It seemed to Philip, as he stood with
the club ready in his hand, that the world had ceased
to breathe in its anticipation of the thing for which
he was waiting-and listening. The wind
had dropped dead. There was not a rustle in the
tree-tops, not a sound to break the stillness.
The silence, so close after storm, was an Arctic phenomenon
which did not astonish him, and yet the effect of
it was almost painfully gripping. Minor sounds
began to impress themselves on his senses-the
soft murmur of the falling snow, his own breath, the
pounding of his heart. He tried to throw off
the strange feeling that oppressed him, but it was
impossible. Out there in the darkness he would
have sworn that there were eyes and ears strained
as his own were strained. And the darkness was
lifting. Shadows began to disentangle themselves
from the gray chaos. Trees and bushes took form,
and over his head the last heavy windrows of clouds
shouldered their way out of the sky.
Still, as the twilight of dawn took
the place of night, he did not move, except to draw
himself a little closer into the shelter of the scrub
spruce behind which he had hidden himself. He
wondered if Celie would be frightened at his absence.
But he could not compel himself to go on-or
back. Something was coming!
He was as positive of it as he was of the fact that
night was giving place to day. Yet he could see
nothing-hear nothing. It was light
enough now for him to see movement fifty yards away,
and he kept his eyes fastened on the little open across
which their trail had come. If Olaf Anderson the
Swede had been there he might have told him of another
night like this, and another vigil. For Olaf
had learned that the Eskimos, like the wolves, trail
two by two and four by four, and that-again
like the wolves-they pursue not on
the trail but with the trail between them.
But it was the trail that Philip watched;
and as he kept his vigil-that inexplicable
mental undercurrent telling him that his enemies were
coming-his mind went back sharply to the
girl a hundred yards behind him. The acuteness
of the situation sent question after question rushing
through his mind, even as he gripped his club, For
her he was about to fight. For her he was ready
to kill, and not afraid to die. He loved her.
And yet-she was a mystery. He had held
her in his arms, had felt her heart beating against
his breast, had kissed her lips and her eyes and her
hair, and her response had been to place herself utterly
within the shelter of his arms. She had given
herself to him and he was possessed of the strength
of one about to fight for his own. And with that
strength the questions pounded again in his head.
Who was she? And for what reason were mysterious
enemies coming after her through the gray dawn?
In that moment he heard a sound.
His heart stood suddenly still. He held his breath.
It was a sound almost indistinguishable from the whisper
of the air and the trees and yet it smote upon his
senses like the detonation of a thunder-clap.
It was more of a presence than a sound.
The trail was clear. He could see to the far side
of the open now, and there was no movement. He
turned his head-slowly and without movement
of his body, and in that instant a gasp rose to his
lips, and died there. Scarcely a dozen paces
from him stood a poised and hooded figure, a squat,
fire-eyed apparition that looked more like monster
than man in that first glance. Something acted
within him that was swifter than reason-a
sub-conscious instinct that works for self-preservation
like the flash of powder in a pan. It was this
sub-conscious self that received the first photographic
impression-the strange poise of the hooded
creature, the uplifted arm, the cold, streaky gleam
of something in the dawn-light, and in response to
that impression Philip’s physical self crumpled
down in the snow as a javelin hissed through the space
where his head and shoulders had been.
So infinitesimal was the space of
time between the throwing of the javelin and Philip’s
movement that the Eskimo believed he had transfixed
his victim. A scream of triumph rose in his throat.
It was the Kogmollock sakootwow-the blood-cry,
a single shriek that split the air for a mile.
It died in another sort of cry. From where he
had dropped Philip was up like a shot. His club
swung through the air and before the amazed hooded
creature could dart either to one side or the other
it had fallen with crushing force. That one blow
must have smashed his shoulder to a pulp. As
the body lurched downward another blow caught the
hooded head squarely and the beginning of a second
cry ended in a sickening grunt. The force of
the blow carried Philip half off his feet, and before
he could recover himself two other figures had rushed
upon him from out of the gloom. Their cries as
they came at him were like the cries of beasts.
Philip had no time to use his club. From his
unbalanced position he flung himself upward and at
the nearest of his enemies, saving himself from the
upraised javelin by clinching. His fist shot
out and caught the Eskimo squarely in the mouth.
He struck again-and the javelin dropped
from the Kogmollock’s hand. In that moment,
every vein in his body pounding with the rage and excitement
of battle, Philip let out a yell. The end of
it was stifled by a pair of furry arms. His head
snapped back-and he was down.
A thrill of horror shot through him.
It was the one unconquerable fighting trick of the
Eskimos-that neck hold. Caught from
behind there was no escape from it. It was the
age-old sasaki-wechikun, or sacrifice-hold, an inheritance
that came down from father to son-the Arctic
jiu-jitsu by which one Kogmollock holds the victim
helpless while a second cuts out his heart. Flat
on his back, with his head and shoulders bent under
him, Philip lay still for a single instant. He
heard the shrill command of the Eskimo over him-an
exhortation for the other to hurry up with the knife.
And then, even as he heard a grunting reply, his hand
came in contact with the pocket which held Celie’s
little revolver. He drew it quickly, cocked it
under his back, and twisting his arm until the elbow-joint
cracked, he fired. It was a chance shot.
The powder-flash burned the murderous, thick-lipped
face in the sealskin hood. There was no cry,
no sound that Philip heard. But the arms relaxed
about his neck. He rolled over and sprang to his
feet. Three or four paces from him was the Eskimo
he had struck, crawling toward him on his hands and
knees, still dazed by the blows he had received.
In the snow Philip saw his club. He picked it
up and replaced the revolver in his pocket. A
single blow as the groggy Eskimo staggered to his
feet and the fight was over.
It had taken perhaps three or four
minutes-no longer than that. His enemies
lay in three dark and motionless heaps in the snow.
Fate had played a strong hand with him. Almost
by a miracle he had escaped and at least two of the
Eskimos were dead.
He was still watchful, still guarding
against a further attack, and suddenly he whirled
to face a figure that brought from him a cry of astonishment
and alarm. It was Celie. She was standing
ten paces from him, and in the wild terror that had
brought her to him she had left the bearskin behind.
Her naked feet were buried in the snow. Her arms,
partly bared, were reaching out to him in the gray
Arctic dawn, and then wildly and moaningly there came
to him-
“Philip-Philip-”
He sprang to her, a choking cry on
his own lips. This, after all, was the last proof-when
she had thought that their enemies were killing him
she had come to him.
He was sobbing her name like a boy as he ran back
with her in his arms. Almost fiercely he wrapped
the bearskin about her again, and then crushed her
so closely in his arms that he could hear her gasping
faintly for breath. In that wild and glorious
moment he listened. A cold and leaden day was
breaking over the world and as they listened their
hearts throbbing against each other, the same sound
came to them both.
It was the sakootwow-the
savage, shrieking blood-cry of the Kogmollocks, a
scream that demanded an answer of the three hooded
creatures who, a few minutes before, had attacked Philip
in the edge of the open. The cry came from perhaps
a mile away. And then, faintly, it was answered
far to the west. For a moment Philip pressed his
face down to Celie’s. In his heart was
a prayer, for he knew that the fight had only begun.