I
Once when the northland was very young,
the social and civic virtues were remarkably alike
for their paucity and their simplicity. When the
burden of domestic duties grew grievous, and the fireside
mood expanded to a constant protest against its bleak
loneliness, the adventurers from the Southland, in
lieu of better, paid the stipulated prices and took
unto themselves native wives. It was a foretaste
of Paradise to the women, for it must be confessed
that the white rovers gave far better care and treatment
of them than did their Indian copartners. Of
course, the white men themselves were satisfied with
such deals, as were also the Indian men for that matter.
Having sold their daughters and sisters for cotton
blankets and obsolete rifles and traded their warm
furs for flimsy calico and bad whisky, the sons of
the soil promptly and cheerfully succumbed to quick
consumption and other swift diseases correlated with
the blessings of a superior civilization.
It was in these days of Arcadian simplicity
that Cal Galbraith journeyed through the land and
fell sick on the Lower River. It was a refreshing
advent in the lives of the good Sisters of the Holy
Cross, who gave him shelter and medicine; though they
little dreamed of the hot elixir infused into his
veins by the touch of their soft hands and their gentle
ministrations. Cal Galbraith, became troubled
with strange thoughts which clamored for attention
till he laid eyes on the Mission girl, Madeline.
Yet he gave no sign, biding his time patiently.
He strengthened with the coming spring, and when the
sun rode the heavens in a golden circle, and the joy
and throb of life was in all the land, he gathered
his still weak body together and departed.
Now, Madeline, the Mission girl, was
an orphan. Her white father had failed to give
a bald-faced grizzly the trail one day, and had died
quickly. Then her Indian mother, having no man
to fill the winter cache, had tried the hazardous
experiment of waiting till the salmon-run on fifty
pounds of flour and half as many of bacon. After
that, the baby, Chook-ra, went to live with the
good Sisters, and to be thenceforth known by another
name.
But Madeline still had kinsfolk, the
nearest being a dissolute uncle who outraged his vitals
with inordinate quantities of the white man’s
whisky. He strove daily to walk with the gods,
and incidentally, his feet sought shorter trails to
the grave. When sober he suffered exquisite torture.
He had no conscience. To this ancient vagabond
Cal Galbraith duly presented himself, and they consumed
many words and much tobacco in the conversation that
followed. Promises were also made; and in the
end the old heathen took a few pounds of dried salmon
and his birch-bark canoe, and paddled away to the
Mission of the Holy Cross.
It is not given the world to know
what promises he made and what lies he told the
Sisters never gossip; but when he returned, upon his
swarthy chest there was a brass crucifix, and in his
canoe his niece Madeline. That night there was
a grand wedding and a potlach; so that for two days
to follow there was no fishing done by the village.
But in the morning Madeline shook the dust of the
Lower River from her moccasins, and with her husband,
in a poling-boat, went to live on the Upper River
in a place known as the Lower Country. And in
the years which followed she was a good wife, sharing
her husband’s hardships and cooking his food.
And she kept him in straight trails, till he learned
to save his dust and to work mightily. In the
end, he struck it rich and built a cabin in Circle
City; and his happiness was such that men who came
to visit him in his home-circle became restless at
the sight of it and envied him greatly.
But the Northland began to mature
and social amenities to make their appearance.
Hitherto, the Southland had sent forth
its sons; but it now belched forth a new exodus this
time of its daughters. Sisters and wives they
were not; but they did not fail to put new ideas in
the heads of the men, and to elevate the tone of things
in ways peculiarly their own. No more did the
squaws gather at the dances, go roaring down the
center in the good, old Virginia reels, or make merry
with jolly ‘Dan Tucker.’ They fell
back on their natural stoicism and uncomplainingly
watched the rule of their white sisters from their
cabins.
Then another exodus came over the
mountains from the prolific Southland.
This time it was of women that became
mighty in the land. Their word was law; their
law was steel. They frowned upon the Indian wives,
while the other women became mild and walked humbly.
There were cowards who became ashamed of their ancient
covenants with the daughters of the soil, who looked
with a new distaste upon their dark-skinned children;
but there were also others men who
remained true and proud of their aboriginal vows.
