A FIGHT IN DEFENCE OF WOMAN, AND RIFLE-SHOOTING
EXTRAORDINARY
When the excitement had somewhat abated,
Leo stepped to the side of Oblooria, and laying his
hand on her shoulder said firmly, through Anders:
“Pardon me, Grabantak, this
girl is not the wife of Koyatuk; she is my
sister!”
The chief frowned, clenched his teeth,
and grasped a spear
“When did Kablunet men begin to have Eskimo
sisters?”
“When they took all distressed
women under their protection,” returned Leo
promptly. “Every woman who needs my help
is my sister,” he added with a look of self-sufficiency
which he was far from feeling.
This new doctrine obviously puzzled
the chief, who frowned, smiled, and looked at the
ground, as if in meditation. It seemed to afford
great comfort to Oblooria, who nestled closer to her
champion. As for Koyatuk, he treated the matter
with an air of mingled surprise and scorn, but dutifully
awaited his father’s pleasure.
Koyatuk was physically a fine specimen
of a savage, but his spirit was not equal to his body.
Like his father he was over six feet high, and firmly
knit, being of both larger and stronger build than
Leo, whom he now regarded, and of course hated, as
his rival a contemptible one, no doubt;
still a rival.
The warriors watched their chief in
breathless suspense. To them it was a thoroughly
new and interesting situation. That a white stranger,
tall and active, but slender and very young, should
dare single-handed to defy not only their chief, but,
as it were, the entire tribe, including the royal
family, was a state of things in regard to which their
previous lives afforded no parallel. They could
not understand it at all, and stood, as it were, in
eager, open-mouthed, and one-legged expectation.
At last Grabantak looked up, as if
smitten by a new idea, and spoke
“Can Kablunet men fight?” he asked.
“They love peace better than
war,” answered Leo, “but when they see
cause to fight they can do so.”
Turning immediately to his son, Grabantak
said with a grim smile
“Behold your wife, take her!”
Koyatuk advanced. Leo placed
Oblooria behind him, and, being unarmed, threw himself
into a pugilistic posture of defence. The young
Eskimo laid one of his strong hands on the Englishman’s
shoulder, intending to thrust him aside violently.
Leo was naturally of a tender disposition. He
shrank from dealing a violent blow to one who had not
the remotest idea of what was coming, or how to defend
himself from the human fist when used as a battering-ram.
But Leo chanced to be, in a sense,
doubly armed. During one of his holiday rambles
in England he had visited Cornwall, and there had
learned that celebrated “throw” which consists
in making your haunch a fulcrum, your right arm a
lever, and your adversary a shuttlecock. He
suddenly grasped his foe round the waist with one arm.
Next moment the Grabantaks saw what the most imaginative
among them had never till then conceived of Koyatuk’s
soles turned to the sky, and his head pointing to
the ground! The moment following, he lay flat
on his back looking upwards blankly.
The huk! hi! ho! hooroos! that followed
may be conceived, but cannot be described. Some
of the men burst into laughter, for anything ludicrous
is irresistible to an Eskimo of the very far north.
A few were petrified. Others there were who
resented this indignity to the heir-apparent, and
flourished their spears in a threatening manner.
These last Grabantak quieted with a look. The
incident undoubtedly surprised that stern parent,
but also afforded him some amusement. He said
it was an insult that must be avenged. Oddly
enough he made use of an expression which sounded
curiously familiar to Leo’s ears, as translated
by Anders. “The insult,” said Grabantak,
“could only be washed out in blood!”
Strange, that simple savages of the
far north should hold to that ridiculous doctrine.
We had imagined that it was confined entirely to
those further south, whose minds have been more or
less warped by civilised usage.
A ring was immediately formed, and
poor Leo now saw that the matter was becoming serious.
He was on the eve of fighting an enforced duel in
Oblooria’s service.
While the savages were preparing the
lists, and Koyatuk, having recovered, was engaged
in converse with his father, Leo whispered to Anders
“Perhaps Oblooria has no objection
to be the wife of this man?”
But the poor girl had very strong
objections. She was, moreover, so emphatic in
her expressions of horror, and cast on her champion
such a look of entreaty, that he would have been more
than mortal had he refused her. It was very
perplexing. The idea of killing, or being killed,
in such a cause was very repulsive. He tried
to reason with Grabantak about the sin of injuring
a defenceless woman, and the abstract right of females
in general to have some say in the selection of their
husbands, but Grabantak was inexorable.
“Is the Kablunet afraid?”
he asked, with a glance of scornful surprise.
“Does he look afraid?” returned
Leo, quietly.
Koyatuk now stepped into the middle
of the ring of warriors, with a short spear in his
right hand, and half-a-dozen spare ones in his left,
whereby Leo perceived that the battle before him was
not meant to be a mere “exchange of shots,”
for the “satisfaction of honour.”
There was evidently no humbug about these Eskimos.
