Kazan and Gray Wolf wandered northward
into the Fond du Lac country, and were there when
Jacques, a Hudson Bay Company’s runner, came
up to the post from the south with the first authentic
news of the dread plague the smallpox.
For weeks there had been rumors on all sides.
And rumor grew into rumor. From the east, the
south and the west they multiplied, until on all sides
the Paul Reveres of the wilderness were carrying word
that La Mort Rouge the Red Death was
at their heels, and the chill of a great fear swept
like a shivering wind from the edge of civilization
to the bay. Nineteen years before these same rumors
had come up from the south, and the Red Terror had
followed. The horror of it still remained with
the forest people, for a thousand unmarked graves,
shunned like a pestilence, and scattered from the lower
waters of James Bay to the lake country of the Athabasca,
gave evidence of the toll it demanded.
Now and then in their wanderings Kazan
and Gray Wolf had come upon the little mounds that
covered the dead. Instinct something
that was infinitely beyond the comprehension of man made
them feel the presence of death about them,
perhaps smell it in the air. Gray Wolf’s
wild blood and her blindness gave her an immense advantage
over Kazan when it came to detecting those mysteries
of the air and the earth which the eyes were not made
to see. Each day that had followed that terrible
moonlit night on the Sun Rock, when the lynx had blinded
her, had added to the infallibility of her two chief
senses hearing and scent. And it was
she who discovered the presence of the plague first,
just as she had scented the great forest fire hours
before Kazan had found it in the air.
Kazan had lured her back to a trap-line.
The trail they found was old. It had not been
traveled for many days. In a trap they found a
rabbit, but it had been dead a long time. In
another there was the carcass of a fox, torn into
bits by the owls. Most of the traps were sprung.
Others were covered with snow. Kazan, with his
three-quarters strain of dog, ran over the trail from
trap to trap, intent only on something alive meat
to devour. Gray Wolf, in her blindness, scented
death. It shivered in the tree-tops above
her. She found it in every trap-house they came
to death man death.
It grew stronger and stronger, and she whined, and
nipped Kazan’s flank. And Kazan went on.
Gray Wolf followed him to the edge of the clearing
in which Loti’s cabin stood, and then she sat
back on her haunches, raised her blind face to the
gray sky, and gave a long and wailing cry. In
that moment the bristles began to stand up along Kazan’s
spine. Once, long ago, he had howled before the
tepee of a master who was newly dead, and he settled
back on his haunches, and gave the death-cry with
Gray Wolf. He, too, scented it now. Death
was in the cabin, and over the cabin there stood a
sapling pole, and at the end of the pole there fluttered
a strip of red cotton rag the warning flag
of the plague from Athabasca to the bay. This
man, like a hundred other heroes of the North, had
run up the warning before he laid himself down to
die. And that same night, in the cold light of
the moon, Kazan and Gray Wolf swung northward into
the country of the Fond du Lac.
There preceded them a messenger from
the post on Reindeer Lake, who was passing up the
warning that had come from Nelson House and the country
to the southeast.
“There’s smallpox on the
Nelson,” the messenger informed Williams, at
Fond du Lac, “and it has struck the Crees on
Wollaston Lake. God only knows what it is doing
to the Bay Indians, but we hear it is wiping out the
Chippewas between the Albany and the Churchill.”
He left the same day with his winded dogs. “I’m
off to carry word to the Réveillon people to
the west,” he explained.
Three days later, word came from Churchill
that all of the company’s servants and his majesty’s
subjects west of the bay should prepare themselves
for the coming of the Red Terror. Williams’
thin face turned as white as the paper he held, as
he read the words of the Churchill factor.
“It means dig graves,”
he said. “That’s the only preparation
we can make.”
He read the paper aloud to the men
at Fond du Lac, and every available man was detailed
to spread the warning throughout the post’s territory.
There was a quick harnessing of dogs, and on each sledge
that went out was a roll of red cotton cloth rolls
that were ominous of death, lurid signals of pestilence
and horror, whose touch sent shuddering chills through
the men who were about to scatter them among the forest
people. Kazan and Gray Wolf struck the trail
of one of these sledges on the Gray Beaver, and followed
it for half a mile. The next day, farther to the
west, they struck another, and on the fourth day still
a third. The last trail was fresh, and Gray Wolf
drew back from it as if stung, her fangs snarling.
On the wind there came to them the pungent odor of
smoke. They cut at right angles to the trail,
Gray Wolf leaping clear of the marks in the snow,
and climbed to the cap of a ridge. To windward
of them, and down in the plain, a cabin was burning.
A team of huskies and a man were disappearing in the
spruce forest. Deep down in his throat Kazan gave
a rumbling whine. Gray Wolf stood as rigid as
a rock. In the cabin a plague-dead man was burning.
It was the law of the North. And the mystery
of the funeral pyre came again to Kazan and Gray Wolf.
This time they did not howl, but slunk down into the
farther plain, and did not stop that day until they
had buried themselves deep in a dry and sheltered
swamp ten miles to the north.