When it became the fashion to divorce the native wives.
Cal Galbraith retained his manhood, and in so doing
felt the heavy hand of the women who had come last,
knew least, but who ruled the land.
One day, the Upper Country, which
lies far above Circle City, was pronounced rich.
Dog-teams carried the news to Salt Water; golden argosies
freighted the lure across the North Pacific; wires
and cables sang with the tidings; and the world heard
for the first time of the Klondike River and the Yukon
Country. Cal Galbraith had lived the years quietly.
He had been a good husband to Madeline, and she had
blessed him. But somehow discontent fell upon
him; he felt vague yearnings for his own kind, for
the life he had been shut out from a general
sort of desire, which men sometimes feel, to break
out and taste the prime of living. Besides, there
drifted down the river wild rumors of the wonderful
El Dorado, glowing descriptions of the city of logs
and tents, and ludicrous accounts of the che-cha-quas
who had rushed in and were stampeding the whole country.
Circle City was dead. The world
had moved on up river and become a new and most marvelous
world.
Cal Galbraith grew restless on the
edge of things, and wished to see with his own eyes.
So, after the wash-up, he weighed
in a couple of hundred pounds of dust on the Company’s
big scales, and took a draft for the same on Dawson.
Then he put Tom Dixon in charge of his mines, kissed
Madeline good-by, promised to be back before the first
mush-ice ran, and took passage on an up-river steamer.
Madeline waited, waited through all
the three months of daylight. She fed the dogs,
gave much of her time to Young Cal, watched the short
summer fade away and the sun begin its long journey
to the south. And she prayed much in the manner
of the Sisters of the Holy Cross. The fall came,
and with it there was mush-ice on the Yukon, and Circle
City kings returning to the winter’s work at
their mines, but no Cal Galbraith. Tom Dixon
received a letter, however, for his men sledded up
her winter’s supply of dry pine. The Company
received a letter for its dogteams filled her cache
with their best provisions, and she was told that
her credit was limitless.
Through all the ages man has been
held the chief instigator of the woes of woman; but
in this case the men held their tongues and swore harshly
at one of their number who was away, while the women
failed utterly to emulate them. So, without needless
delay, Madeline heard strange tales of Cal Galbraith’s
doings; also, of a certain Greek dancer who played
with men as children did with bubbles. Now Madeline
was an Indian woman, and further, she had no woman
friend to whom to go for wise counsel. She prayed
and planned by turns, and that night, being quick
of resolve and action, she harnessed the dogs, and
with Young Cal securely lashed to the sled, stole
away.
Though the Yukon still ran free, the
eddy-ice was growing, and each day saw the river dwindling
to a slushy thread. Save him who has done the
like, no man may know what she endured in traveling
a hundred miles on the rim-ice; nor may they understand
the toil and hardship of breaking the two hundred
miles of packed ice which remained after the river
froze for good. But Madeline was an Indian woman,
so she did these things, and one night there came
a knock at Malemute Kid’s door. Thereat
he fed a team of starving dogs, put a healthy youngster
to bed, and turned his attention to an exhausted woman.
He removed her icebound moccasins while he listened
to her tale, and stuck the point of his knife into
her feet that he might see how far they were frozen.
Despite his tremendous virility, Malemute
Kid was possessed of a softer, womanly element, which
could win the confidence of a snarling wolf-dog or
draw confessions from the most wintry heart. Nor
did he seek them. Hearts opened to him as spontaneously
as flowers to the sun. Even the priest, Father
Roubeau, had been known to confess to him, while the
men and women of the Northland were ever knocking at
his door a door from which the latch-string
hung always out. To Madeline, he could do no
wrong, make no mistake. She had known him from
the time she first cast her lot among the people of
her father’s race; and to her half-barbaric
mind it seemed that in him was centered the wisdom
of the ages, that between his vision and the future
there could be no intervening veil.
There were false ideals in the land.
The social strictures of Dawson were not synonymous
with those of the previous era, and the swift maturity
of the Northland involved much wrong. Malemute
Kid was aware of this, and he had Cal Galbraith’s
measure accurately.
