I
The sleds were singing their eternal
lament to the creaking of the harness and the tinkling
bells of the leaders; but the men and dogs were tired
and made no sound. The trail was heavy with new-fallen
snow, and they had come far, and the runners, burdened
with flint-like quarters of frozen moose, clung tenaciously
to the unpacked surface and held back with a stubbornness
almost human.
Darkness was coming on, but there
was no camp to pitch that night. The snow fell
gently through the pulseless air, not in flakes, but
in tiny frost crystals of delicate design. It
was very warm barely ten below zero and
the men did not mind. Meyers and Bettles had raised
their ear flaps, while Malemute Kid had even taken
off his mittens.
The dogs had been fagged out early
in the after noon, but they now began to show new
vigor. Among the more astute there was a certain
restlessness an impatience at the restraint
of the traces, an indecisive quickness of movement,
a sniffing of snouts and pricking of ears. These
became incensed at their more phlegmatic brothers,
urging them on with numerous sly nips on their hinder
quarters. Those, thus chidden, also contracted
and helped spread the contagion. At last the
leader of the foremost sled uttered a sharp whine of
satisfaction, crouching lower in the snow and throwing
himself against the collar. The rest followed
suit.
There was an ingathering of back hands,
a tightening of traces; the sleds leaped forward,
and the men clung to the gee poles, violently accelerating
the uplift of their feet that they might escape going
under the runners. The weariness of the day fell
from them, and they whooped encouragement to the dogs.
The animals responded with joyous yelps. They
were swinging through the gathering darkness at a rattling
gallop.
‘Gee! Gee!’ the men
cried, each in turn, as their sleds abruptly left
the main trail, heeling over on single runners like
luggers on the wind.
Then came a hundred yards’ dash
to the lighted parchment window, which told its own
story of the home cabin, the roaring Yukon stove, and
the steaming pots of tea. But the home cabin
had been invaded. Threescore huskies chorused
defiance, and as many furry forms precipitated themselves
upon the dogs which drew the first sled. The door
was flung open, and a man, clad in the scarlet tunic
of the Northwest Police, waded knee-deep among the
furious brutes, calmly and impartially dispensing
soothing justice with the butt end of a dog whip.
After that the men shook hands; and in this wise was
Malemute Kid welcomed to his own cabin by a stranger.
Stanley Prince, who should have welcomed
him, and who was responsible for the Yukon stove and
hot tea aforementioned, was busy with his guests.
There were a dozen or so of them, as nondescript a
crowd as ever served the Queen in the enforcement
of her laws or the delivery of her mails. They
were of many breeds, but their common life had formed
of them a certain type a lean and wiry type,
with trail-hardened muscles, and sun-browned faces,
and untroubled souls which gazed frankly forth, clear-eyed
and steady.
They drove the dogs of the Queen,
wrought fear in the hearts of her enemies, ate of
her meager fare, and were happy. They had seen
life, and done deeds, and lived romances; but they
did not know it.
And they were very much at home.
Two of them were sprawled upon Malemute Kid’s
bunk, singing chansons which their French forebears
sang in the days when first they entered the Northwest
land and mated with its Indian women. Bettles’
bunk had suffered a similar invasion, and three or
four lusty voyageurs worked their toes among its blankets
as they listened to the tale of one who had served
on the boat brigade with Wolseley when he fought his
way to Khartoum.
And when he tired, a cowboy told of
courts and kings and lords and ladies he had seen
when Buffalo Bill toured the capitals of Europe.
In a corner two half-breeds, ancient comrades in a
lost campaign, mended harnesses and talked of the
days when the Northwest flamed with insurrection and
Louis Riel was king.
Rough jests and rougher jokes went
up and down, and great hazards by trail and river
were spoken of in the light of commonplaces, only to
be recalled by virtue of some grain of humor or ludicrous
happening. Prince was led away by these uncrowned
heroes who had seen history made, who regarded the
great and the romantic as but the ordinary and the
incidental in the routine of life. He passed his
precious tobacco among them with lavish disregard,
and rusty chains of reminiscence were loosened, and
forgotten odysseys resurrected for his especial benefit.
When conversation dropped and the
travelers filled the last pipes and lashed their tight-rolled
sleeping furs. Prince fell back upon his comrade
for further information.
‘Well, you know what the cowboy
is,’ Malemute Kid answered, beginning to unlace
his moccasins; ’and it’s not hard to guess
the British blood in his bed partner. As for
the rest, they’re all children of the coureurs
du bois, mingled with God knows how many
other bloods. The two turning in by the door
are the regulation ‘breeds’ or Boisbrules.
That lad with the worsted breech scarf notice
his eyebrows and the turn of his jaw shows
a Scotchman wept in his mother’s smoky tepee.
And that handsome looking fellow putting the capote
under his head is a French half-breed you
heard him talking; he doesn’t like the two Indians
turning in next to him. You see, when the ‘breeds’
rose under the Riel the full-bloods kept the peace,
and they’ve not lost much love for one another
since.’ ’But I say, what’s that
glum-looking fellow by the stove? I’ll
swear he can’t talk English. He hasn’t
opened his mouth all night.’ ’You’re
wrong. He knows English well enough. Did
you follow his eyes when he listened? I did.
But he’s neither kith nor kin to the others.
When they talked their own patois you could see he
didn’t understand. I’ve been wondering
myself what he is. Let’s find out.’
‘Fire a couple of sticks into the stove!’
Malemute Kid commanded, raising his
voice and looking squarely at the man in question.
He obeyed at once.
‘Had discipline knocked into
him somewhere.’ Prince commented in a low
tone.
Malemute Kid nodded, took off his
socks, and picked his way among recumbent men to the
stove. There he hung his damp footgear among a
score or so of mates.
‘When do you expect to get to
Dawson?’ he asked tentatively.
The man studied him a moment before
replying. ’They say seventy-five mile.
So? Maybe two days.’ The very slightest
accent was perceptible, while there was no awkward
hesitancy or groping for words.
‘Been in the country before?’
‘No.’ ‘Northwest Territory?’
‘Yes.’ ’Born there?’
‘No.’
‘Well, where the devil were
you born? You’re none of these.’
Malemute Kid swept his hand over the dog drivers,
even including the two policemen who had turned into
Prince’s bunk. ’Where did you come
from? I’ve seen faces like yours before,
though I can’t remember just where.’
‘I know you,’ he irrelevantly replied,
at once turning the drift of Malemute Kid’s
questions.
‘Where? Ever see me?’
’No; your partner, him priest, Pastilik, long
time ago. Him ask me if I see you, Malemute Kid.
Him give me grub. I no stop long. You hear
him speak ‘bout me?’ ’Oh! you’re
the fellow that traded the otter skins for the dogs?’
The man nodded, knocked out his pipe, and signified
his disinclination for conversation by rolling up
in his furs. Malemute Kid blew out the slush lamp
and crawled under the blankets with Prince.
‘Well, what is he?’ ’Don’t
know turned me off, somehow, and then shut
up like a clam.
’But he’s a fellow to
whet your curiosity. I’ve heard of him.
All the coast wondered about him eight years ago.
