Followed days of feasting on the frozen
flesh of the old bull. In vain Gray Wolf tried
to lure Kazan off into the forests and the swamps.
Day by day the temperature rose. There was hunting
now. And Gray Wolf wanted to be alone with
Kazan. But with Kazan, as with most men, leadership
and power roused new sensations. And he was the
leader of the dog-pack, as he had once been a leader
among the wolves. Not only Gray Wolf followed
at his flank now, but the four huskies trailed behind
him. Once more he was experiencing that triumph
and strange thrill that he had almost forgotten and
only Gray Wolf, in that eternal night of her blindness,
felt with dread foreboding the danger into which his
newly achieved czarship might lead him.
For three days and three nights they
remained in the neighborhood of the dead moose, ready
to defend it against others, and yet each day and
each night growing less vigilant in their guard.
Then came the fourth night, on which they killed a
young doe. Kazan led in that chase and for the
first time, in the excitement of having the pack at
his back, he left his blind mate behind. When
they came to the kill he was the first to leap at
its soft throat. And not until he had begun to
tear at the doe’s flesh did the others dare
to eat. He was master. He could send them
back with a snarl. At the gleam of his fangs they
crouched quivering on their bellies in the snow.
Kazan’s blood was fomented with
brute exultation, and the excitement and fascination
that came in the possession of new power took the place
of Gray Wolf each day a little more. She came
in half an hour after the kill, and there was no longer
the lithesome alertness to her slender legs, or gladness
in the tilt of her ears or the poise of her head.
She did not eat much of the doe. Her blind face
was turned always in Kazan’s direction.
Wherever he moved she followed with her unseeing eyes,
as if expecting each moment his old signal to her that
low throat-note that had called to her so often when
they were alone in the wilderness.
In Kazan, as leader of the pack, there
was working a curious change. If his mates had
been wolves it would not have been difficult for Gray
Wolf to have lured him away. But Kazan was among
his own kind. He was a dog. And they were
dogs. Fires that had burned down and ceased to
warm him flamed up in him anew. In his life with
Gray Wolf one thing had oppressed him as it could
not oppress her, and that thing was loneliness.
Nature had created him of that kind which requires
companionship not of one but of many.
It had given him birth that he might listen to and
obey the commands of the voice of man. He had
grown to hate men, but of the dogs his
kind he was a part. He had been happy
with Gray Wolf, happier than he had ever been in the
companionship of men and his blood-brothers.
But he had been a long time separated from the life
that had once been his and the call of blood made him
for a time forget. And only Gray Wolf, with that
wonderful super-instinct which nature was giving her
in place of her lost sight, foresaw the end to which
it was leading him.
Each day the temperature continued
to rise until when the sun was warmest the snow began
to thaw a little. This was two weeks after the
fight near the bull. Gradually the pack had swung
eastward, until it was now fifty miles east and twenty
miles south of the old home under the windfall.
More than ever Gray Wolf began to long for their old
nest under the fallen trees. Again with those
first promises of spring in sunshine and air, there
was coming also for the second time in her life the
promise of approaching motherhood.
But her efforts to draw Kazan back
were unavailing, and in spite of her protest he wandered
each day a little farther east and south at the head
of his pack.
Instinct impelled the four huskies
to move in that direction. They had not yet been
long enough a part of the wild to forget the necessity
of man and in that direction there was man. In
that direction, and not far from them now, was the
Hudson Bay Company’s post to which they and their
dead master owed their allegiance. Kazan did not
know this, but one day something happened to bring
back visions and desires that widened still more the
gulf between him and Gray Wolf.
They had come to the cap of a ridge
when something stopped them. It was a man’s
voice crying shrilly that word of long ago that had
so often stirred the blood in Kazan’s own veins “m’hoosh!
m’hoosh! m’hoosh!" and
from the ridge they looked down upon the open space
of the plain, where a team of six dogs was trotting
ahead of a sledge, with a man running behind them,
urging them on at every other step with that cry of
“m’hoosh! m’hoosh! m’hoosh!"
Trembling and undecided, the four
huskies and the wolf-dog stood on the ridge with Gray
Wolf cringing behind them. Not until man and dogs
and sledge had disappeared did they move, and then
they trotted down to the trail and sniffed at it whiningly
and excitedly. For a mile or two they followed
it, Kazan and his mates going fearlessly in the trail.
Gray Wolf hung back, traveling twenty yards to the
right of them, with the hot man-scent driving the
blood feverishly through her brain. Only her
love for Kazan and the faith she still had
in him kept her that near.
At the edge of a swamp Kazan halted
and turned away from the trail. With the desire
that was growing in him there was still that old suspicion
which nothing could quite wipe out the suspicion
that was an inheritance of his quarter-strain of wolf.