He knew a hasty word was the father
of much evil; besides, he was minded to teach a great
lesson and bring shame upon the man. So Stanley
Prince, the young mining expert, was called into the
conference the following night as was also Lucky Jack
Harrington and his violin. That same night, Bettles,
who owed a great debt to Malemute Kid, harnessed up
Cal Galbraith’s dogs, lashed Cal Galbraith, Junior,
to the sled, and slipped away in the dark for Stuart
River.
II
’So; one two three,
one two three. Now reverse!
No, no! Start up again, Jack. See this
way.’ Prince executed the movement as one
should who has led the cotillion.
’Now; one two three,
one two three. Reverse!
Ah! that’s better. Try it again. I
say, you know, you mustn’t look at your feet.
One two three, one two three.
Shorter steps! You are not hanging to the gee-pole
just now. Try it over.
‘There! that’s the way.
One two three, one two three.’
Round and round went Prince and Madeline in an interminable
waltz. The table and stools had been shoved over
against the wall to increase the room. Malemute
Kid sat on the bunk, chin to knees, greatly interested.
Jack Harrington sat beside him, scraping away on his
violin and following the dancers.
It was a unique situation, the undertaking
of these three men with the woman.
The most pathetic part, perhaps, was
the businesslike way in which they went about it.
No athlete was ever trained more rigidly
for a coming contest, nor wolf-dog for the harness,
than was she. But they had good material, for
Madeline, unlike most women of her race, in her childhood
had escaped the carrying of heavy burdens and the
toil of the trail. Besides, she was a clean-limbed,
willowy creature, possessed of much grace which had
not hitherto been realized. It was this grace
which the men strove to bring out and knock into shape.
‘Trouble with her she learned
to dance all wrong,’ Prince remarked to the
bunk after having deposited his breathless pupil on
the table. ’She’s quick at picking
up; yet I could do better had she never danced a step.
But say, Kid, I can’t understand this.’
Prince imitated a peculiar movement of the shoulders
and head a weakness Madeline suffered from
in walking.
‘Lucky for her she was raised
in the Mission,’ Malemute Kid answered.
’Packing, you know, the head-strap.
Other Indian women have it bad, but she didn’t
do any packing till after she married, and then only
at first. Saw hard lines with that husband of
hers. They went through the Forty-Mile famine
together.’ ‘But can we break it?’
’Don’t know.
’Perhaps long walks with her
trainers will make the riffle. Anyway, they’ll
take it out some, won’t they, Madeline?’
The girl nodded assent. If Malemute Kid, who
knew all things, said so, why it was so. That
was all there was about it.
She had come over to them, anxious
to begin again. Harrington surveyed her in quest
of her points much in the same manner men usually do
horses. It certainly was not disappointing, for
he asked with sudden interest, ‘What did that
beggarly uncle of yours get anyway?’ ’One
rifle, one blanket, twenty bottles of hooch. Rifle
broke.’ She said this last scornfully,
as though disgusted at how low her maiden-value had
been rated.
She spoke fair English, with many
peculiarities of her husband’s speech, but there
was still perceptible the Indian accent, the traditional
groping after strange gutturals. Even this her
instructors had taken in hand, and with no small success,
too.
At the next intermission, Prince discovered
a new predicament.
‘I say, Kid,’ he said,
’we’re wrong, all wrong. She can’t
learn in moccasins.
‘Put her feet into slippers,
and then onto that waxed floor phew!’
Madeline raised a foot and regarded her shapeless house-moccasins
dubiously. In previous winters, both at Circle
City and Forty-Mile, she had danced many a night away
with similar footgear, and there had been nothing
the matter.
But now well, if there
was anything wrong it was for Malemute Kid to know,
not her.
But Malemute Kid did know, and he
had a good eye for measures; so he put on his cap
and mittens and went down the hill to pay Mrs. Eppingwell
a call. Her husband, Clove Eppingwell, was prominent
in the community as one of the great Government officials.
The Kid had noted her slender little
foot one night, at the Governor’s Ball.
And as he also knew her to be as sensible as she was
pretty, it was no task to ask of her a certain small
favor.
On his return, Madeline withdrew for
a moment to the inner room. When she reappeared
Prince was startled.
‘By Jove!’ he gasped.
