In the golden glow of the autumn sun
there came up the stream overlooked by the Sun Rock
one day a man, a woman and a child in a canoe.
Civilization had done for lovely Joan what it had done
for many another wild flower transplanted from the
depths of the wilderness. Her cheeks were thin.
Her blue eyes had lost their luster. She coughed,
and when she coughed the man looked at her with love
and fear in his eyes. But now, slowly, the man
had begun to see the transformation, and on the day
their canoe pointed up the stream and into the wonderful
valley that had been their home before the call of
the distant city came to them, he noted the flush
gathering once more in her cheeks, the fuller redness
of her lips, and the gathering glow of happiness and
content in her eyes. He laughed softly as he
saw these things, and he blessed the forests.
In the canoe she had leaned back, with her head almost
against his shoulder, and he stopped paddling to draw
her to him, and run his fingers through the soft golden
masses of her hair.
“You are happy again, Joan,”
he laughed joyously. “The doctors were
right. You are a part of the forests.”
“Yes, I am happy,” she
whispered, and suddenly there came a little thrill
into her voice, and she pointed to a white finger of
sand running out into the stream. “Do you
remember years and years ago, it seems that
Kazan left us here? She was on the sand over
there, calling to him. Do you remember?”
There was a little tremble about her mouth, and she
added, “I wonder where they have
gone.”
The cabin was as they had left it.
Only the crimson bakneesh had grown up about
it, and shrubs and tall grass had sprung up near its
walls. Once more it took on life, and day by
day the color came deeper into Joan’s cheeks,
and her voice was filled with its old wild sweetness
of song. Joan’s husband cleared the trails
over his old trap-lines, and Joan and the little Joan,
who romped and talked now, transformed the cabin into
home. One night the man returned to the
cabin late, and when he came in there was a glow of
excitement in Joan’s blue eyes, and a tremble
in her voice when she greeted him.
“Did you hear it?” she asked. “Did
you hear the call?”
He nodded, stroking her soft hair.
“I was a mile back in the creek swamp,”
he said. “I heard it!”
Joan’s hands clutched his arms.
“It wasn’t Kazan,”
she said. “I would recognize his
voice. But it seemed to me it was like the other the
call that came that morning from the sand-bar, his
mate?”
The man was thinking. Joan’s
fingers tightened. She was breathing a little
quickly.
“Will you promise me this?”
she asked, “Will you promise me that you will
never hunt or trap for wolves?”
“I had thought of that,”
he replied. “I thought of it after
I heard the call. Yes, I will promise.”
Joan’s arms stole up about his neck.
“We loved Kazan,” she whispered.
“And you might kill him or her”
Suddenly she stopped. Both listened.
The door was a little ajar, and to them there came
again the wailing mate-call of the wolf. Joan
ran to the door. Her husband followed. Together
they stood silent, and with tense breath Joan pointed
over the starlit plain.
“Listen! Listen!”
she commanded. “It’s her cry, and
it came from the Sun Rock!”
She ran out into the night, forgetting
that the man was close behind her now, forgetting
that little Joan was alone in her bed. And to
them, from miles and miles across the plain, there
came a wailing cry in answer a cry that
seemed a part of the wind, and that thrilled Joan until
her breath broke in a strange sob.
Farther out on the plain she went
and then stopped, with the golden glow of the autumn
moon and the stars shimmering in her hair and eyes.
It was many minutes before the cry came again, and
then it was so near that Joan put her hands to her
mouth, and her cry rang out over the plain as in the
days of old.
“Kazan! Kazan! Kazan!”
At the top of the Sun Rock, Gray Wolf gaunt
and thinned by starvation heard the woman’s
cry, and the call that was in her throat died away
in a whine. And to the north a swiftly moving
shadow stopped for a moment, and stood like a thing
of rock under the starlight. It was Kazan.
A strange fire leaped through his body. Every
fiber of his brute understanding was afire with the
knowledge that here was home. It was here,
long ago, that he had lived, and loved, and fought and
all at once the dreams that had grown faded and indistinct
in his memory came back to him as real living things.
For, coming to him faintly over the plain, he heard
Joan’s voice!
In the starlight Joan stood, tense
and white, when from out of the pale mists of the
moon-glow he came to her, cringing on his belly, panting
and wind-run, and with a strange whining note in his
throat. And as Joan went to him, her arms reaching
out, her lips sobbing his name over and over again,
the man stood and looked down upon them with the wonder
of a new and greater understanding in his face.
He had no fear of the wolf-dog now. And as Joan’s
arms hugged Kazan’s great shaggy head up to
her he heard the whining gasping joy of the beast and
the sobbing whispering voice of the girl, and with
tensely gripped hands he faced the Sun Rock.
“My Gawd,” he breathed. “I
believe it’s so ”
As if in response to the thought in
his mind, there came once more across the plain Gray
Wolf’s mate-seeking cry of grief and of loneliness.
Swiftly as though struck by a lash Kazan was on his
feet oblivious of Joan’s touch, of
her voice, of the presence of the man. In another
instant he was gone, and Joan flung herself against
her husband’s breast, and almost fiercely took
his face between her two hands.
“Now do you believe?”
she cried pantingly. “Now do you believe
in the God of my world the God I have lived
with, the God that gives souls to the wild things,
the God that that has brought us,
all together once more home!”
His arms closed gently about her.
“I believe, my Joan,” he whispered.
“And you understand now what
it means, ’Thou shalt not kill’?”
“Except that it brings us life yes,
I understand,” he replied.
Her warm soft hands stroked his face.
Her blue eyes, filled with the glory of the stars,
looked up into his.
“Kazan and she you
and I and the baby! Are you sorry that
we came back?” she asked.
So close he drew her against his breast
that she did not hear the words he whispered in the
soft warmth of her hair. And after that, for many
hours, they sat in the starlight in front of the cabin
door. But they did not hear again that lonely
cry from the Sun Rock. Joan and her husband understood.
“He’ll visit us again
to-morrow,” the man said at last. “Come,
Joan, let us go to bed.”
Together they entered the cabin.
And that night, side by side, Kazan
and Gray Wolf hunted again in the moonlit plain.