After this they followed the days
and weeks which marked the winter of nineteen hundred
and ten as one of the most terrible in all the history
of the Northland a single month in which
wild life as well as human hung in the balance, and
when cold, starvation and plague wrote a chapter in
the lives of the forest people which will not be forgotten
for generations to come.
In the swamp Kazan and Gray Wolf found
a home under a windfall. It was a small comfortable
nest, shut in entirely from the snow and wind.
Gray Wolf took possession of it immediately.
She flattened herself out on her belly, and panted
to show Kazan her contentment and satisfaction.
Nature again kept Kazan close at her side. A
vision came to him, unreal and dream-like, of that
wonderful night under the stars ages and
ages ago, it seemed when he had fought
the leader of the wolf-pack, and young Gray Wolf had
crept to his side after his victory and had given herself
to him for mate. But this mating season there
was no running after the doe or the caribou, or mingling
with the wild pack. They lived chiefly on rabbit
and spruce partridge, because of Gray Wolf’s
blindness. Kazan could hunt those alone.
The hair had now grown over Gray Wolf’s sightless
eyes. She had ceased to grieve, to rub her eyes
with her paws, to whine for the sunlight, the golden
moon and the stars. Slowly she began to forget
that she had ever seen those things. She could
now run more swiftly at Kazan’s flank.
Scent and hearing had become wonderfully keen.
She could wind a caribou two miles distant, and the
presence of man she could pick up at an even greater
distance. On a still night she had heard the
splash of a trout half a mile away. And as these
two things scent and hearing became
more and more developed in her, those same senses
became less active in Kazan.
He began to depend upon Gray Wolf.
She would point out the hiding-place of a partridge
fifty yards from their trail. In their hunts she
became the leader until game was found.
And as Kazan learned to trust to her in the hunt,
so he began just as instinctively to heed her warnings.
If Gray Wolf reasoned, it was to the effect that without
Kazan she would die. She had tried hard now and
then to catch a partridge, or a rabbit, but she had
always failed. Kazan meant life to her. And if
she reasoned it was to make herself indispensable
to her mate. Blindness had made her different
than she would otherwise have been. Again nature
promised motherhood to her. But she did not as
she would have done in the open, and with sight hold
more and more aloof from Kazan as the days passed.
It was her habit, spring, summer and winter, to snuggle
close to Kazan and lie with her beautiful head resting
on his neck or back. If Kazan snarled at her
she did not snap back, but slunk down as though struck
a blow. With her warm tongue she would lick away
the ice that froze to the long hair between Kazan’s
toes. For days after he had run a sliver in his
paw she nursed his foot. Blindness had made Kazan
absolutely necessary to her existence and
now, in a different way, she became more and more
necessary to Kazan. They were happy in their swamp
home. There was plenty of small game about them,
and it was warm under the windfall. Rarely did
they go beyond the limits of the swamp to hunt.
Out on the more distant plains and the barren ridges
they occasionally heard the cry of the wolf-pack on
the trail of meat, but it no longer thrilled them
with a desire to join in the chase.
One day they struck farther than usual
to the west. They left the swamp, crossed a plain
over which a fire had swept the preceding year, climbed
a ridge, and descended into a second plain. At
the bottom Gray Wolf stopped and sniffed the air.
At these times Kazan always watched her, waiting eagerly
and nervously if the scent was too faint for him to
catch. But to-day he caught the edge of it, and
he knew why Gray Wolf’s ears flattened, and
her hindquarters drooped. The scent of game would
have made her rigid and alert. But it was not
the game smell. It was human, and Gray Wolf slunk
behind Kazan and whined. For several minutes
they stood without moving or making a sound, and then
Kazan led the way on. Less than three hundred
yards away they came to a thick clump of scrub spruce,
and almost ran into a snow-smothered tepee. It
was abandoned. Life and fire had not been there
for a long time. But from the tepee had come
the man-smell. With legs rigid and his spine
quivering Kazan approached the opening to the tepee.
He looked in. In the middle of the tepee, lying
on the charred embers of a fire, lay a ragged blanket and
in the blanket was wrapped the body of a little Indian
child. Kazan could see the tiny moccasined feet.
But so long had death been there that he could scarcely
smell the presence of it. He drew back, and saw
Gray Wolf cautiously nosing about a long and peculiarly
shaped hummock in the snow. She had traveled about
it three times, but never approaching nearer than
a man could have reached with a rifle barrel.
At the end of her third circle she sat down on her
haunches, and Kazan went close to the hummock and sniffed.
Under that bulge in the snow, as well as in the tepee,
there was death. They slunk away, their ears
flattened and their tails drooping until they trailed
the snow, and did not stop until they reached their
swamp home. Even there Gray Wolf still sniffed
the horror of the plague, and her muscles twitched
and shivered as she lay close at Kazan’s side.