Gray Wolf whined joyfully when he turned into the
forest, and drew so close to him that her shoulder
rubbed against Kazan’s as they traveled side
by side.
The “slush” snows followed
fast after this. And the “slush” snows
meant spring and the emptying of the wilderness
of human life. Kazan and his mates soon began
to scent the presence and the movement of this life.
They were now within thirty miles of the post.
For a hundred miles on all sides of them the trappers
were moving in with their late winter’s catch
of furs. From east and west, south and north,
all trails led to the post. The pack was caught
in the mesh of them. For a week not a day passed
that they did not cross a fresh trail, and sometimes
two or three.
Gray Wolf was haunted by constant
fear. In her blindness she knew that they were
surrounded by the menace of men. To Kazan what
was coming to pass had more and more ceased to fill
him with fear and caution. Three times that week
he heard the shouts of men and once he heard
a white man’s laughter and the barking of dogs
as their master tossed them their daily feed of fish.
In the air he caught the pungent scent of camp-fires
and one night, in the far distance, he heard a wild
snatch of song, followed by the yelping and barking
of a dog-pack.
Slowly and surely the lure of man
drew him nearer to the post a mile to-night,
two miles to-morrow, but always nearer. And Gray
Wolf, fighting her losing fight to the end, sensed
in the danger-filled air the nearness of that hour
when he would respond to the final call and she would
be left alone.
These were days of activity and excitement
at the fur company’s post, the days of accounting,
of profit and of pleasure; the days when
the wilderness poured in its treasure of fur, to be
sent a little later to London and Paris and the capitals
of Europe. And this year there was more than
the usual interest in the foregathering of the forest
people. The plague had wrought its terrible havoc,
and not until the fur-hunters had come to answer to
the spring roll-call would it be known accurately
who had lived and who had died.
The Chippewans and half-breeds from
the south began to arrive first, with their teams
of mongrel curs, picked up along the borders of civilization.
Close after them came the hunters from the western
barren lands, bringing with them loads of white fox
and caribou skins, and an army of big-footed, long-legged
Mackenzie hounds that pulled like horses and wailed
like whipped puppies when the huskies and Eskimo dogs
set upon them. Packs of fierce Labrador dogs,
never vanquished except by death, came from close
to Hudson’s Bay. Team after team of little
yellow and gray Eskimo dogs, as quick with their fangs
as were their black and swift-running masters with
their hands and feet, met the much larger and dark-colored
Malemutes from the Athabasca. Enemies of all these
packs of fierce huskies trailed in from all sides,
fighting, snapping and snarling, with the lust of
killing deep born in them from their wolf progenitors.
There was no cessation in the battle
of the fangs. It began with the first brute arrivals.
It continued from dawn through the day and around
the camp-fires at night. There was never an end
to the strife between the dogs, and between the men
and the dogs. The snow was trailed and stained
with blood and the scent of it added greater fierceness
to the wolf-breeds.
Half a dozen battles were fought to
the death each day and night. Those that died
were chiefly the south-bred curs mixtures
of mastiff, Great Dane, and sheep-dog and
the fatally slow Mackenzie hounds. About the
post rose the smoke of a hundred camp-fires, and about
these fires gathered the women and the children of
the hunters. When the snow was no longer fit
for sledging, Williams, the factor, noted that there
were many who had not come, and the accounts of these
he later scratched out of his ledgers knowing that
they were victims of the plague.
At last came the night of the Big
Carnival, For weeks and months women and children
and men had been looking forward to this. In scores
of forest cabins, in smoke-blackened tepees, and even
in the frozen homes of the little Eskimos, anticipation
of this wild night of pleasure had given an added
zest to life. It was the Big Circus the
good time given twice each year by the company to
its people.
This year, to offset the memory of
plague and death, the factor had put forth unusual
exertions. His hunters had killed four fat caribou.
In the clearing there were great piles of dry logs,
and in the center of all there rose eight ten-foot
tree-butts crotched at the top; and from crotch to
crotch there rested a stout sapling stripped of bark,
and on each sapling was spitted the carcass of a caribou,
to be roasted whole by the heat of the fire beneath.
The fires were lighted at dusk, and Williams himself
started the first of those wild songs of the Northland the
song of the caribou, as the flames leaped up into the
dark night.
“Oh, ze cariboo-oo-oo, ze cariboo-oo-oo,
He roas’ on high,
Jes’ under ze sky.
air-holes beeg white cariboo-oo-oo!”
“Now!” he yelled.
“Now all together!” And carried
away by his enthusiasm, the forest people awakened
from their silence of months, and the song burst forth
in a savage frenzy that reached to the skies.
Two miles to the south and west that
first thunder of human voice reached the ears of Kazan
and Gray Wolf and the masterless huskies. And
with the voices of men they heard now the excited howlings
of dogs. The huskies faced the direction of the
sounds, moving restlessly and whining. For a
few moments Kazan stood as though carven of rock.