Sort of mysterious, you know. He came down out
of the North in the dead of winter, many a thousand
miles from here, skirting Bering Sea and traveling
as though the devil were after him. No one ever
learned where he came from, but he must have come
far. He was badly travel-worn when he got food
from the Swedish missionary on Golovin Bay and asked
the way south. We heard of all this afterward.
Then he abandoned the shore line, heading right across
Norton Sound. Terrible weather, snowstorms and
high winds, but he pulled through where a thousand
other men would have died, missing St. Michaels and
making the land at Pastilik. He’d lost all
but two dogs, and was nearly gone with starvation.
’He was so anxious to go on
that Father Roubeau fitted him out with grub; but
he couldn’t let him have any dogs, for he was
only waiting my arrival, to go on a trip himself.
Mr. Ulysses knew too much to start on without animals,
and fretted around for several days. He had on
his sled a bunch of beautifully cured otter skins,
sea otters, you know, worth their weight in gold.
There was also at Pastilik an old Shylock of a Russian
trader, who had dogs to kill. Well, they didn’t
dicker very long, but when the Strange One headed
south again, it was in the rear of a spanking dog
team. Mr. Shylock, by the way, had the otter
skins. I saw them, and they were magnificent.
We figured it up and found the dogs brought him at
least five hundred apiece. And it wasn’t
as if the Strange One didn’t know the value of
sea otter; he was an Indian of some sort, and what
little he talked showed he’d been among white
men.
’After the ice passed out of
the sea, word came up from Nunivak Island that he’d
gone in there for grub. Then he dropped from sight,
and this is the first heard of him in eight years.
Now where did he come from? and what was he doing
there? and why did he come from there? He’s
Indian, he’s been nobody knows where, and he’s
had discipline, which is unusual for an Indian.
Another mystery of the North for you to solve, Prince.’
‘Thanks awfully, but I’ve got too many
on hand as it is,’ he replied.
Malemute Kid was already breathing
heavily; but the young mining engineer gazed straight
up through the thick darkness, waiting for the strange
orgasm which stirred his blood to die away. And
when he did sleep, his brain worked on, and for the
nonce he, too, wandered through the white unknown,
struggled with the dogs on endless trails, and saw
men live, and toil, and die like men. The next
morning, hours before daylight, the dog drivers and
policemen pulled out for Dawson. But the powers
that saw to Her Majesty’s interests and ruled
the destinies of her lesser creatures gave the mailmen
little rest, for a week later they appeared at Stuart
River, heavily burdened with letters for Salt Water.
However, their dogs had been replaced
by fresh ones; but, then, they were dogs.
The men had expected some sort of
a layover in which to rest up; besides, this Klondike
was a new section of the Northland, and they had wished
to see a little something of the Golden City where
dust flowed like water and dance halls rang with never-ending
revelry. But they dried their socks and smoked
their evening pipes with much the same gusto as on
their former visit, though one or two bold spirits
speculated on desertion and the possibility of crossing
the unexplored Rockies to the east, and thence, by
the Mackenzie Valley, of gaining their old stamping
grounds in the Chippewyan country.
Two or three even decided to return
to their homes by that route when their terms of service
had expired, and they began to lay plans forthwith,
looking forward to the hazardous undertaking in much
the same way a city-bred man would to a day’s
holiday in the woods.
He of the Otter Skins seemed very
restless, though he took little interest in the discussion,
and at last he drew Malemute Kid to one side and talked
for some time in low tones.
Prince cast curious eyes in their
direction, and the mystery deepened when they put
on caps and mittens and went outside. When they
returned, Malemute Kid placed his gold scales on the
table, weighed out the matter of sixty ounces, and
transferred them to the Strange One’s sack.
Then the chief of the dog drivers joined the conclave,
and certain business was transacted with him.
The next day the gang went on upriver,
but He of the Otter Skins took several pounds of grub
and turned his steps back toward Dawson.
‘Didn’t know what to make
of it,’ said Malemute Kid in response to Prince’s
queries; ’but the poor beggar wanted to be quit
of the service for some reason or other at
least it seemed a most important one to him, though
he wouldn’t let on what. You see, it’s
just like the army: he signed for two years,
and the only way to get free was to buy himself out.
He couldn’t desert and then stay here, and he
was just wild to remain in the country.
’Made up his mind when he got
to Dawson, he said; but no one knew him, hadn’t
a cent, and I was the only one he’d spoken two
words with. So he talked it over with the lieutenant-governor,
and made arrangements in case he could get the money
from me loan, you know. Said he’d
pay back in the year, and, if I wanted, would put
me onto something rich. Never’d seen it,
but he knew it was rich.
’And talk! why, when he got
me outside he was ready to weep. Begged and pleaded;
got down in the snow to me till I hauled him out of
it. Palavered around like a crazy man.
’Swore he’s worked to
this very end for years and years, and couldn’t
bear to be disappointed now. Asked him what end,
but he wouldn’t say.
’Said they might keep him on
the other half of the trail and he wouldn’t
get to Dawson in two years, and then it would be too
late. Never saw a man take on so in my life.
And when I said I’d let him have it, had to
yank him out of the snow again. Told him to consider
it in the light of a grubstake. Think he’d
have it? No sir! Swore he’d give me
all he found, make me rich beyond the dreams of avarice,
and all such stuff. Now a man who puts his life
and time against a grubstake ordinarily finds it hard
enough to turn over half of what he finds. Something
behind all this, Prince; just you make a note of it.
We’ll hear of him if he stays in the country ’
‘And if he doesn’t?’ ’Then
my good nature gets a shock, and I’m sixty some
odd ounces out.’ The cold weather had come
on with the long nights, and the sun had begun to play
his ancient game of peekaboo along the southern snow
line ere aught was heard of Malemute Kid’s grubstake.
And then, one bleak morning in early January, a heavily
laden dog train pulled into his cabin below Stuart
River. He of the Otter Skins was there, and with
him walked a man such as the gods have almost forgotten
how to fashion. Men never talked of luck and
pluck and five-hundred-dollar dirt without bringing
in the name of Axel Gunderson; nor could tales of
nerve or strength or daring pass up and down the campfire
without the summoning of his presence. And when
the conversation flagged, it blazed anew at mention
of the woman who shared his fortunes.
As has been noted, in the making of
Axel Gunderson the gods had remembered their old-time
cunning and cast him after the manner of men who were
born when the world was young. Full seven feet
he towered in his picturesque costume which marked
a king of Eldorado. His chest, neck, and limbs
were those of a giant. To bear his three hundred
pounds of bone and muscle, his snowshoes were greater
by a generous yard than those of other men. Rough-hewn,
with rugged brow and massive jaw and unflinching eyes
of palest blue, his face told the tale of one who knew
but the law of might. Of the yellow of ripe corn
silk, his frost-incrusted hair swept like day across
the night and fell far down his coat of bearskin.
A vague tradition of the sea seemed
to cling about him as he swung down the narrow trail
in advance of the dogs; and he brought the butt of
his dog whip against Malemute Kid’s door as
a Norse sea rover, on southern foray, might thunder
for admittance at the castle gate.
Prince bared his womanly arms and
kneaded sour-dough bread, casting, as he did so, many
a glance at the three guests three guests
the like of which might never come under a man’s
roof in a lifetime. The Strange One, whom Malemute
Kid had surnamed Ulysses, still fascinated him; but
his interest chiefly gravitated between Axel Gunderson
and Axel Gunderson’s wife. She felt the
day’s journey, for she had softened in comfortable
cabins during the many days since her husband mastered
the wealth of frozen pay streaks, and she was tired.
