Good Hope
saw the last and bravest bending to the towlines as
they bucked the current down which they had so treacherously
glided.
Jacques Baptiste alone remained.
Had he not sworn to travel even to the never-opening
ice? The lying charts, compiled in main from hearsay,
were now constantly consulted.
And they felt the need of hurry, for
the sun had already passed its northern solstice and
was leading the winter south again. Skirting the
shores of the bay, where the Mackenzie disembogues
into the Arctic Ocean, they entered the mouth of the
Little Peel River. Then began the arduous up-stream
toil, and the two Incapables fared worse than
ever. Towline and pole, paddle and tumpline,
rapids and portages such tortures
served to give the one a deep disgust for great hazards,
and printed for the other a fiery text on the true
romance of adventure. One day they waxed mutinous,
and being vilely cursed by Jacques Baptiste, turned,
as worms sometimes will. But the half-breed thrashed
the twain, and sent them, bruised and bleeding, about
their work. It was the first time either had
been manhandled.
Abandoning their river craft at the
headwaters of the Little Peel, they consumed the rest
of the summer in the great portage over the Mackenzie
watershed to the West Rat. This little stream
fed the Porcupine, which in turn joined the Yukon
where that mighty highway of the North countermarches
on the Arctic Circle.
But they had lost in the race with
winter, and one day they tied their rafts to the thick
eddy-ice and hurried their goods ashore. That
night the river jammed and broke several times; the
following morning it had fallen asleep for good.
’We can’t be more’n four hundred
miles from the Yukon,’ concluded Sloper, multiplying
his thumb nails by the scale of the map. The
council, in which the two Incapables had whined
to excellent disadvantage, was drawing to a close.
‘Hudson Bay Post, long time
ago. No use um now.’ Jacques Baptiste’s
father had made the trip for the Fur Company in the
old days, incidentally marking the trail with a couple
of frozen toes.
Sufferin’ cracky!’ cried
another of the party. ‘No whites?’
’Nary white,’ Sloper sententiously affirmed;
’but it’s only five hundred more up the
Yukon to Dawson. Call it a rough thousand from
here.’ Weatherbee and Cuthfert groaned
in chorus.
‘How long’ll that take,
Baptiste?’ The half-breed figured for a moment.
’Workum like hell, no man play out, ten twenty forty fifty
days. Um babies come’ (designating the
Incapables), ’no can tell. Mebbe when
hell freeze over; mebbe not then.’ The manufacture
of snowshoes and moccasins ceased. Somebody called
the name of an absent member, who came out of an ancient
cabin at the edge of the campfire and joined them.
The cabin was one of the many mysteries which lurk
in the vast recesses of the North. Built when
and by whom, no man could tell.
Two graves in the open, piled high
with stones, perhaps contained the secret of those
early wanderers. But whose hand had piled the
stones? The moment had come. Jacques Baptiste
paused in the fitting of a harness and pinned the
struggling dog in the snow. The cook made mute
protest for delay, threw a handful of bacon into a
noisy pot of beans, then came to attention. Sloper
rose to his feet. His body was a ludicrous contrast
to the healthy physiques of the Incapables.
Yellow and weak, fleeing from a South American fever-hole,
he had not broken his flight across the zones, and
was still able to toil with men. His weight was
probably ninety pounds, with the heavy hunting knife
thrown in, and his grizzled hair told of a prime which
had ceased to be. The fresh young muscles of
either Weatherbee or Cuthfert were equal to ten times
the endeavor of his; yet he could walk them into the
earth in a day’s journey. And all this
day he had whipped his stronger comrades into venturing
a thousand miles of the stiffest hardship man can
conceive. He was the incarnation of the unrest
of his race, and the old Teutonic stubbornness, dashed
with the quick grasp and action of the Yankee, held
the flesh in the bondage of the spirit.
’All those in favor of going
on with the dogs as soon as the ice sets, say ay.’
‘Ay!’ rang out eight voices voices
destined to string a trail of oaths along many a hundred
miles of pain.
‘Contrary minded?’ ‘No!’
For the first time the Incapables were united
without some compromise of personal interests.
‘And what are you going to do
about it?’ Weatherbee added belligerently.
‘Majority rule! Majority
rule!’ clamored the rest of the party.
‘I know the expedition is liable
to fall through if you don’t come,’ Sloper
replied sweetly; ’but I guess, if we try real
hard, we can manage to do without you.