‘Who’d a’ thought it! The little
witch! Why my sister ’ ‘Is
an English girl,’ interrupted Malemute Kid, ’with
an English foot. This girl comes of a small-footed
race. Moccasins just broadened her feet healthily,
while she did not misshape them by running with the
dogs in her childhood.’ But this explanation
failed utterly to allay Prince’s admiration.
Harrington’s commercial instinct was touched,
and as he looked upon the exquisitely turned foot and
ankle, there ran through his mind the sordid list ’One
rifle, one blanket, twenty bottles of hooch.’
Madeline was the wife of a king, a king whose yellow
treasure could buy outright a score of fashion’s
puppets; yet in all her life her feet had known no
gear save red-tanned moosehide. At first she
had looked in awe at the tiny white-satin slippers;
but she had quickly understood the admiration which
shone, manlike, in the eyes of the men. Her face
flushed with pride. For the moment she was drunken
with her woman’s loveliness; then she murmured,
with increased scorn, ‘And one rifle, broke!’
So the training went on. Every day Malemute Kid
led the girl out on long walks devoted to the correction
of her carriage and the shortening of her stride.
There was little likelihood of her
identity being discovered, for Cal Galbraith and the
rest of the Old-Timers were like lost children among
the many strangers who had rushed into the land.
Besides, the frost of the North has a bitter tongue,
and the tender women of the South, to shield their
cheeks from its biting caresses, were prone to the
use of canvas masks. With faces obscured and
bodies lost in squirrel-skin parkas, a mother and
daughter, meeting on trail, would pass as strangers.
The coaching progressed rapidly.
At first it had been slow, but later a sudden acceleration
had manifested itself. This began from the moment
Madeline tried on the white-satin slippers, and in
so doing found herself. The pride of her renegade
father, apart from any natural self-esteem she might
possess, at that instant received its birth.
Hitherto, she had deemed herself a woman of an alien
breed, of inferior stock, purchased by her lord’s
favor. Her husband had seemed to her a god, who
had lifted her, through no essential virtues on her
part, to his own godlike level. But she had never
forgotten, even when Young Cal was born, that she
was not of his people. As he had been a god, so
had his womenkind been goddesses. She might have
contrasted herself with them, but she had never compared.
It might have been that familiarity
bred contempt; however, be that as it may, she had
ultimately come to understand these roving white men,
and to weigh them.
True, her mind was dark to deliberate
analysis, but she yet possessed her woman’s
clarity of vision in such matters. On the night
of the slippers she had measured the bold, open admiration
of her three man-friends; and for the first time comparison
had suggested itself. It was only a foot and
an ankle, but but comparison could not,
in the nature of things, cease at that point.
She judged herself by their standards till the divinity
of her white sisters was shattered. After all,
they were only women, and why should she not exalt
herself to their midst? In doing these things
she learned where she lacked and with the knowledge
of her weakness came her strength. And so mightily
did she strive that her three trainers often marveled
late into the night over the eternal mystery of woman.
In this way Thanksgiving Night drew
near. At irregular intervals Bettles sent word
down from Stuart River regarding the welfare of Young
Cal. The time of their return was approaching.
More than once a casual caller, hearing dance-music
and the rhythmic pulse of feet, entered, only to find
Harrington scraping away and the other two beating
time or arguing noisily over a mooted step. Madeline
was never in evidence, having precipitately fled to
the inner room.
On one of these nights Cal Galbraith
dropped in. Encouraging news had just come down
from Stuart River, and Madeline had surpassed herself not
in walk alone, and carriage and grace, but in womanly
roguishness. They had indulged in sharp repartee
and she had defended herself brilliantly; and then,
yielding to the intoxication of the moment, and of
her own power, she had bullied, and mastered, and
wheedled, and patronized them with most astonishing
success. And instinctively, involuntarily, they
had bowed, not to her beauty, her wisdom, her wit,
but to that indefinable something in woman to which
man yields yet cannot name.
The room was dizzy with sheer delight
as she and Prince whirled through the last dance of
the evening. Harrington was throwing in inconceivable
flourishes, while Malemute Kid, utterly abandoned,
had seized the broom and was executing mad gyrations
on his own account.