She rested against his great breast like a slender
flower against a wall, replying lazily to Malemute
Kid’s good-natured banter, and stirring Prince’s
blood strangely with an occasional sweep of her deep,
dark eyes. For Prince was a man, and healthy,
and had seen few women in many months. And she
was older than he, and an Indian besides. But
she was different from all native wives he had met:
she had traveled had been in his country
among others, he gathered from the conversation; and
she knew most of the things the women of his own race
knew, and much more that it was not in the nature
of things for them to know. She could make a meal
of sun-dried fish or a bed in the snow; yet she teased
them with tantalizing details of many-course dinners,
and caused strange internal dissensions to arise at
the mention of various quondam dishes which they had
well-nigh forgotten. She knew the ways of the
moose, the bear, and the little blue fox, and of the
wild amphibians of the Northern seas; she was skilled
in the lore of the woods, and the streams, and the
tale writ by man and bird and beast upon the delicate
snow crust was to her an open book; yet Prince caught
the appreciative twinkle in her eye as she read the
Rules of the Camp. These rules had been fathered
by the Unquenchable Bettles at a time when his blood
ran high, and were remarkable for the terse simplicity
of their humor.
Prince always turned them to the wall
before the arrival of ladies; but who could suspect
that this native wife Well, it was too late
now.
This, then, was the wife of Axel Gunderson,
a woman whose name and fame had traveled with her
husband’s, hand in hand, through all the Northland.
At table, Malemute Kid baited her with the assurance
of an old friend, and Prince shook off the shyness
of first acquaintance and joined in. But she
held her own in the unequal contest, while her husband,
slower in wit, ventured naught but applause. And
he was very proud of her; his every look and action
revealed the magnitude of the place she occupied in
his life. He of the Otter Skins ate in silence,
forgotten in the merry battle; and long ere the others
were done he pushed back from the table and went out
among the dogs. Yet all too soon his fellow travelers
drew on their mittens and parkas and followed him.
There had been no snow for many days,
and the sleds slipped along the hardpacked Yukon trail
as easily as if it had been glare ice. Ulysses
led the first sled; with the second came Prince and
Axel Gunderson’s wife; while Malemute Kid and
the yellow-haired giant brought up the third.
‘It’s only a hunch, Kid,’
he said, ’but I think it’s straight.
He’s never been there, but he tells a good story,
and shows a map I heard of when I was in the Kootenay
country years ago. I’d like to have you
go along; but he’s a strange one, and swore
point-blank to throw it up if anyone was brought in.
But when I come back you’ll get first tip, and
I’ll stake you next to me, and give you a half
share in the town site besides.’ ‘No!
no!’ he cried, as the other strove to interrupt.
’I’m running this, and before I’m
done it’ll need two heads.
’If it’s all right, why,
it’ll be a second Cripple Creek, man; do you
hear? a second Cripple Creek! It’s
quartz, you know, not placer; and if we work it right
we’ll corral the whole thing millions
upon millions. I’ve heard of the place
before, and so have you. We’ll build a
town thousands of workmen good
waterways steamship lines big
carrying trade light-draught steamers for
head reaches survey a railroad, perhaps sawmills electric-light
plant do our own banking commercial
company syndicate Say! Just
you hold your hush till I get back!’ The sleds
came to a halt where the trail crossed the mouth of
Stuart River. An unbroken sea of frost, its wide
expanse stretched away into the unknown east.
The snowshoes were withdrawn from
the lashings of the sleds. Axel Gunderson shook
hands and stepped to the fore, his great webbed shoes
sinking a fair half yard into the feathery surface
and packing the snow so the dogs should not wallow.
His wife fell in behind the last sled, betraying long
practice in the art of handling the awkward footgear,
The stillness was broken with cheery farewells; the
dogs whined; and He of the Otter Skins talked with
his whip to a recalcitrant wheeler.
An hour later the train had taken
on the likeness of a black pencil crawling in a long,
straight line across a mighty sheet of foolscap.
II
One night, many weeks later, Malemute
Kid and Prince fell to solving chess problems from
the torn page of an ancient magazine. The Kid
had just returned from his Bonanza properties and
was resting up preparatory to a long moose hunt.
Prince, too, had been on creek and
trail nearly all winter, and had grown hungry for
a blissful week of cabin life.
’Interpose the black knight,
and force the king. No, that won’t do.
See, the next move-’
’Why advance the pawn two squares?
Bound to take it in transit, and with the bishop out
of the way-’ ’But hold on! That leaves
a hole, and-’ ‘No; it’s protected.
Go ahead! You’ll see it works.’
It was very interesting. Somebody knocked at
the door a second time before Malemute Kid said, ‘Come
in.’ The door swung open. Something
staggered in.
Prince caught one square look and
sprang to his feet. The horror in his eyes caused
Malemute Kid to whirl about; and he, too, was startled,
though he had seen bad things before. The thing
tottered blindly toward them. Prince edged away
till he reached the nail from which hung his Smith
& Wesson.
‘My God! what is it?’ he whispered to
Malemute Kid.
‘Don’t know. Looks
like a case of freezing and no grub,’ replied
the Kid, sliding away in the opposite direction.
’Watch out! It may be mad,’ he warned,
coming back from closing the door.
The thing advanced to the table.
The bright flame of the slush lamp caught its eye.
It was amused, and gave voice to eldritch cackles which
betokened mirth.
Then, suddenly, he for
it was a man swayed back, with a hitch to
his skin trousers, and began to sing a chantey, such
as men lift when they swing around the capstan circle
and the sea snorts in their ears: Yan-kee ship
come down de ri-ib-er, Pull! my bully boys! Pull!
D’yeh want to know de captain ru-uns
her? Pull! my bully boys! Pull! Jon-a-than
Jones ob South Caho-li-in-a, Pull! my
bully. He broke off abruptly, tottered with a
wolfish snarl to the meat shelf, and before they could
intercept was tearing with his teeth at a chunk of
raw bacon. The struggle was fierce between him
and Malemute Kid; but his mad strength left him as
suddenly as it had come, and he weakly surrendered
the spoil. Between them they got him upon a stool,
where he sprawled with half his body across the table.
A small dose of whiskey strengthened
him, so that he could dip a spoon into the sugar caddy
which Malemute Kid placed before him. After his
appetite had been somewhat cloyed, Prince, shuddering
as he did so, passed him a mug of weak beef tea.
The creature’s eyes were alight
with a somber frenzy, which blazed and waned with
every mouthful. There was very little skin to
the face. The face, for that matter, sunken and
emaciated, bore little likeness to human countenance.
Frost after frost had bitten deeply,
each depositing its stratum of scab upon the half-healed
scar that went before. This dry, hard surface
was of a bloody-black color, serrated by grievous cracks
wherein the raw red flesh peeped forth. His skin
garments were dirty and in tatters, and the fur of
one side was singed and burned away, showing where
he had lain upon his fire.
Malemute Kid pointed to where the
sun-tanned hide had been cut away, strip by strip the
grim signature of famine.