What do you say, boys?’ The
sentiment was cheered to the echo.
‘But I say, you know,’
Cuthfert ventured apprehensively; ’what’s
a chap like me to do?’
‘Ain’t you coming with
us.’ ‘No o.’
’Then do as you damn well please. We won’t
have nothing to say.’ ‘Kind o’
calkilate yuh might settle it with that canoodlin’
pardner of yourn,’ suggested a heavy-going Westerner
from the Dakotas, at the same time pointing out Weatherbee.
‘He’ll be shore to ask yuh what yur a-goin’
to do when it comes to cookin’ an’ gatherin’
the wood.’ ‘Then we’ll consider
it all arranged,’ concluded Sloper.
’We’ll pull out tomorrow,
if we camp within five miles just to get
everything in running order and remember if we’ve
forgotten anything.’ The sleds groaned
by on their steel-shod runners, and the dogs strained
low in the harnesses in which they were born to die.
Jacques Baptiste paused by the side
of Sloper to get a last glimpse of the cabin.
The smoke curled up pathetically from the Yukon stovepipe.
The two Incapables were watching them from the
doorway.
Sloper laid his hand on the other’s shoulder.
‘Jacques Baptiste, did you ever
hear of the Kilkenny cats?’ The half-breed shook
his head.
’Well, my friend and good comrade,
the Kilkenny cats fought till neither hide, nor hair,
nor yowl, was left. You understand? till
nothing was left. Very good.
Now, these two men don’t like
work. They’ll be all alone in that cabin
all winter a mighty long, dark winter.
Kilkenny cats well?’ The Frenchman
in Baptiste shrugged his shoulders, but the Indian
in him was silent. Nevertheless, it was an eloquent
shrug, pregnant with prophecy. Things prospered
in the little cabin at first. The rough badinage
of their comrades had made Weatherbee and Cuthfert
conscious of the mutual responsibility which had devolved
upon them; besides, there was not so much work after
all for two healthy men. And the removal of the
cruel whiphand, or in other words the bulldozing half-breed,
had brought with it a joyous reaction. At first,
each strove to outdo the other, and they performed
petty tasks with an unction which would have opened
the eyes of their comrades who were now wearing out
bodies and souls on the Long Trail.
All care was banished. The forest,
which shouldered in upon them from three sides, was
an inexhaustible woodyard. A few yards from their
door slept the Porcupine, and a hole through its winter
robe formed a bubbling spring of water, crystal clear
and painfully cold. But they soon grew to find
fault with even that. The hole would persist in
freezing up, and thus gave them many a miserable hour
of ice-chopping. The unknown builders of the
cabin had extended the sidelogs so as to support a
cache at the rear. In this was stored the bulk
of the party’s provisions.
Food there was, without stint, for
three times the men who were fated to live upon it.
But the most of it was the kind which built up brawn
and sinew, but did not tickle the palate.
True, there was sugar in plenty for
two ordinary men; but these two were little else than
children. They early discovered the virtues of
hot water judiciously saturated with sugar, and they
prodigally swam their flapjacks and soaked their crusts
in the rich, white syrup.
Then coffee and tea, and especially
the dried fruits, made disastrous inroads upon it.
The first words they had were over the sugar question.
And it is a really serious thing when two men, wholly
dependent upon each other for company, begin to quarrel.
Weatherbee loved to discourse blatantly
on politics, while Cuthfert, who had been prone to
clip his coupons and let the commonwealth jog on as
best it might, either ignored the subject or delivered
himself of startling epigrams. But the clerk
was too obtuse to appreciate the clever shaping of
thought, and this waste of ammunition irritated Cuthfert.
He had been used to blinding people
by his brilliancy, and it worked him quite a hardship,
this loss of an audience. He felt personally
aggrieved and unconsciously held his muttonhead companion
responsible for it.
Save existence, they had nothing in
common came in touch on no single point.
Weatherbee was a clerk who had known
naught but clerking all his life; Cuthfert was a master
of arts, a dabbler in oils, and had written not a
little. The one was a lower-class man who considered
himself a gentleman, and the other was a gentleman
who knew himself to be such. From this it may
be remarked that a man can be a gentleman without
possessing the first instinct of true comradeship.