At this instant the door shook with
a heavy rap-rap, and their quick glances noted the
lifting of the latch. But they had survived similar
situations before. Harrington never broke a note.
Madeline shot through the waiting door to the inner
room. The broom went hurtling under the bunk,
and by the time Cal Galbraith and Louis Savoy got their
heads in, Malemute Kid and Prince were in each other’s
arms, wildly schottisching down the room.
As a rule, Indian women do not make
a practice of fainting on provocation, but Madeline
came as near to it as she ever had in her life.
For an hour she crouched on the floor, listening to
the heavy voices of the men rumbling up and down in
mimic thunder. Like familiar chords of childhood
melodies, every intonation, every trick of her husband’s
voice swept in upon her, fluttering her heart and weakening
her knees till she lay half-fainting against the door.
It was well she could neither see nor hear when he
took his departure.
‘When do you expect to go back
to Circle City?’ Malemute Kid asked simply.
‘Haven’t thought much
about it,’ he replied. ’Don’t
think till after the ice breaks.’ ‘And
Madeline?’
He flushed at the question, and there
was a quick droop to his eyes. Malemute Kid could
have despised him for that, had he known men less.
As it was, his gorge rose against the wives and daughters
who had come into the land, and not satisfied with
usurping the place of the native women, had put unclean
thoughts in the heads of the men and made them ashamed.
‘I guess she’s all right,’
the Circle City King answered hastily, and in an apologetic
manner. ’Tom Dixon’s got charge of
my interests, you know, and he sees to it that she
has everything she wants.’ Malemute Kid
laid hand upon his arm and hushed him suddenly.
They had stepped without. Overhead, the aurora,
a gorgeous wanton, flaunted miracles of color; beneath
lay the sleeping town. Far below, a solitary dog
gave tongue.
The King again began to speak, but
the Kid pressed his hand for silence. The sound
multiplied. Dog after dog took up the strain till
the full-throated chorus swayed the night.
To him who hears for the first time
this weird song, is told the first and greatest secret
of the Northland; to him who has heard it often, it
is the solemn knell of lost endeavor. It is the
plaint of tortured souls, for in it is invested the
heritage of the North, the suffering of countless
generations the warning and the requiem
to the world’s estrays.
Cal Galbraith shivered slightly as
it died away in half-caught sobs. The Kid read
his thoughts openly, and wandered back with him through
all the weary days of famine and disease; and with
him was also the patient Madeline, sharing his pains
and perils, never doubting, never complaining.
His mind’s retina vibrated to a score of pictures,
stern, clear-cut, and the hand of the past drew back
with heavy fingers on his heart. It was the psychological
moment. Malemute Kid was half-tempted to play
his reserve card and win the game; but the lesson was
too mild as yet, and he let it pass. The next
instant they had gripped hands, and the King’s
beaded moccasins were drawing protests from the outraged
snow as he crunched down the hill.
Madeline in collapse was another woman
to the mischievous creature of an hour before, whose
laughter had been so infectious and whose heightened
color and flashing eyes had made her teachers for the
while forget. Weak and nerveless, she sat in
the chair just as she had been dropped there by Prince
and Harrington.
Malemute Kid frowned. This would
never do. When the time of meeting her husband
came to hand, she must carry things off with high-handed
imperiousness. It was very necessary she should
do it after the manner of white women, else the victory
would be no victory at all. So he talked to her,
sternly, without mincing of words, and initiated her
into the weaknesses of his own sex, till she came to
understand what simpletons men were after all, and
why the word of their women was law.
A few days before Thanksgiving Night,
Malemute Kid made another call on Mrs. Eppingwell.
She promptly overhauled her feminine fripperies, paid
a protracted visit to the dry-goods department of the
P. C. Company, and returned with the Kid to make Madeline’s
acquaintance. After that came a period such as
the cabin had never seen before, and what with cutting,
and fitting, and basting, and stitching, and numerous
other wonderful and unknowable things, the male conspirators
were more often banished the premises than not.
At such times the Opera House opened its double storm-doors
to them.
