Kazan lay mute and motionless, his
gray nose between his forepaws, his eyes half closed.
A rock could have appeared scarcely less lifeless than
he; not a muscle twitched; not a hair moved; not an
eyelid quivered. Yet every drop of the wild blood
in his splendid body was racing in a ferment of excitement
that Kazan had never before experienced; every nerve
and fiber of his wonderful muscles was tense as steel
wire. Quarter-strain wolf, three-quarters “husky,”
he had lived the four years of his life in the wilderness.
He had felt the pangs of starvation. He knew
what it meant to freeze. He had listened to the
wailing winds of the long Arctic night over the barrens.
He had heard the thunder of the torrent and the cataract,
and had cowered under the mighty crash of the storm.
His throat and sides were scarred by battle, and his
eyes were red with the blister of the snows.
He was called Kazan, the Wild Dog, because he was
a giant among his kind and as fearless, even, as the
men who drove him through the perils of a frozen world.
He had never known fear until
now. He had never felt in him before the desire
to run not even on that terrible
day in the forest when he had fought and killed the
big gray lynx. He did not know what it was that
frightened him, but he knew that he was in another
world, and that many things in it startled and alarmed
him. It was his first glimpse of civilization.
He wished that his master would come back into the
strange room where he had left him. It was a
room filled with hideous things. There were great
human faces on the wall, but they did not move or
speak, but stared at him in a way he had never seen
people look before. He remembered having looked
on a master who lay very quiet and very cold in the
snow, and he had sat back on his haunches and wailed
forth the death song; but these people on the walls
looked alive, and yet seemed dead.
Suddenly Kazan lifted his ears a little.
He heard steps, then low voices. One of them
was his master’s voice. But the other it
sent a little tremor through him! Once, so long
ago that it must have been in his puppyhood days,
he seemed to have had a dream of a laugh that was
like the girl’s laugh a laugh that
was all at once filled with a wonderful happiness,
the thrill of a wonderful love, and a sweetness that
made Kazan lift his head as they came in. He looked
straight at them, his red eyes gleaming. At once
he knew that she must be dear to his master, for his
master’s arm was about her. In the glow
of the light he saw that her hair was very bright,
and that there was the color of the crimson bakneesh
vine in her face and the blue of the bakneesh
flower in her shining eyes. Suddenly she saw him,
and with a little cry darted toward him.
“Stop!” shouted the man. “He’s
dangerous! Kazan ”
She was on her knees beside him, all
fluffy and sweet and beautiful, her eyes shining wonderfully,
her hands about to touch him. Should he cringe
back? Should he snap? Was she one of the
things on the wall, and his enemy? Should he
leap at her white throat? He saw the man running
forward, pale as death. Then her hand fell upon
his head and the touch sent a thrill through him that
quivered in every nerve of his body. With both
hands she turned up his head. Her face was very
close, and he heard her say, almost sobbingly:
“And you are Kazan dear
old Kazan, my Kazan, my hero dog who brought
him home to me when all the others had died! My
Kazan my hero!”
And then, miracle of miracles, her
face was crushed down against him, and he felt her
sweet warm touch.
In those moments Kazan did not move.
He scarcely breathed. It seemed a long time before
the girl lifted her face from him. And when she
did, there were tears in her blue eyes, and the man
was standing above them, his hands gripped tight,
his jaws set.
“I never knew him to let any
one touch him with their naked hand,”
he said in a tense wondering voice. “Move
back quietly, Isobel. Good heaven look
at that!”
Kazan whined softly, his bloodshot
eyes on the girl’s face. He wanted to feel
her hand again; he wanted to touch her face. Would
they beat him with a club, he wondered, if he dared!
He meant no harm now. He would kill for her.
He cringed toward her, inch by inch, his eyes never
faltering. He heard what the man said “Good
heaven! Look at that!” and he
shuddered. But no blow fell to drive him back.
His cold muzzle touched her filmy dress, and she looked
at him, without moving, her wet eyes blazing like
stars.
“See!” she whispered. “See!”
Half an inch more an inch,
two inches, and he gave his big gray body a hunch
toward her. Now his muzzle traveled slowly upward over
her foot, to her lap, and at last touched the warm
little hand that lay there. His eyes were still
on her face: he saw a queer throbbing in her bare
white throat, and then a trembling of her lips as
she looked up at the man with a wonderful look.
He, too, knelt down beside them, and put his arm about
the girl again, and patted the dog on his head.
Kazan did not like the man’s touch. He
mistrusted it, as nature had taught him to mistrust
the touch of all men’s hands, but he permitted
it because he saw that it in some way pleased the
girl.
“Kazan, old boy, you wouldn’t
hurt her, would you?” said his master softly.
“We both love her, don’t we, boy?
Can’t help it, can we? And she’s
ours, Kazan, all ours! She belongs to you
and to me, and we’re going to take care of her
all our lives, and if we ever have to we’ll
fight for her like hell won’t we?
Eh, Kazan, old boy?”
For a long time after they left him
where he was lying on the rug, Kazan’s eyes
did not leave the girl. He watched and listened and
all the time there grew more and more in him the craving
to creep up to them and touch the girl’s hand,
or her dress, or her foot. After a time his master
said something, and with a little laugh the girl jumped
up and ran to a big, square, shining thing that stood
crosswise in a corner, and which had a row of white
teeth longer than his own body. He had wondered
what those teeth were for. The girl’s fingers
touched them now, and all the whispering of winds
that he had ever heard, all the music of the waterfalls
and the rapids and the trilling of birds in spring-time,
could not equal the sounds they made. It was his
first music. For a moment it startled and frightened
him, and then he felt the fright pass away and a strange
tingling in his body. He wanted to sit back on
his haunches and howl, as he had howled at the billion
stars in the skies on cold winter nights. But
something kept him from doing that. It was the
girl. Slowly he began slinking toward her.
He felt the eyes of the man upon him, and stopped.
Then a little more inches at a time, with
his throat and jaw straight out along the floor!
He was half-way to her half-way across
the room when the wonderful sounds grew
very soft and very low.
“Go on!” he heard the
man urge in a low quick voice. “Go on!
Don’t stop!”
The girl turned her head, saw Kazan
cringing there on the floor, and continued to play.
The man was still looking, but his eyes could not
keep Kazan back now. He went nearer, still nearer,
until at last his outreaching muzzle touched her dress
where it lay piled on the floor. And then he
lay trembling, for she had begun to sing. He had
heard a Cree woman crooning in front of her tepee;
he had heard the wild chant of the caribou song but
he had never heard anything like this wonderful sweetness
that fell from the lips of the girl. He forgot
his master’s presence now. Quietly, cringingly,
so that she would not know, he lifted his head.
He saw her looking at him; there was something in
her wonderful eyes that gave him confidence, and he
laid his head in her lap. For the second time
he felt the touch of a woman’s hand, and he
closed his eyes with a long sighing breath. The
music stopped. There came a little fluttering
sound above him, like a laugh and a sob in one.
He heard his master cough.
“I’ve always loved the
old rascal but I never thought he’d
do that,” he said; and his voice sounded queer
to Kazan.