The clerk was as sensuous as the other was aesthetic,
and his love adventures, told at great length and
chiefly coined from his imagination, affected the
supersensitive master of arts in the same way as so
many whiffs of sewer gas. He deemed the clerk
a filthy, uncultured brute, whose place was in the
muck with the swine, and told him so; and he was reciprocally
informed that he was a milk-and-water sissy and a cad.
Weatherbee could not have defined ‘cad’
for his life; but it satisfied its purpose, which
after all seems the main point in life.
Weatherbee flatted every third note
and sang such songs as ’The Boston Burglar’
and ‘the Handsome Cabin Boy,’ for hours
at a time, while Cuthfert wept with rage, till he
could stand it no longer and fled into the outer cold.
But there was no escape. The intense frost could
not be endured for long at a time, and the little
cabin crowded them beds, stove, table,
and all into a space of ten by twelve.
The very presence of either became a personal affront
to the other, and they lapsed into sullen silences
which increased in length and strength as the days
went by. Occasionally, the flash of an eye or
the curl of a lip got the better of them, though they
strove to wholly ignore each other during these mute
periods.
And a great wonder sprang up in the
breast of each, as to how God had ever come to create
the other.
With little to do, time became an
intolerable burden to them. This naturally made
them still lazier. They sank into a physical lethargy
which there was no escaping, and which made them rebel
at the performance of the smallest chore. One
morning when it was his turn to cook the common breakfast,
Weatherbee rolled out of his blankets, and to the
snoring of his companion, lighted first the slush lamp
and then the fire. The kettles were frozen hard,
and there was no water in the cabin with which to
wash. But he did not mind that. Waiting for
it to thaw, he sliced the bacon and plunged into the
hateful task of bread-making. Cuthfert had been
slyly watching through his half-closed lids.
Consequently there was a scene, in
which they fervently blessed each other, and agreed,
henceforth, that each do his own cooking. A week
later, Cuthfert neglected his morning ablutions, but
none the less complacently ate the meal which he had
cooked. Weatherbee grinned. After that the
foolish custom of washing passed out of their lives.
As the sugar-pile and other little
luxuries dwindled, they began to be afraid they were
not getting their proper shares, and in order that
they might not be robbed, they fell to gorging themselves.
The luxuries suffered in this gluttonous contest,
as did also the men.
In the absence of fresh vegetables
and exercise, their blood became impoverished, and
a loathsome, purplish rash crept over their bodies.
Yet they refused to heed the warning.
Next, their muscles and joints began
to swell, the flesh turning black, while their mouths,
gums, and lips took on the color of rich cream.
Instead of being drawn together by their misery, each
gloated over the other’s symptoms as the scurvy
took its course.
They lost all regard for personal
appearance, and for that matter, common decency.
The cabin became a pigpen, and never once were the
beds made or fresh pine boughs laid underneath.
Yet they could not keep to their blankets, as they
would have wished; for the frost was inexorable, and
the fire box consumed much fuel. The hair of their
heads and faces grew long and shaggy, while their garments
would have disgusted a ragpicker. But they did
not care. They were sick, and there was no one
to see; besides, it was very painful to move about.
To all this was added a new trouble the
Fear of the North. This Fear was the joint child
of the Great Cold and the Great Silence, and was born
in the darkness of December, when the sun dipped below
the horizon for good. It affected them according
to their natures.
Weatherbee fell prey to the grosser
superstitions, and did his best to resurrect the spirits
which slept in the forgotten graves. It was a
fascinating thing, and in his dreams they came to him
from out of the cold, and snuggled into his blankets,
and told him of their toils and troubles ere they
died. He shrank away from the clammy contact as
they drew closer and twined their frozen limbs about
him, and when they whispered in his ear of things
to come, the cabin rang with his frightened shrieks.
Cuthfert did not understand for they no
longer spoke and when thus awakened he
invariably grabbed for his revolver. Then he
would sit up in bed, shivering nervously, with the
weapon trained on the unconscious dreamer. Cuthfert
deemed the man going mad, and so came to fear for
his life.
His own malady assumed a less concrete
form. The mysterious artisan who had laid the
cabin, log by log, had pegged a wind-vane to the ridgepole.
Cuthfert noticed it always pointed south, and one day,
irritated by its steadfastness of purpose, he turned
it toward the east. He watched eagerly, but never
a breath came by to disturb it. Then he turned
the vane to the north, swearing never again to touch
it till the wind did blow. But the air frightened
him with its unearthly calm, and he often rose in
the middle of the night to see if the vane had veered ten
degrees would have satisfied him. But no, it poised
above him as unchangeable as fate.