Two men mounted guard over Anders
and Oblooria, who, however, were allowed to remain
inside the ring to witness the combat. A warrior
now advanced to Leo and presented him with a small
bundle of spears. He took them almost mechanically,
thanked the giver, and laid them down at his feet
without selecting one. Then he stood up, and,
crossing his arms on his breast, gazed full at his
opponent, who made a hideous face at him and flourished
his spear.
It was quite evident that the Eskimos
were perplexed by the white youth’s conduct,
and knew not what to make of it. The truth is
that poor Leo was almost beside himself with conflicting
emotions and uncertainty as to what he ought to do.
Despite all that had taken place, he found it almost
impossible to persuade himself that he was actually
about to engage in mortal combat. He had not
a vestige of angry feeling in his heart against the
man whom he was expected to fight with to the death,
and the extraordinary nature of the complex faces
that Koyatuk was making at him tended to foster the
delusion that the whole thing was a farce or
a dream.
Then the knowledge that he could burst
through the ring, get hold of his rifle, and sell
his life dearly, or, perhaps, cause the whole savage
tribe to fly in terror, was a sore temptation to him.
All this, coupled with the necessity for taking instant
and vigorous action of some sort, was enough to drive
an older head distracted. It did drive the blood
violently to the youth’s face, but, by a powerful
effort of self-restraint, he continued to stand perfectly
still, like a living statue, facing the Eskimo.
At last Koyatuk became tired of making
useless faces at his rival. Suddenly poising
his spear, he launched it.
Had Leo’s eye been less quick,
or his limbs less active, that spear had laid him
low for ever. He had barely time to spring aside,
when the weapon passed between his side and his left
arm, grazing the latter slightly, and drawing blood
which trickled to the ends of his fingers.
There could be no further doubt now
about the nature of the fight. Catching up a
spear from the bundle at his feet he was just in time
to receive the Eskimo, who sprang in on him with the
intention of coming at once to close quarters.
His rush was very furious; probably with a view to
make it decisive. But the agile Leo was equal
to the occasion. Bending suddenly so low as to
be quite under his opponent’s desperate thrust,
he struck out his right leg firmly. Koyatuk tripped
over it, and ploughed the land for some yards with
his hands, head, and knees.
Considerably staggered in mind and
body by the fall, he sprang up with a roar, and turned
to renew the attack. Leo was ready. The
Eskimo, by that time mad with pain, humiliation, and
rage, exercised no caution in his assault. He
rushed at his rival like a mad bull. Our Englishman
saw his opportunity. Dropping his own spear he
guarded the thrust of his adversary’s with his
right arm, while, with his left fist, he planted a
solid blow on Koyatuk’s forehead. The right
fist followed the left like the lightning flash, and
alighted on Koyatuk’s nose, which, flat by nature,
was rendered flatter still by art. Indeed it
would be the weakest flattery to assert that he had
any nose at all after receiving that blow. It
was reduced to the shape of a small pancake, from
the two holes in which there instantly spouted a stream
of blood so copious that it drenched alike its owner
and his rival.
After giving him this double salute,
Leo stepped quickly aside to let him tumble forward,
heels over head, which he did with the only half-checked
impetuosity of his onset, and lay prone upon the ground.
“There, Anders,” said
the victor, turning round as he pointed to his prostrate
foe, “surely Grabantak’s son has got enough
of blood now to wipe out all the insults he ever received,
or is likely to receive, from me.”
Grabantak appeared to agree to this
view of the case. That he saw and relished the
jest was obvious, for he burst into an uproarious fit
of laughter, in which his amiable warriors joined
him, and, advancing to Leo, gave him a hearty slap
of approval on the shoulder. At the same time
he cast a look of amused scorn on his fallen son, who
was being attended to by Merkut.
It may be observed here that Merkut
was the only woman of the tribe allowed to go on this
war-expedition. Being the chief’s wife,
she had been allowed to do as she pleased, and it
was her pleasure to accompany the party and to travel
like the warriors in a kayak, which she managed as
well as the best of them.
Grabantak now ordered his men to encamp,
and feed till the gale should abate. Then, calling
Leo and the interpreter aside, he questioned them
closely as to the condition of the Poloese and the
numbers of the white men who had recently joined them.
Of course Leo made Anders give him
a graphic account of the preparations made by his
enemies to receive him, in the hope that he might be
induced to give up his intentions, but he had mistaken
the spirit of the Eskimo, who merely showed his teeth,
frowned, laughed in a diabolic manner, and flourished
his spear during the recital of Amalatok’s warlike
arrangements. He wound up by saying that he was
rejoiced to learn all that, because it would be all
the more to his credit to make his enemy go down on
his knees, lick the dust, crawl in his presence, and
otherwise humble himself.
“But tell him, Anders,”
said Leo, earnestly, “that my white brothers,
though few in number, are very strong and brave.
They have weapons too which kill far off and make
a dreadful noise.”
Grabantak laughed contemptuously at this.
“Does the Kablunet,” he
asked, “think I am afraid to die afraid
of a noise? does he think that none but white men
can kill far off?”
As he spoke he suddenly hurled his
spear at a gull, which, with many others, was perched
on a cliff about thirty yards off, and transfixed
it.