‘Who are you?’
slowly and distinctly enunciated the Kid.
The man paid no heed.
‘Where do you come from?’
‘Yan-kee ship come down de ri-ib-er,’ was
the quavering response.
‘Don’t doubt the beggar
came down the river,’ the Kid said, shaking him
in an endeavor to start a more lucid flow of talk.
But the man shrieked at the contact,
clapping a hand to his side in evident pain.
He rose slowly to his feet, half leaning on the table.
’She laughed at me so with
the hate in her eye; and she would not come.’
His voice died away, and he was sinking back when
Malemute Kid gripped him by the wrist and shouted,
’Who? Who would not come?’ ’She,
Unga. She laughed, and struck at me, so, and so.
And then-’ ‘Yes?’
‘And then ’
‘And then what?’ ’And then he lay
very still in the snow a long time. He is-still
in the snow.’ The
two men looked at each other helplessly.
‘Who is in the snow?’
’She, Unga. She looked at me with the hate
in her eye, and then ’
‘Yes, yes.’ ’And
then she took the knife, so; and once, twice she
was weak. I traveled very slow. And there
is much gold in that place, very much gold.’
‘Where is Unga?’ For all Malemute Kid knew,
she might be dying a mile away. He shook the
man savagely, repeating again and again, ‘Where
is Unga? Who is Unga?’ ‘She is in the snow.’
‘Go on!’ The Kid was pressing his wrist
cruelly.
’So I would be in the
snow but I had a debt to pay.
It was heavy I had a-debt to pay a debt to pay
I had-’ The faltering monosyllables
ceased as he fumbled in his pouch and drew forth a
buckskin sack. ’A debt to pay five pounds of gold-grub
stake Mal e mute Kid I y ’
The exhausted head dropped upon the table; nor could
Malemute Kid rouse it again.
‘It’s Ulysses,’
he said quietly, tossing the bag of dust on the table.
’Guess it’s all day with Axel Gunderson
and the woman. Come on, let’s get him between
the blankets. He’s Indian; he’ll pull
through and tell a tale besides.’ As they
cut his garments from him, near his right breast could
be seen two unhealed, hard-lipped knife thrusts.
III
’I will talk of the things which
were in my own way; but you will understand.
I will begin at the beginning, and tell of myself and
the woman, and, after that, of the man.’
He of the Otter Skins drew over to the stove as do
men who have been deprived of fire and are afraid the
Promethean gift may vanish at any moment. Malemute
Kid picked up the slush lamp and placed it so its
light might fall upon the face of the narrator.
Prince slid his body over the edge of the bunk and
joined them.
’I am Naass, a chief, and the
son of a chief, born between a sunset and a rising,
on the dark seas, in my father’s oomiak.
All of a night the men toiled at the paddles, and
the women cast out the waves which threw in upon us,
and we fought with the storm. The salt spray froze
upon my mother’s breast till her breath passed
with the passing of the tide. But I I
raised my voice with the wind and the storm, and lived.
‘We dwelt in Akatan ’ ‘Where?’
asked Malemute Kid.
’Akatan, which is in the Aleutians;
Akatan, beyond Chignik, beyond Kardalak, beyond Unimak.
As I say, we dwelt in Akatan, which lies in the midst
of the sea on the edge of the world. We farmed
the salt seas for the fish, the seal, and the otter;
and our homes shouldered about one another on the
rocky strip between the rim of the forest and the
yellow beach where our kayaks lay. We were not
many, and the world was very small. There were
strange lands to the east islands like Akatan;
so we thought all the world was islands and did not
mind.
’I was different from my people.
In the sands of the beach were the crooked timbers
and wave-warped planks of a boat such as my people
never built; and I remember on the point of the island
which overlooked the ocean three ways there stood
a pine tree which never grew there, smooth and straight
and tall. It is said the two men came to that
spot, turn about, through many days, and watched with
the passing of the light. These two men came
from out of the sea in the boat which lay in pieces
on the beach. And they were white like you, and
weak as the little children when the seal have gone
away and the hunters come home empty. I know
of these things from the old men and the old women,
who got them from their fathers and mothers before
them. These strange white men did not take kindly
to our ways at first, but they grew strong, what of
the fish and the oil, and fierce. And they built
them each his own house, and took the pick of our
women, and in time children came. Thus he was
born who was to become the father of my father’s
father.
’As I said, I was different
from my people, for I carried the strong, strange
blood of this white man who came out of the sea.
It is said we had other laws in the days before these
men; but they were fierce and quarrelsome, and fought
with our men till there were no more left who dared
to fight. Then they made themselves chiefs, and
took away our old laws, and gave us new ones, insomuch
that the man was the son of his father, and not his
mother, as our way had been. They also ruled that
the son, first-born, should have all things which were
his father’s before him, and that the brothers
and sisters should shift for themselves. And
they gave us other laws. They showed us new ways
in the catching of fish and the killing of bear which
were thick in the woods; and they taught us to lay
by bigger stores for the time of famine. And
these things were good.
’But when they had become chiefs,
and there were no more men to face their anger, they
fought, these strange white men, each with the other.
And the one whose blood I carry drove his seal spear
the length of an arm through the other’s body.
Their children took up the fight, and their children’s
children; and there was great hatred between them,
and black doings, even to my time, so that in each
family but one lived to pass down the blood of them
that went before. Of my blood I was alone; of
the other man’s there was but a girl. Unga,
who lived with her mother. Her father and my
father did not come back from the fishing one night;
but afterward they washed up to the beach on the big
tides, and they held very close to each other.
’The people wondered, because
of the hatred between the houses, and the old men
shook their heads and said the fight would go on when
children were born to her and children to me.
They told me this as a boy, till I came to believe,
and to look upon Unga as a foe, who was to be the
mother of children which were to fight with mine.
I thought of these things day by day, and when I grew
to a stripling I came to ask why this should be so.
’And they answered, “We
do not know, but that in such way your fathers did.”
And I marveled that those which were to come should
fight the battles of those that were gone, and in
it I could see no right. But the people said
it must be, and I was only a stripling.
’And they said I must hurry,
that my blood might be the older and grow strong before
hers. This was easy, for I was head man, and the
people looked up to me because of the deeds and the
laws of my fathers, and the wealth which was mine.
Any maiden would come to me, but I found none to my
liking. And the old men and the mothers of maidens
told me to hurry, for even then were the hunters bidding
high to the mother of Unga; and should her children
grow strong before mine, mine would surely die.
’Nor did I find a maiden till
one night coming back from the fishing. The sunlight
was lying, so, low and full in the eyes, the wind free,
and the kayacks racing with the white seas. Of
a sudden the kayak of Unga came driving past me, and
she looked upon me, so, with her black hair flying
like a cloud of night and the spray wet on her cheek.
As I say, the sunlight was full in the eyes, and I
was a stripling; but somehow it was all clear, and
I knew it to be the call of kind to kind.
’As she whipped ahead she looked
back within the space of two strokes looked
as only the woman Unga could look and again
I knew it as the call of kind. The people shouted
as we ripped past the lazy oomiaks and left them far
behind. But she was quick at the paddle, and
my heart was like the belly of a sail, and I did not
gain. The wind freshened, the sea whitened, and,
leaping like the seals on the windward breech, we
roared down the golden pathway of the sun.’