His imagination ran riot, till it
became to him a fetish. Sometimes he followed
the path it pointed across the dismal dominions, and
allowed his soul to become saturated with the Fear.
He dwelt upon the unseen and the unknown till the
burden of eternity appeared to be crushing him.
Everything in the Northland had that crushing effect the
absence of life and motion; the darkness; the infinite
peace of the brooding land; the ghastly silence, which
made the echo of each heartbeat a sacrilege; the solemn
forest which seemed to guard an awful, inexpressible
something, which neither word nor thought could compass.
The world he had so recently left,
with its busy nations and great enterprises, seemed
very far away. Recollections occasionally obtruded recollections
of marts and galleries and crowded thoroughfares,
of evening dress and social functions, of good men
and dear women he had known but they were
dim memories of a life he had lived long centuries
agone, on some other planet. This phantasm was
the Reality. Standing beneath the wind-vane,
his eyes fixed on the polar skies, he could not bring
himself to realize that the Southland really existed,
that at that very moment it was a-roar with life and
action.
There was no Southland, no men being
born of women, no giving and taking in marriage.
Beyond his bleak skyline there stretched
vast solitudes, and beyond these still vaster solitudes.
There were no lands of sunshine, heavy
with the perfume of flowers. Such things were
only old dreams of paradise. The sunlands of the
West and the spicelands of the East, the smiling Arcadias
and blissful Islands of the Blest ha! ha!
His laughter split the void and shocked him with its
unwonted sound. There was no sun.
This was the Universe, dead and cold
and dark, and he its only citizen. Weatherbee?
At such moments Weatherbee did not count. He was
a Caliban, a monstrous phantom, fettered to him for
untold ages, the penalty of some forgotten crime.
He lived with Death among the dead,
emasculated by the sense of his own insignificance,
crushed by the passive mastery of the slumbering ages.
The magnitude of all things appalled him. Everything
partook of the superlative save himself the
perfect cessation of wind and motion, the immensity
of the snow-covered wildness, the height of the sky
and the depth of the silence. That wind-vane if
it would only move. If a thunderbolt would fall,
or the forest flare up in flame.
The rolling up of the heavens as a
scroll, the crash of Doom anything, anything!
But no, nothing moved; the Silence crowded in, and
the Fear of the North laid icy fingers on his heart.
Once, like another Crusoe, by the
edge of the river he came upon a track the
faint tracery of a snowshoe rabbit on the delicate
snow-crust. It was a revelation.
There was life in the Northland.
He would follow it, look upon it, gloat over it.
He forgot his swollen muscles, plunging
through the deep snow in an ecstasy of anticipation.
The forest swallowed him up, and the brief midday
twilight vanished; but he pursued his quest till exhausted
nature asserted itself and laid him helpless in the
snow.
There he groaned and cursed his folly,
and knew the track to be the fancy of his brain; and
late that night he dragged himself into the cabin
on hands and knees, his cheeks frozen and a strange
numbness about his feet. Weatherbee grinned malevolently,
but made no offer to help him. He thrust needles
into his toes and thawed them out by the stove.
A week later mortification set in.
But the clerk had his own troubles.
The dead men came out of their graves more frequently
now, and rarely left him, waking or sleeping.
He grew to wait and dread their coming, never passing
the twin cairns without a shudder. One night
they came to him in his sleep and led him forth to
an appointed task. Frightened into inarticulate
horror, he awoke between the heaps of stones and fled
wildly to the cabin. But he had lain there for
some time, for his feet and cheeks were also frozen.
Sometimes he became frantic at their
insistent presence, and danced about the cabin, cutting
the empty air with an axe, and smashing everything
within reach.
During these ghostly encounters, Cuthfert
huddled into his blankets and followed the madman
about with a cocked revolver, ready to shoot him if
he came too near.
But, recovering from one of these
spells, the clerk noticed the weapon trained upon
him.
His suspicions were aroused, and thenceforth
he, too, lived in fear of his life. They watched
each other closely after that, and faced about in
startled fright whenever either passed behind the other’s
back. The apprehensiveness became a mania which
controlled them even in their sleep. Through
mutual fear they tacitly let the slush-lamp burn all
night, and saw to a plentiful supply of bacon-grease
before retiring. The slightest movement on the
part of one was sufficient to arouse the other, and
many a still watch their gazes countered as they shook
beneath their blankets with fingers on the trigger-guards.