That night the big white moon had
around its edge a crimson rim. It meant cold intense
cold. Always the plague came in the days of greatest
cold the lower the temperature the more
terrible its havoc. It grew steadily colder that
night, and the increased chill penetrated to the heart
of the windfall, and drew Kazan and Gray Wolf closer
together. With dawn, which came at about eight
o’clock, Kazan and his blind mate sallied forth
into the day. It was fifty degrees below zero.
About them the trees cracked with reports like pistol-shots.
In the thickest spruce the partridges were humped
into round balls of feathers. The snow-shoe rabbits
had burrowed deep under the snow or to the heart of
the heaviest windfalls. Kazan and Gray Wolf found
few fresh trails, and after an hour of fruitless hunting
they returned to their lair. Kazan, dog-like,
had buried the half of a rabbit two or three days before,
and they dug this out of the snow and ate the frozen
flesh.
All that day it grew colder steadily
colder. The night that followed was cloudless,
with a white moon and brilliant stars. The temperature
had fallen another ten degrees, and nothing was moving.
Traps were never sprung on such nights, for even the
furred things the mink, and the ermine,
and the lynx lay snug in the holes and the
nests they had found for themselves. An increasing
hunger was not strong enough to drive Kazan and Gray
Wolf from their windfall. The next day there was
no break in the terrible cold, and toward noon Kazan
set out on a hunt for meat, leaving Gray Wolf in the
windfall. Being three-quarters dog, food was
more necessary to Kazan than to his mate. Nature
has fitted the wolf-breed for famine, and in ordinary
temperature Gray Wolf could have lived for a fortnight
without food. At sixty degrees below zero she
could exist a week, perhaps ten days. Only thirty
hours had passed sinee they had devoured the last
of the frozen rabbit, and she was quite satisfied
to remain in their snug retreat.
But Kazan was hungry. He began
to hunt in the face of the wind, traveling toward
the burned plain. He nosed about every windfall
that he came to, and investigated the thickets.
A thin shot-like snow had fallen, and in this from
the windfall to the burn he found but a
single trail, and that was the trail of an ermine.
Under a windfall he caught the warm scent of a rabbit,
but the rabbit was as safe from him there as were
the partridges in the trees, and after an hour of futile
digging and gnawing he gave up his effort to reach
it. For three hours he had hunted when he returned
to Gray Wolf. He was exhausted. While Gray
Wolf, with the instinct of the wild, had saved her
own strength and energy, Kazan had been burning up
his reserve forces, and was hungrier than ever.
The moon rose clear and brilliant
in the sky again that night, and Kazan set out once
more on the hunt. He urged Gray Wolf to accompany
him, whining for her outside the windfall returning
for her twice but Gray Wolf laid her ears
aslant and refused to move. The temperature had
now fallen to sixty-five or seventy degrees below zero,
and with it there came from the north an increasing
wind, making the night one in which human life could
not have existed for an hour. By midnight Kazan
was back under the windfall. The wind grew stronger.
It began to wail in mournful dirges over the swamp,
and then it burst in fierce shrieking volleys, with
intervals of quiet between. These were the first
warnings from the great barrens that lay between the
last lines of timber and the Arctic. With morning
the storm burst in all its fury from out of the north,
and Gray Wolf and Kazan lay close together and shivered
as they listened to the roar of it over the windfall.
Once Kazan thrust his head and shoulders out from
the shelter of the fallen trees, but the storm drove
him back. Everything that possessed life had sought
shelter, according to its way and instinct. The
furred creatures like the mink and the ermine were
safest, for during the warmer hunting days they were
of the kind that cached meat. The wolves and the
foxes had sought out the windfalls, and the rocks.
Winged things, with the exception of the owls, who
were a tenth part body and nine-tenths feathers, burrowed
under snow-drifts or found shelter in thick spruce.
To the hoofed and horned animals the storm meant greatest
havoc. The deer, the caribou and the moose could
not crawl under windfalls or creep between rocks.
The best they could do was to lie down in the lee
of a drift, and allow themselves to be covered deep
with the protecting snow. Even then they could
not keep their shelter long, for they had to eat.
For eighteen hours out of the twenty-four the moose
had to feed to keep himself alive during the winter.
His big stomach demanded quantity, and it took him
most of his time to nibble from the tops of bushes
the two or three bushels he needed a day. The
caribou required almost as much the deer
least of the three.
And the storm kept up that day, and
the next, and still a third three days
and three nights and the third day and night
there came with it a stinging, shot-like snow that
fell two feet deep on the level, and in drifts of
eight and ten. It was the “heavy snow”
of the Indians the snow that lay like lead
on the earth, and under which partridges and rabbits
were smothered in thousands.
On the fourth day after the beginning
of the storm Kazan and Gray Wolf issued forth from
the windfall. There was no longer a wind no
more falling snow. The whole world lay under
a blanket of unbroken white, and it was intensely
cold.
The plague had worked its havoc with
men. Now had come the days of famine and death
for the wild things.