Naass was crouched half out of his stool, in the attitude
of one driving a paddle, as he ran the race anew.
Somewhere across the stove he beheld the tossing kayak
and the flying hair of Unga. The voice of the
wind was in his ears, and its salt beat fresh upon
his nostrils.
’But she made the shore, and
ran up the sand, laughing, to the house of her mother.
And a great thought came to me that night a
thought worthy of him that was chief over all the
people of Akatan. So, when the moon was up, I
went down to the house of her mother, and looked upon
the goods of Yash-Noosh, which were piled by the door the
goods of Yash-Noosh, a strong hunter who had it in
mind to be the father of the children of Unga.
Other young men had piled their goods there and taken
them away again; and each young man had made a pile
greater than the one before.
’And I laughed to the moon and
the stars, and went to my own house where my wealth
was stored. And many trips I made, till my pile
was greater by the fingers of one hand than the pile
of Yash-Noosh. There were fish, dried in the
sun and smoked; and forty hides of the hair seal,
and half as many of the fur, and each hide was tied
at the mouth and big bellied with oil; and ten skins
of bear which I killed in the woods when they came
out in the spring. And there were beads and blankets
and scarlet cloths, such as I got in trade from the
people who lived to the east, and who got them in
trade from the people who lived still beyond in the
east.
’And I looked upon the pile
of Yash-Noosh and laughed, for I was head man in Akatan,
and my wealth was greater than the wealth of all my
young men, and my fathers had done deeds, and given
laws, and put their names for all time in the mouths
of the people.
’So, when the morning came,
I went down to the beach, casting out of the corner
of my eye at the house of the mother of Unga.
My offer yet stood untouched.
’And the women smiled, and said
sly things one to the other. I wondered, for
never had such a price been offered; and that night
I added more to the pile, and put beside it a kayak
of well-tanned skins which never yet had swam in the
sea. But in the day it was yet there, open to
the laughter of all men. The mother of Unga was
crafty, and I grew angry at the shame in which I stood
before my people. So that night I added till
it became a great pile, and I hauled up my oomiak,
which was of the value of twenty kayaks. And in
the morning there was no pile.
’Then made I preparation for
the wedding, and the people that lived even to the
east came for the food of the feast and the potlatch
token. Unga was older than I by the age of four
suns in the way we reckoned the years. I was
only a stripling; but then I was a chief, and the son
of a chief, and it did not matter.
’But a ship shoved her sails
above the floor of the ocean, and grew larger with
the breath of the wind. From her scuppers she
ran clear water, and the men were in haste and worked
hard at the pumps. On the bow stood a mighty
man, watching the depth of the water and giving commands
with a voice of thunder. His eyes were of the
pale blue of the deep waters, and his head was maned
like that of a sea lion. And his hair was yellow,
like the straw of a southern harvest or the manila
rope yarns which sailormen plait.
’Of late years we had seen ships
from afar, but this was the first to come to the beach
of Akatan. The feast was broken, and the women
and children fled to the houses, while we men strung
our bows and waited with spears in hand. But
when the ship’s forefoot smelled the beach the
strange men took no notice of us, being busy with their
own work. With the falling of the tide they careened
the schooner and patched a great hole in her bottom.
So the women crept back, and the feast went on.
’When the tide rose, the sea
wanderers kedged the schooner to deep water and then
came among us. They bore presents and were friendly;
so I made room for them, and out of the largeness
of my heart gave them tokens such as I gave all the
guests, for it was my wedding day, and I was head
man in Akatan. And he with the mane of the sea
lion was there, so tall and strong that one looked
to see the earth shake with the fall of his feet.
He looked much and straight at Unga, with his arms
folded, so, and stayed till the sun went away and
the stars came out. Then he went down to his
ship. After that I took Unga by the hand and led
her to my own house. And there was singing and
great laughter, and the women said sly things, after
the manner of women at such times. But we did
not care. Then the people left us alone and went
home.
’The last noise had not died
away when the chief of the sea wanderers came in by
the door. And he had with him black bottles, from
which we drank and made merry. You see, I was
only a stripling, and had lived all my days on the
edge of the world. So my blood became as fire,
and my heart as light as the froth that flies from
the surf to the cliff. Unga sat silent among
the skins in the corner, her eyes wide, for she seemed
to fear. And he with the mane of the sea lion
looked upon her straight and long. Then his men
came in with bundles of goods, and he piled before
me wealth such as was not in all Akatan. There
were guns, both large and small, and powder and shot
and shell, and bright axes and knives of steel, and
cunning tools, and strange things the like of which
I had never seen. When he showed me by sign that
it was all mine, I thought him a great man to be so
free; but he showed me also that Unga was to go away
with him in his ship.
’Do you understand? that
Unga was to go away with him in his ship. The
blood of my fathers flamed hot on the sudden, and I
made to drive him through with my spear. But
the spirit of the bottles had stolen the life from
my arm, and he took me by the neck, so, and knocked
my head against the wall of the house. And I
was made weak like a newborn child, and my legs would
no more stand under me.
’Unga screamed, and she laid
hold of the things of the house with her hands, till
they fell all about us as he dragged her to the door.
Then he took her in his great arms, and when she tore
at his yellow hair laughed with a sound like that
of the big bull seal in the rut.
’I crawled to the beach and
called upon my people, but they were afraid.
Only Yash-Noosh was a man, and they struck him on the
head with an oar, till he lay with his face in the
sand and did not move. And they raised the sails
to the sound of their songs, and the ship went away
on the wind.
’The people said it was good,
for there would be no more war of the bloods in Akatan;
but I said never a word, waiting till the time of the
full moon, when I put fish and oil in my kayak and
went away to the east. I saw many islands and
many people, and I, who had lived on the edge, saw
that the world was very large. I talked by signs;
but they had not seen a schooner nor a man with the
mane of a sea lion, and they pointed always to the
east. And I slept in queer places, and ate odd
things, and met strange faces. Many laughed, for
they thought me light of head; but sometimes old men
turned my face to the light and blessed me, and the
eyes of the young women grew soft as they asked me
of the strange ship, and Unga, and the men of the
sea.
’And in this manner, through
rough seas and great storms, I came to Unalaska.
There were two schooners there, but neither was
the one I sought. So I passed on to the east,
with the world growing ever larger, and in the island
of Unamok there was no word of the ship, nor in Kadiak,
nor in Atognak. And so I came one day to a rocky
land, where men dug great holes in the mountain.
And there was a schooner, but not my schooner, and
men loaded upon it the rocks which they dug. This
I thought childish, for all the world was made of
rocks; but they gave me food and set me to work.
When the schooner was deep in the water, the captain
gave me money and told me to go; but I asked which
way he went, and he pointed south. I made signs
that I would go with him, and he laughed at first,
but then, being short of men, took me to help work
the ship. So I came to talk after their manner,
and to heave on ropes, and to reef the stiff sails
in sudden squalls, and to take my turn at the wheel.
But it was not strange, for the blood of my fathers
was the blood of the men of the sea.