So often did they put their heads
together, and so deeply did they drink to curious
toasts, that the loungers scented unknown creeks of
incalculable richness, and it is known that several
checha-quas and at least one Old-Timer kept their
stampeding packs stored behind the bar, ready to hit
the trail at a moment’s notice.
Mrs. Eppingwell was a woman of capacity;
so, when she turned Madeline over to her trainers
on Thanksgiving Night she was so transformed that
they were almost afraid of her. Prince wrapped
a Hudson Bay blanket about her with a mock reverence
more real than feigned, while Malemute Kid, whose
arm she had taken, found it a severe trial to resume
his wonted mentorship. Harrington, with the list
of purchases still running through his head, dragged
along in the rear, nor opened his mouth once all the
way down into the town. When they came to the
back door of the Opera House they took the blanket
from Madeline’s shoulders and spread it on the
snow. Slipping out of Prince’s moccasins,
she stepped upon it in new satin slippers. The
masquerade was at its height. She hesitated,
but they jerked open the door and shoved her in.
Then they ran around to come in by the front entrance.
III
‘Where is Freda?’ the
Old-Timers questioned, while the che-cha-quas
were equally energetic in asking who Freda was.
The ballroom buzzed with her name.
It was on everybody’s lips.
Grizzled ‘sour-dough boys,’ day-laborers
at the mines but proud of their degree, either patronized
the spruce-looking tenderfeet and lied eloquently the
‘sour-dough boys’ being specially created
to toy with truth or gave them savage looks
of indignation because of their ignorance. Perhaps
forty kings of the Upper and Lower Countries were
on the floor, each deeming himself hot on the trail
and sturdily backing his judgment with the yellow dust
of the realm. An assistant was sent to the man
at the scales, upon whom had fallen the burden of
weighing up the sacks, while several of the gamblers,
with the rules of chance at their finger-ends, made
up alluring books on the field and favorites.
Which was Freda? Time and again
the ‘Greek Dancer’ was thought to have
been discovered, but each discovery brought panic to
the betting ring and a frantic registering of new
wagers by those who wished to hedge. Malemute
Kid took an interest in the hunt, his advent being
hailed uproariously by the revelers, who knew him
to a man. The Kid had a good eye for the trick
of a step, and ear for the lilt of a voice, and his
private choice was a marvelous creature who scintillated
as the ’Aurora Borealis.’ But the
Greek dancer was too subtle for even his penetration.
The majority of the gold-hunters seemed to have centered
their verdict on the ‘Russian Princess,’
who was the most graceful in the room, and hence could
be no other than Freda Moloof.
During a quadrille a roar of satisfaction
went up. She was discovered. At previous
balls, in the figure, ‘all hands round,’
Freda had displayed an inimitable step and variation
peculiarly her own. As the figure was called,
the ‘Russian Princess’ gave the unique
rhythm to limb and body. A chorus of I-told-you-so’s
shook the squared roof-beams, when lo! it was noticed
that ‘Aurora Borealis’ and another masque,
the ‘Spirit of the Pole,’ were performing
the same trick equally well. And when two twin
‘Sun-Dogs’ and a ‘Frost Queen’
followed suit, a second assistant was dispatched to
the aid of the man at the scales.
Bettles came off trail in the midst
of the excitement, descending upon them in a hurricane
of frost. His rimed brows turned to cataracts
as he whirled about; his mustache, still frozen, seemed
gemmed with diamonds and turned the light in varicolored
rays; while the flying feet slipped on the chunks
of ice which rattled from his moccasins and German
socks. A Northland dance is quite an informal
affair, the men of the creeks and trails having lost
whatever fastidiousness they might have at one time
possessed; and only in the high official circles are
conventions at all observed. Here, caste carried
no significance. Millionaires and paupers, dog-drivers
and mounted policemen joined hands with ’ladies
in the center,’ and swept around the circle
performing most remarkable capers. Primitive
in their pleasure, boisterous and rough, they displayed
no rudeness, but rather a crude chivalry more genuine
than the most polished courtesy.
In his quest for the ‘Greek
Dancer,’ Cal Galbraith managed to get into the
same set with the ‘Russian Princess,’ toward
whom popular suspicion had turned.