What with the Fear of the North, the
mental strain, and the ravages of the disease, they
lost all semblance of humanity, taking on the appearance
of wild beasts, hunted and desperate. Their cheeks
and noses, as an aftermath of the freezing, had turned
black.
Their frozen toes had begun to drop
away at the first and second joints. Every movement
brought pain, but the fire box was insatiable, wringing
a ransom of torture from their miserable bodies.
Day in, day out, it demanded its food a
veritable pound of flesh and they dragged
themselves into the forest to chop wood on their knees.
Once, crawling thus in search of dry sticks, unknown
to each other they entered a thicket from opposite
sides.
Suddenly, without warning, two peering
death’s-heads confronted each other. Suffering
had so transformed them that recognition was impossible.
They sprang to their feet, shrieking with terror, and
dashed away on their mangled stumps; and falling at
the cabin’s door, they clawed and scratched
like demons till they discovered their mistake.
Occasionally they lapsed normal, and
during one of these sane intervals, the chief bone
of contention, the sugar, had been divided equally
between them. They guarded their separate sacks,
stored up in the cache, with jealous eyes; for there
were but a few cupfuls left, and they were totally
devoid of faith in each other.
But one day Cuthfert made a mistake.
Hardly able to move, sick with pain, with his head
swimming and eyes blinded, he crept into the cache,
sugar canister in hand, and mistook Weatherbee’s
sack for his own.
January had been born but a few days
when this occurred. The sun had some time since
passed its lowest southern declination, and at meridian
now threw flaunting streaks of yellow light upon the
northern sky. On the day following his mistake
with the sugar-bag, Cuthfert found himself feeling
better, both in body and in spirit. As noontime
drew near and the day brightened, he dragged himself
outside to feast on the evanescent glow, which was
to him an earnest of the sun’s future intentions.
Weatherbee was also feeling somewhat better, and crawled
out beside him. They propped themselves in the
snow beneath the moveless wind-vane, and waited.
The stillness of death was about them.
In other climes, when nature falls into such moods,
there is a subdued air of expectancy, a waiting for
some small voice to take up the broken strain.
Not so in the North. The two men had lived seeming
eons in this ghostly peace.
They could remember no song of the
past; they could conjure no song of the future.
This unearthly calm had always been the
tranquil silence of eternity.
Their eyes were fixed upon the north.
Unseen, behind their backs, behind the towering mountains
to the south, the sun swept toward the zenith of another
sky than theirs. Sole spectators of the mighty
canvas, they watched the false dawn slowly grow.
A faint flame began to glow and smoulder. It
deepened in intensity, ringing the changes of reddish-yellow,
purple, and saffron. So bright did it become that
Cuthfert thought the sun must surely be behind it a
miracle, the sun rising in the north! Suddenly,
without warning and without fading, the canvas was
swept clean. There was no color in the sky.
The light had gone out of the day.
They caught their breaths in half-sobs.
But lo! the air was aglint with particles of scintillating
frost, and there, to the north, the wind-vane lay
in vague outline of the snow.
A shadow! A shadow! It was
exactly midday. They jerked their heads hurriedly
to the south. A golden rim peeped over the mountain’s
snowy shoulder, smiled upon them an instant, then
dipped from sight again.
There were tears in their eyes as
they sought each other. A strange softening came
over them. They felt irresistibly drawn toward
each other. The sun was coming back again.
It would be with them tomorrow, and the next day,
and the next.
And it would stay longer every visit,
and a time would come when it would ride their heaven
day and night, never once dropping below the skyline.
There would be no night.
The ice-locked winter would be broken;
the winds would blow and the forests answer; the land
would bathe in the blessed sunshine, and life renew.
Hand in hand, they would quit this
horrid dream and journey back to the Southland.
They lurched blindly forward, and their hands met their
poor maimed hands, swollen and distorted beneath their
mittens.
But the promise was destined to remain
unfulfilled. The Northland is the Northland,
and men work out their souls by strange rules, which
other men, who have not journeyed into far countries,
cannot come to understand.
An hour later, Cuthfert put a pan
of bread into the oven, and fell to speculating on
what the surgeons could do with his feet when he got
back. Home did not seem so very far away now.