’I had thought it an easy task
to find him I sought, once I got among his own people;
and when we raised the land one day, and passed between
a gateway of the sea to a port, I looked for perhaps
as many schooners as there were fingers to my
hands. But the ships lay against the wharves
for miles, packed like so many little fish; and when
I went among them to ask for a man with the mane of
a sea lion, they laughed, and answered me in the tongues
of many peoples. And I found that they hailed
from the uttermost parts of the earth.
’And I went into the city to
look upon the face of every man. But they were
like the cod when they run thick on the banks, and
I could not count them. And the noise smote upon
me till I could not hear, and my head was dizzy with
much movement. So I went on and on, through the
lands which sang in the warm sunshine; where the harvests
lay rich on the plains; and where great cities were
fat with men that lived like women, with false words
in their mouths and their hearts black with the lust
of gold. And all the while my people of Akatan
hunted and fished, and were happy in the thought that
the world was small.
’But the look in the eyes of
Unga coming home from the fishing was with me always,
and I knew I would find her when the time was met.
She walked down quiet lanes in the dusk of the evening,
or led me chases across the thick fields wet with
the morning dew, and there was a promise in her eyes
such as only the woman Unga could give.
’So I wandered through a thousand
cities. Some were gentle and gave me food, and
others laughed, and still others cursed; but I kept
my tongue between my teeth, and went strange ways
and saw strange sights. Sometimes I, who was
a chief and the son of a chief, toiled for men men
rough of speech and hard as iron, who wrung gold from
the sweat and sorrow of their fellow men. Yet
no word did I get of my quest till I came back to
the sea like a homing seal to the rookeries.
’But this was at another port,
in another country which lay to the north. And
there I heard dim tales of the yellow-haired sea wanderer,
and I learned that he was a hunter of seals, and that
even then he was abroad on the ocean.
’So I shipped on a seal schooner
with the lazy Siwashes, and followed his trackless
trail to the north where the hunt was then warm.
And we were away weary months, and spoke many of the
fleet, and heard much of the wild doings of him I
sought; but never once did we raise him above the
sea. We went north, even to the Pribilofs, and
killed the seals in herds on the beach, and brought
their warm bodies aboard till our scuppers ran grease
and blood and no man could stand upon the deck.
Then were we chased by a ship of slow steam, which
fired upon us with great guns. But we put sail
till the sea was over our decks and washed them clean,
and lost ourselves in a fog.
’It is said, at this time, while
we fled with fear at our hearts, that the yellow-haired
sea wanderer put in to the Pribilofs, right to the
factory, and while the part of his men held the servants
of the company, the rest loaded ten thousand green
skins from the salt houses. I say it is said,
but I believe; for in the voyages I made on the coast
with never a meeting the northern seas rang with his
wildness and daring, till the three nations which
have lands there sought him with their ships.
’And I heard of Unga, for the
captains sang loud in her praise, and she was always
with him. She had learned the ways of his people,
they said, and was happy. But I knew better knew
that her heart harked back to her own people by the
yellow beach of Akatan.
’So, after a long time, I went
back to the port which is by a gateway of the sea,
and there I learned that he had gone across the girth
of the great ocean to hunt for the seal to the east
of the warm land which runs south from the Russian
seas.
’And I, who was become a sailorman,
shipped with men of his own race, and went after him
in the hunt of the seal. And there were few ships
off that new land; but we hung on the flank of the
seal pack and harried it north through all the spring
of the year. And when the cows were heavy with
pup and crossed the Russian line, our men grumbled
and were afraid. For there was much fog, and
every day men were lost in the boats. They would
not work, so the captain turned the ship back toward
the way it came. But I knew the yellow-haired
sea wanderer was unafraid, and would hang by the pack,
even to the Russian Isles, where few men go.
So I took a boat, in the black of night, when the lookout
dozed on the fo’c’slehead, and went alone
to the warm, long land. And I journeyed south
to meet the men by Yeddo Bay, who are wild and unafraid.
And the Yoshiwara girls were small, and bright like
steel, and good to look upon; but I could not stop,
for I knew that Unga rolled on the tossing floor by
the rookeries of the north.
’The men by Yeddo Bay had met
from the ends of the earth, and had neither gods nor
homes, sailing under the flag of the Japanese.
And with them I went to the rich beaches of Copper
Island, where our salt piles became high with skins.
’And in that silent sea we saw
no man till we were ready to come away. Then
one day the fog lifted on the edge of a heavy wind,
and there jammed down upon us a schooner, with close
in her wake the cloudy funnels of a Russian man-of-war.
We fled away on the beam of the wind, with the schooner
jamming still closer and plunging ahead three feet
to our two. And upon her poop was the man with
the mane of the sea lion, pressing the rails under
with the canvas and laughing in his strength of life.
And Unga was there I knew her on the moment but
he sent her below when the cannons began to talk across
the sea.
As I say, with three feet to our two,
till we saw the rudder lift green at every jump and
I swinging on to the wheel and cursing, with my back
to the Russian shot. For we knew he had it in
mind to run before us, that he might get away while
we were caught. And they knocked our masts out
of us till we dragged into the wind like a wounded
gull; but he went on over the edge of the sky line he
and Unga.
’What could we? The fresh
hides spoke for themselves. So they took us to
a Russian port, and after that to a lone country, where
they set us to work in the mines to dig salt.
And some died, and and some did not die.’
Naass swept the blanket from his shoulders, disclosing
the gnarled and twisted flesh, marked with the unmistakable
striations of the knout. Prince hastily
covered him, for it was not nice to look upon.
’We were there a weary time
and sometimes men got away to the south, but they
always came back. So, when we who hailed from
Yeddo Bay rose in the night and took the guns from
the guards, we went to the north. And the land
was very large, with plains, soggy with water, and
great forests. And the cold came, with much snow
on the ground, and no man knew the way. Weary
months we journeyed through the endless forest I
do not remember, now, for there was little food and
often we lay down to die. But at last we came
to the cold sea, and but three were left to look upon
it. One had shipped from Yeddo as captain, and
he knew in his head the lay of the great lands, and
of the place where men may cross from one to the other
on the ice. And he led us I do not
know, it was so long till there were but
two. When we came to that place we found five
of the strange people which live in that country, and
they had dogs and skins, and we were very poor.
We fought in the snow till they died, and the captain
died, and the dogs and skins were mine. Then I
crossed on the ice, which was broken, and once I drifted
till a gale from the west put me upon the shore.
And after that, Golovin Bay, Pastilik, and the priest.
Then south, south, to the warm sunlands where first
I wandered.
’But the sea was no longer fruitful,
and those who went upon it after the seal went to
little profit and great risk. The fleets scattered,
and the captains and the men had no word of those I
sought. So I turned away from the ocean which
never rests, and went among the lands, where the trees,
the houses, and the mountains sit always in one place
and do not move. I journeyed far, and came to
learn many things, even to the way of reading and
writing from books. It was well I should do this,
for it came upon me that Unga must know these things,
and that someday, when the time was met we you
understand, when the time was met.
’So I drifted, like those little
fish which raise a sail to the wind but cannot steer.
But my eyes and my ears were open always, and I went
among men who traveled much, for I knew they had but
to see those I sought to remember. At last there
came a man, fresh from the mountains, with pieces
of rock in which the free gold stood to the size of
peas, and he had heard, he had met, he knew them.
They were rich, he said, and lived in the place where
they drew the gold from the ground.