But by the time he had guided her
through one dance, he was willing not only to stake
his millions that she was not Freda, but that he had
had his arm about her waist before. When or where
he could not tell, but the puzzling sense of familiarity
so wrought upon him that he turned his attention to
the discovery of her identity. Malemute Kid might
have aided him instead of occasionally taking the
Princess for a few turns and talking earnestly to
her in low tones. But it was Jack Harrington
who paid the ‘Russian Princess’ the most
assiduous court. Once he drew Cal Galbraith aside
and hazarded wild guesses as to who she was, and explained
to him that he was going in to win. That rankled
the Circle City King, for man is not by nature monogamic,
and he forgot both Madeline and Freda in the new quest.
It was soon noised about that the
‘Russian Princess’ was not Freda Moloof.
Interest deepened. Here was a fresh enigma.
They knew Freda though they could not find her, but
here was somebody they had found and did not know.
Even the women could not place her, and they knew
every good dancer in the camp. Many took her for
one of the official clique, indulging in a silly escapade.
Not a few asserted she would disappear before the
unmasking. Others were equally positive that she
was the woman-reporter of the Kansas City Star, come
to write them up at ninety dollars per column.
And the men at the scales worked busily.
At one o’clock every couple
took to the floor. The unmasking began amid laughter
and delight, like that of carefree children. There
was no end of Oh’s and Ah’s as mask after
mask was lifted. The scintillating ‘Aurora
Borealis’ became the brawny negress whose income
from washing the community’s clothes ran at
about five hundred a month. The twin ‘Sun-Dogs’
discovered mustaches on their upper lips, and were
recognized as brother Fraction-Kings of El Dorado.
In one of the most prominent sets, and the slowest
in uncovering, was Cal Galbraith with the ‘Spirit
of the Pole.’ Opposite him was Jack Harrington
and the ‘Russian Princess.’ The rest
had discovered themselves, yet the ’Greek Dancer’
was still missing. All eyes were upon the group.
Cal Galbraith, in response to their cries, lifted
his partner’s mask. Freda’s wonderful
face and brilliant eyes flashed out upon them.
A roar went up, to be squelched suddenly in the new
and absorbing mystery of the ‘Russian Princess.’
Her face was still hidden, and Jack Harrington was
struggling with her. The dancers tittered on the
tiptoes of expectancy. He crushed her dainty
costume roughly, and then and then the revelers
exploded. The joke was on them. They had
danced all night with a tabooed native woman.
But those that knew, and they were
many, ceased abruptly, and a hush fell upon the room.
Cal Galbraith crossed over with great
strides, angrily, and spoke to Madeline in polyglot
Chinook. But she retained her composure, apparently
oblivious to the fact that she was the cynosure of
all eyes, and answered him in English. She showed
neither fright nor anger, and Malemute Kid chuckled
at her well-bred equanimity. The King felt baffled,
defeated; his common Siwash wife had passed beyond
him.
‘Come!’ he said finally.
‘Come on home.’ ‘I beg pardon,’
she replied; ’I have agreed to go to supper
with Mr. Harrington. Besides, there’s no
end of dances promised.’
Harrington extended his arm to lead
her away. He evinced not the slightest disinclination
toward showing his back, but Malemute Kid had by this
time edged in closer. The Circle City King was
stunned. Twice his hand dropped to his belt,
and twice the Kid gathered himself to spring; but
the retreating couple passed through the supper-room
door where canned oysters were spread at five dollars
the plate.
The crowd sighed audibly, broke up
into couples, and followed them. Freda pouted
and went in with Cal Galbraith; but she had a good
heart and a sure tongue, and she spoiled his oysters
for him. What she said is of no importance, but
his face went red and white at intervals, and he swore
repeatedly and savagely at himself.
The supper-room was filled with a
pandemonium of voices, which ceased suddenly as Cal
Galbraith stepped over to his wife’s table.
Since the unmasking considerable weights of dust had
been placed as to the outcome. Everybody watched
with breathless interest.
Harrington’s blue eyes were
steady, but under the overhanging tablecloth a Smith
& Wesson balanced on his knee. Madeline looked
up, casually, with little interest.
‘May may I have the
next round dance with you?’ the King stuttered.
The wife of the King glanced at her
card and inclined her head.