Weatherbee was rummaging in the cache. Of a sudden,
he raised a whirlwind of blasphemy, which in turn
ceased with startling abruptness. The other man
had robbed his sugar-sack. Still, things might
have happened differently, had not the two dead men
come out from under the stones and hushed the hot words
in his throat. They led him quite gently from
the cache, which he forgot to close. That consummation
was reached; that something they had whispered to
him in his dreams was about to happen. They guided
him gently, very gently, to the woodpile, where they
put the axe in his hands.
Then they helped him shove open the
cabin door, and he felt sure they shut it after him at
least he heard it slam and the latch fall sharply
into place. And he knew they were waiting just
without, waiting for him to do his task.
‘Carter! I say, Carter!’
Percy Cuthfert was frightened at the look on the clerk’s
face, and he made haste to put the table between them.
Carter Weatherbee followed, without
haste and without enthusiasm. There was neither
pity nor passion in his face, but rather the patient,
stolid look of one who has certain work to do and goes
about it methodically.
‘I say, what’s the matter?’
The clerk dodged back, cutting off
his retreat to the door, but never opening his mouth.
‘I say, Carter, I say; let’s
talk. There’s a good chap.’ The
master of arts was thinking rapidly, now, shaping
a skillful flank movement on the bed where his Smith
& Wesson lay. Keeping his eyes on the madman,
he rolled backward on the bunk, at the same time clutching
the pistol.
‘Carter!’ The powder flashed
full in Weatherbee’s face, but he swung his
weapon and leaped forward. The axe bit deeply
at the base of the spine, and Percy Cuthfert felt
all consciousness of his lower limbs leave him.
Then the clerk fell heavily upon him, clutching him
by the throat with feeble fingers. The sharp
bite of the axe had caused Cuthfert to drop the pistol,
and as his lungs panted for release, he fumbled aimlessly
for it among the blankets. Then he remembered.
He slid a hand up the clerk’s belt to the sheath-knife;
and they drew very close to each other in that last
clinch.
Percy Cuthfert felt his strength leave
him. The lower portion of his body was useless,
The inert weight of Weatherbee crushed him crushed
him and pinned him there like a bear under a trap.
The cabin became filled with a familiar odor, and
he knew the bread to be burning. Yet what did
it matter? He would never need it. And there
were all of six cupfuls of sugar in the cache if
he had foreseen this he would not have been so saving
the last several days. Would the wind-vane ever
move? Why not’ Had he not seen the sun today?
He would go and see. No; it was impossible to
move. He had not thought the clerk so heavy a
man.
How quickly the cabin cooled!
The fire must be out. The cold was forcing in.
It must be below zero already, and
the ice creeping up the inside of the door. He
could not see it, but his past experience enabled him
to gauge its progress by the cabin’s temperature.
The lower hinge must be white ere now. Would
the tale of this ever reach the world? How would
his friends take it? They would read it over their
coffee, most likely, and talk it over at the clubs.
He could see them very clearly, ’Poor Old Cuthfert,’
they murmured; ’not such a bad sort of a chap,
after all.’ He smiled at their eulogies,
and passed on in search of a Turkish bath. It
was the same old crowd upon the streets.
Strange, they did not notice his moosehide
moccasins and tattered German socks! He would
take a cab. And after the bath a shave would not
be bad. No; he would eat first.
Steak, and potatoes, and green things
how fresh it all was! And what was that?
Squares of honey, streaming liquid amber! But
why did they bring so much? Ha! ha! he could
never eat it all.
Shine! Why certainly. He
put his foot on the box. The bootblack looked
curiously up at him, and he remembered his moosehide
moccasins and went away hastily.
Hark! The wind-vane must be surely
spinning. No; a mere singing in his ears.
That was all a mere singing.
The ice must have passed the latch by now. More
likely the upper hinge was covered. Between the
moss-chinked roof-poles, little points of frost began
to appear. How slowly they grew! No; not
so slowly. There was a new one, and there another.
Two three four; they were coming
too fast to count. There were two growing together.
And there, a third had joined them.
Why, there were no more spots.
They had run together and formed a sheet.
Well, he would have company.
If Gabriel ever broke the silence of the North, they
would stand together, hand in hand, before the great
White Throne. And God would judge them, God would
judge them!
Then Percy Cuthfert closed his eyes
and dropped off to sleep.