’It was in a wild country, and
very far away; but in time I came to the camp, hidden
between the mountains, where men worked night and day,
out of the sight of the sun. Yet the time was
not come. I listened to the talk of the people.
He had gone away they had gone away to
England, it was said, in the matter of bringing men
with much money together to form companies. I
saw the house they had lived in; more like a palace,
such as one sees in the old countries. In the
nighttime I crept in through a window that I might
see in what manner he treated her. I went from
room to room, and in such way thought kings and queens
must live, it was all so very good. And they
all said he treated her like a queen, and many marveled
as to what breed of woman she was for there was other
blood in her veins, and she was different from the
women of Akatan, and no one knew her for what she
was. Aye, she was a queen; but I was a chief,
and the son of a chief, and I had paid for her an untold
price of skin and boat and bead.
’But why so many words?
I was a sailorman, and knew the way of the ships on
the seas. I followed to England, and then to other
countries. Sometimes I heard of them by word
of mouth, sometimes I read of them in the papers;
yet never once could I come by them, for they had much
money, and traveled fast, while I was a poor man.
Then came trouble upon them, and their wealth slipped
away one day like a curl of smoke. The papers
were full of it at the time; but after that nothing
was said, and I knew they had gone back where more
gold could be got from the ground.
’They had dropped out of the
world, being now poor, and so I wandered from camp
to camp, even north to the Kootenay country, where
I picked up the cold scent. They had come and
gone, some said this way, and some that, and still
others that they had gone to the country of the Yukon.
And I went this way, and I went that, ever journeying
from place to place, till it seemed I must grow weary
of the world which was so large. But in the Kootenay
I traveled a bad trail, and a long trail, with a breed
of the Northwest, who saw fit to die when the famine
pinched. He had been to the Yukon by an unknown
way over the mountains, and when he knew his time
was near gave me the map and the secret of a place
where he swore by his gods there was much gold.
’After that all the world began
to flock into the north. I was a poor man; I
sold myself to be a driver of dogs. The rest you
know. I met him and her in Dawson.
’She did not know me, for I
was only a stripling, and her life had been large,
so she had no time to remember the one who had paid
for her an untold price.
’So? You bought me from
my term of service. I went back to bring things
about in my own way, for I had waited long, and now
that I had my hand upon him was in no hurry.
’As I say, I had it in mind
to do my own way, for I read back in my life, through
all I had seen and suffered, and remembered the cold
and hunger of the endless forest by the Russian seas.
As you know, I led him into the east him
and Unga into the east where many have gone
and few returned. I led them to the spot where
the bones and the curses of men lie with the gold
which they may not have.
’The way was long and the trail
unpacked. Our dogs were many and ate much; nor
could our sleds carry till the break of spring.
We must come back before the river ran free.
So here and there we cached grub, that our sleds might
be lightened and there be no chance of famine on the
back trip. At the McQuestion there were three
men, and near them we built a cache, as also did we
at the Mayo, where was a hunting camp of a dozen Pellys
which had crossed the divide from the south.
’After that, as we went on into
the east, we saw no men; only the sleeping river,
the moveless forest, and the White Silence of the
North. As I say, the way was long and the trail
unpacked. Sometimes, in a day’s toil, we
made no more than eight miles, or ten, and at night
we slept like dead men. And never once did they
dream that I was Naass, head man of Akatan, the righter
of wrongs.
’We now made smaller caches,
and in the nighttime it was a small matter to go back
on the trail we had broken and change them in such
way that one might deem the wolverines the thieves.
Again there be places where there is a fall to the
river, and the water is unruly, and the ice makes
above and is eaten away beneath.
’In such a spot the sled I drove
broke through, and the dogs; and to him and Unga it
was ill luck, but no more. And there was much
grub on that sled, and the dogs the strongest.
’But he laughed, for he was
strong of life, and gave the dogs that were left little
grub till we cut them from the harnesses one by one
and fed them to their mates. We would go home
light, he said, traveling and eating from cache to
cache, with neither dogs nor sleds; which was true,
for our grub was very short, and the last dog died
in the traces the night we came to the gold and the
bones and the curses of men.
’To reach that place and
the map spoke true in the heart of the great
mountains, we cut ice steps against the wall of a divide.
One looked for a valley beyond, but there was no valley;
the snow spread away, level as the great harvest plains,
and here and there about us mighty mountains shoved
their white heads among the stars. And midway
on that strange plain which should have been a valley
the earth and the snow fell away, straight down toward
the heart of the world.
’Had we not been sailormen our
heads would have swung round with the sight, but we
stood on the dizzy edge that we might see a way to
get down. And on one side, and one side only,
the wall had fallen away till it was like the slope
of the decks in a topsail breeze. I do not know
why this thing should be so, but it was so. “It
is the mouth of hell,” he said; “let us
go down.” And we went down.
’And on the bottom there was
a cabin, built by some man, of logs which he had cast
down from above. It was a very old cabin, for
men had died there alone at different times, and on
pieces of birch bark which were there we read their
last words and their curses.
’One had died of scurvy; another’s
partner had robbed him of his last grub and powder
and stolen away; a third had been mauled by a baldface
grizzly; a fourth had hunted for game and starved and
so it went, and they had been loath to leave the gold,
and had died by the side of it in one way or another.
And the worthless gold they had gathered yellowed
the floor of the cabin like in a dream.
’But his soul was steady, and
his head clear, this man I had led thus far.
“We have nothing to eat,” he said, “and
we will only look upon this gold, and see whence it
comes and how much there be. Then we will go
away quick, before it gets into our eyes and steals
away our judgment. And in this way we may return
in the end, with more grub, and possess it all.”
So we looked upon the great vein, which cut the wall
of the pit as a true vein should, and we measured it,
and traced it from above and below, and drove the
stakes of the claims and blazed the trees in token
of our rights. Then, our knees shaking with lack
of food, and a sickness in our bellies, and our hearts
chugging close to our mouths, we climbed the mighty
wall for the last time and turned our faces to the
back trip.
’The last stretch we dragged
Unga between us, and we fell often, but in the end
we made the cache. And lo, there was no grub.
It was well done, for he thought it the wolverines,
and damned them and his gods in one breath. But
Unga was brave, and smiled, and put her hand in his,
till I turned away that I might hold myself.
“We will rest by the fire,” she said,
“till morning, and we will gather strength from
our moccasins.” So we cut the tops of our
moccasins in strips, and boiled them half of the night,
that we might chew them and swallow them. And
in the morning we talked of our chance. The next
cache was five days’ journey; we could not make
it. We must find game.
’"We will go forth and hunt,” he said.
’"Yes,” said I, “we
will go forth and hunt.” ’And he ruled
that Unga stay by the fire and save her strength.
And we went forth, he in quest of the moose and I
to the cache I had changed. But I ate little,
so they might not see in me much strength. And
in the night he fell many times as he drew into camp.
And I, too, made to suffer great weakness, stumbling
over my snowshoes as though each step might be my last.
And we gathered strength from our moccasins.
’He was a great man. His
soul lifted his body to the last; nor did he cry aloud,
save for the sake of Unga. On the second day I
followed him, that I might not miss the end.