Then he turned his head, and his first look was to
Gray Wolf. She had slunk back a dozen feet and
lay crouched under the thick cover of a balsam shrub.
Her body, legs and neck were flattened in the snow.
She made no sound, but her lips were drawn back and
her teeth shone white.
Kazan trotted back to her, sniffed
at her blind face and whined. Gray Wolf still
did not move. He returned to the dogs and his
jaws opened and closed with a snap. Still more
clearly came the wild voice of the carnival, and no
longer to be held back by Kazan’s leadership,
the four huskies dropped their heads and slunk like
shadows in its direction. Kazan hesitated, urging
Gray Wolf. But not a muscle of Gray Wolf’s
body moved. She would have followed him in face
of fire but not in face of man. Not a sound escaped
her ears. She heard the quick fall of Kazan’s
feet as he left her. In another moment she knew
that he was gone. Then and not until
then did she lift her head, and from her
soft throat there broke a whimpering cry.
It was her last call to Kazan.
But stronger than that there was running through Kazan’s
excited blood the call of man and of dog. The
huskies were far in advance of him now and for a few
moments he raced madly to overtake them. Then
he slowed down until he was trotting, and a hundred
yards farther on he stopped. Less than a mile
away he could see where the flames of the great fires
were reddening the sky. He gazed back to see
if Gray Wolf was following and then went on until he
struck an open and hard traveled trail. It was
beaten with the footprints of men and dogs, and over
it two of the caribou had been dragged a day or two
before.
At last he came to the thinned out
strip of timber that surrounded the clearing and the
flare of the flames was in his eyes. The bedlam
of sound that came to him now was like fire in his
brain. He heard the song and the laughter of
men, the shrill cries of women and children, the barking
and snarling and fighting of a hundred dogs. He
wanted to rush out and join them, to become again
a part of what he had once been. Yard by yard
he sneaked through the thin timber until he reached
the edge of the clearing. There he stood in the
shadow of a spruce and looked out upon life as he
had once lived it, trembling, wistful and yet hesitating
in that final moment.
A hundred yards away was the savage
circle of men and dogs and fire. His nostrils
were filled with the rich aroma of the roasting caribou,
and as he crouched down, still with that wolfish caution
that Gray Wolf had taught him, men with long poles
brought the huge carcasses crashing down upon the
melting snow about the fires. In one great rush
the horde of wild revelers crowded in with bared knives,
and a snarling mass of dogs closed in behind them.
In another moment he had forgotten Gray Wolf, had
forgotten all that man and the wild had taught him,
and like a gray streak was across the open.
The dogs were surging back when he
reached them, with half a dozen of the factor’s
men lashing them in the faces with long caribou-gut
whips. The sting of a lash fell in a fierce cut
over an Eskimo dog’s shoulder, and in snapping
at the lash his fangs struck Kazan’s rump.
With lightning swiftness Kazan returned the cut, and
in an instant the jaws of the dogs had met. In
another instant they were down and Kazan had the Eskimo
dog by the throat.
With shouts the men rushed in.
Again and again their whips cut like knives through
the air. Their blows fell on Kazan, who was uppermost,
and as he felt the burning pain of the scourging whips
there flooded through him all at once the fierce memory
of the days of old the days of the Club
and the Lash. He snarled. Slowly he loosened
his hold of the Eskimo dog’s throat. And
then, out of the melee of dogs and men, there sprang
another man with a club! It
fell on Kazan’s back and the force of it sent
him flat into the snow. It was raised again.
Behind the club there was a face a brutal,
fire-reddened face. It was such a face that had
driven Kazan into the wild, and as the club fell again
he evaded the full weight of its blow and his fangs
gleamed like ivory knives. A third time the club
was raised, and this time Kazan met it in mid-air,
and his teeth ripped the length of the man’s
forearm.
“Good God!” shrieked the
man in pain, and Kazan caught the gleam of a rifle
barrel as he sped toward the forest. A shot followed.
Something like a red-hot coal ran the length of Kazan’s
hip, and deep in the forest he stopped to lick at
the burning furrow where the bullet had gone just
deep enough to take the skin and hair from his flesh.
Gray Wolf was still waiting under
the balsam shrub when Kazan returned to her.
Joyously she sprang forth to meet him. Once more
the man had sent back the old Kazan to her. He
muzzled her neck and face, and stood for a few moments
with his head resting across her back, listening to
the distant sound.
Then, with ears laid flat, he set
out straight into the north and west. And now
Gray Wolf ran shoulder to shoulder with him like the
Gray Wolf of the days before the dog-pack came; for
that wonderful thing that lay beyond the realm of
reason told her that once more she was comrade and
mate, and that their trail that night was leading to
their old home under the windfall.