“Go to the boat, Anders, and
fetch my rifle,” said Leo in a low tone.
When the rifle was brought a crowd
of Eskimos came with it. They had been closely
observing their chief and the stranger during the
conference, but remained at a respectful distance until
they saw something unusual going on.
“Tell the chief,” said
Leo, “to look at that peak with the solitary
gull standing on it.”
He pointed to a detached cone of rock
upwards of two hundred yards distant.
When the attention of the whole party
was concentrated on the bird in question, Leo took
a steady aim and fired.
Need we say that the effect of the
shot was wonderful? not only did the braves utter
a united yell and give a simultaneous jump, but several
of the less brave among them bolted behind rocks,
or tumbled in attempting to do so, while myriads of
sea-fowl, which clustered among the cliffs, sprang
from their perches and went screaming into the air.
At the same time echoes innumerable, which had lain
dormant since creation, or at best had given but sleepy
response to the bark of walruses and the cry of gulls,
took up the shot in lively haste and sent it to and
fro from cliff to crag in bewildering continuation.
“Wonderful!” exclaimed
Grabantak in open-mouthed amazement, when he beheld
the shot gull tumbling from its lofty perch, “Do
it again.”
Leo did it again all the
more readily that another gull, unwarned by its predecessor’s
fate, flew to the conical rock at the moment, and
perched itself on the same peak. It fell, as
before, and the echoes were again awakened, while
the sea-birds cawed and screamed more violently than
ever.
The timid ones among the braves, having
recovered from their first shock, stood fast this
time, but trembled much and glared horribly.
The chief, who was made of sterner stuff than many
of his followers; did not move, though his face flushed
crimson with suppressed emotion. As to the sea-birds,
curiosity seemed to have overcome fear, for they came
circling and wheeling overhead in clouds so dense that
they almost darkened the sky many of them
swooping close past the Eskimos and then shearing
off and up with wild cries.
An idea suddenly flashed into Leo’s
head. Pointing his rifle upwards he began and
continued a rapid fire until all the bullets in it,
(ten or twelve), were expended. The result was
as he had expected. Travelling through such
a dense mass of birds, each ball pierced we know not
how many, until it absolutely rained dead and wounded
gulls on the heads of the natives, while the rocks
sent forth a roar of echoes equal to a continuous
fire of musketry. It was stupendous! Nothing
like it had occurred in the Polar regions since the
world first became a little flattened at the poles!
Nothing like it will happen again until the conjunction
of a series of similar circumstances occurs.
The timid braves lost heart again and dived like the
coneys into holes and corners of the rocks.
Others stood still with chattering teeth. Even
Grabantak wavered for a moment. But it was only
for a moment. Recovering himself he uttered
a mighty shout; then he yelled; then he howled; then
he slapped his breast and thighs; then he seized a
smallish brave near him by the neck and hurled him
into the sea. Having relieved his feelings thus
he burst into a fit of laughter such as has never been
equalled by the wildest maniac either before or since.
Suddenly he calmed, stepped up to
Leo, and wrenched the rifle from his grasp.
“I will do that!” he cried,
and held the weapon out at arms-length in front of
his face with both hands; but there was no answering
shot.
“Why does it not bark?”
he demanded, turning to Leo sternly.
“It will only bark at my bidding,”
said Leo, with a significant smile.
“Bid it, then,” said the
chief in a peremptory tone, still holding the rifle
out.
“You must treat it in the right
way, otherwise it will not bark. I will show
you.”
Having been shown how to pull the
trigger, the chief tried again, but a sharp click
was the only reply. Grabantak having expected
a shot, he nervously dropped the rifle, but Leo was
prepared, and caught it.
“You must not be afraid of it;
it cannot work properly if you are afraid. See,
look there,” he added, pointing to the conical
rock on which another infatuated gull had perched
himself.
Grabantak looked earnestly.
His timid braves began to creep out of their holes,
and directed their eyes to the same spot. While
their attention was occupied Leo managed to slip a
fresh cartridge into the rifle unobserved.
“Now,” said he, handing
the rifle to the chief, “try again.”
Grabantak, who was not quite pleased
at the hint about his being afraid, seized the rifle
and held it out as before. Resolved to maintain
his reputation for coolness, he said to his followers
in imitation of Leo:
“Do you see that gull?”
“Huk!” replied the warriors, with eager
looks.
Leo thought of correcting his manner
of taking aim, but, reflecting that the result would
be a miss in any case, he refrained.
Grabantak raised the rifle slowly,
as its owner had done, and frowned along the barrel.
In doing so, he drew it back until the butt almost
touched his face. Then he fired. There
was a repetition of previous results with some differences.
The gull flew away from the rock unhurt; one of the
braves received the bullet in his thigh and ran off
shrieking with agony, while the chief received a blow
from the rifle on the nose which all but incorporated
that feature with his cheeks, and drew from his eyes
the first tears he had ever shed since babyhood.
That night Grabantak sat for hours
staring in moody silence at the sea, tenderly caressing
his injured nose, and meditating, no doubt, on things
past, present, and to come.