And he lay down to rest often. That night he
was near gone; but in the morning he swore weakly and
went forth again. He was like a drunken man,
and I looked many times for him to give up, but his
was the strength of the strong, and his soul the soul
of a giant, for he lifted his body through all the
weary day. And he shot two ptarmigan, but would
not eat them. He needed no fire; they meant life;
but his thought was for Unga, and he turned toward
camp.
’He no longer walked, but crawled
on hand and knee through the snow. I came to
him, and read death in his eyes. Even then it
was not too late to eat of the ptarmigan. He
cast away his rifle and carried the birds in his mouth
like a dog. I walked by his side, upright.
And he looked at me during the moments he rested,
and wondered that I was so strong. I could see
it, though he no longer spoke; and when his lips moved,
they moved without sound.
’As I say, he was a great man,
and my heart spoke for softness; but I read back in
my life, and remembered the cold and hunger of the
endless forest by the Russian seas. Besides,
Unga was mine, and I had paid for her an untold price
of skin and boat and bead.
’And in this manner we came
through the white forest, with the silence heavy upon
us like a damp sea mist. And the ghosts of the
past were in the air and all about us; and I saw the
yellow beach of Akatan, and the kayaks racing home
from the fishing, and the houses on the rim of the
forest. And the men who had made themselves chiefs
were there, the lawgivers whose blood I bore and whose
blood I had wedded in Unga. Aye, and Yash-Noosh
walked with me, the wet sand in his hair, and his war
spear, broken as he fell upon it, still in his hand.
And I knew the time was meet, and saw in the eyes
of Unga the promise.
’As I say, we came thus through
the forest, till the smell of the camp smoke was in
our nostrils. And I bent above him, and tore the
ptarmigan from his teeth.
’He turned on his side and rested,
the wonder mounting in his eyes, and the hand which
was under slipping slow toward the knife at his hip.
But I took it from him, smiling close in his face.
Even then he did not understand. So I made to
drink from black bottles, and to build high upon the
snow a pile of goods, and to live again
the things which had happened on the night of my marriage.
I spoke no word, but he understood. Yet was he
unafraid. There was a sneer to his lips, and
cold anger, and he gathered new strength with the knowledge.
It was not far, but the snow was deep, and he dragged
himself very slow.
’Once he lay so long I turned
him over and gazed into his eyes. And sometimes
he looked forth, and sometimes death. And when
I loosed him he struggled on again. In this way
we came to the fire. Unga was at his side on
the instant. His lips moved without sound; then
he pointed at me, that Unga might understand.
And after that he lay in the snow, very still, for
a long while. Even now is he there in the snow.
’I said no word till I had cooked
the ptarmigan. Then I spoke to her, in her own
tongue, which she had not heard in many years.
She straightened herself, so, and her eyes were wonder-wide,
and she asked who I was, and where I had learned that
speech.
’"I am Naass,” I said.
’"You?” she said.
“You?” And she crept close that she might
look upon me.
’"Yes,” I answered; “I
am Naass, head man of Akatan, the last of the blood,
as you are the last of the blood.” ’And
she laughed. By all the things I have seen and
the deeds I have done may I never hear such a laugh
again. It put the chill to my soul, sitting there
in the White Silence, alone with death and this woman
who laughed.
’"Come!” I said, for I
thought she wandered. “Eat of the food and
let us be gone. It is a far fetch from here to
Akatan.” ’But she shoved her face
in his yellow mane, and laughed till it seemed the
heavens must fall about our ears. I had thought
she would be overjoyed at the sight of me, and eager
to go back to the memory of old times, but this seemed
a strange form to take.
’"Come!” I cried, taking
her strong by the hand. “The way is long
and dark. Let us hurry!” “Where?”
she asked, sitting up, and ceasing from her strange
mirth.
’"To Akatan,” I answered,
intent on the light to grow on her face at the thought.
But it became like his, with a sneer to the lips, and
cold anger.
’"Yes,” she said; “we
will go, hand in hand, to Akatan, you and I. And we
will live in the dirty huts, and eat of the fish and
oil, and bring forth a spawn a spawn to
be proud of all the days of our life. We will
forget the world and be happy, very happy. It
is good, most good. Come! Let us hurry.
Let us go back to Akatan.” And she ran her
hand through his yellow hair, and smiled in a way
which was not good. And there was no promise
in her eyes.
’I sat silent, and marveled
at the strangeness of woman. I went back to the
night when he dragged her from me and she screamed
and tore at his hair at his hair which
now she played with and would not leave. Then
I remembered the price and the long years of waiting;
and I gripped her close, and dragged her away as he
had done. And she held back, even as on that
night, and fought like a she-cat for its whelp.
And when the fire was between us and the man.
I loosed her, and she sat and listened. And I
told her of all that lay between, of all that had
happened to me on strange seas, of all that I had done
in strange lands; of my weary quest, and the hungry
years, and the promise which had been mine from the
first. Aye, I told all, even to what had passed
that day between the man and me, and in the days yet
young. And as I spoke I saw the promise grow
in her eyes, full and large like the break of dawn.
And I read pity there, the tenderness of woman, the
love, the heart and the soul of Unga. And I was
a stripling again, for the look was the look of Unga
as she ran up the beach, laughing, to the home of
her mother. The stern unrest was gone, and the
hunger, and the weary waiting.
’The time was met. I felt
the call of her breast, and it seemed there I must
pillow my head and forget. She opened her arms
to me, and I came against her. Then, sudden,
the hate flamed in her eye, her hand was at my hip.
And once, twice, she passed the knife.
’"Dog!” she sneered, as
she flung me into the snow. “Swine!”
And then she laughed till the silence cracked, and
went back to her dead.
’As I say, once she passed the
knife, and twice; but she was weak with hunger, and
it was not meant that I should die. Yet was I
minded to stay in that place, and to close my eyes
in the last long sleep with those whose lives had
crossed with mine and led my feet on unknown trails.
But there lay a debt upon me which would not let me
rest.
’And the way was long, the cold
bitter, and there was little grub. The Pellys
had found no moose, and had robbed my cache. And
so had the three white men, but they lay thin and
dead in their cabins as I passed. After that
I do not remember, till I came here, and found food
and fire much fire.’ As he finished,
he crouched closely, even jealously, over the stove.
For a long while the slush-lamp shadows played tragedies
upon the wall.
‘But Unga!’ cried Prince,
the vision still strong upon him.
’Unga? She would not eat
of the ptarmigan. She lay with her arms about
his neck, her face deep in his yellow hair. I
drew the fire close, that she might not feel the frost,
but she crept to the other side. And I built
a fire there; yet it was little good, for she would
not eat. And in this manner they still lie up
there in the snow.’
‘And you?’ asked Malemute Kid.
’I do not know; but Akatan is
small, and I have little wish to go back and live
on the edge of the world. Yet is there small use
in life. I can go to Constantine, and he will
put irons upon me, and one day they will tie a piece
of rope, so, and I will sleep good. Yet no;
I do not know.’ ‘But, Kid,’
protested Prince, ‘this is murder!’ ‘Hush!’
commanded Malemute Kid. ’There be things
greater than our wisdom, beyond our justice.
The right and the wrong of this we cannot say, and
it is not for us to judge.’ Naass drew yet
closer to the fire. There was a great silence,
and in each man’s eyes many pictures came and
went.