It was a moment when memories were
stirring. An-ina searched the distance with eyes
untroubled and full of a glad content. Had she
not every reason for content? Oh, yes. She
knew.
It was the same scene she had gazed
upon for many seasons, for many years, and the limit
of her vision had become practically the limits of
her world. There stretched the white snow-clad
valley with the still frozen river winding its way
throughout its length to the north and south.
There were the far-off hills beyond, white, grey; and
purpling as the distance gained. Dark forest
patches chequered the prospect. It was the same
all ways, north, south, and west.
For all the few changings of aspect
with the passing of the seasons there was no weariness
in the woman’s heart. She was bound up to
the exclusion of all else with the human associations
which were hers. No prison could hold bondage
for her, so long as those associations were not denied
her.
Out of the tail of her eyes she glanced
at the great figure that was standing near her in
the gateway of the fort. It was a figure, the
sight of which filled her with a great sense of pride,
and joy, and gratitude. In her simple way she
understood something of the debt owed her for her
years of untiring, watchful care of the small body
which had grown to such splendid manhood. But
the thought of its discharge never occurred to her
uncalculating mind. That which she beheld more
than repaid.
Marcel was great for Indian eyes to
gaze upon. Tall as was the woman, comely in her
maturing years, she was left dwarfed beside the youthful
manhood she had watched grow from its earliest days.
The young man had the erect, supple, muscular body
of a trained athlete and the face of the mother who
had long since been laid to rest in the woods of the
Sleeper Indians. He had moreover the strength
of the father’s unspoiled character, and all
the purposeful method which the patient upbringing
of “Uncle Steve” had been capable of inspiring.
He was a simple human product, unspoiled by contamination
with the evil which lurks under the veneer of civilization,
yet he possessed all the trained mind that both Steve
and he had been able to achieve from the wealth of
learning which his father’s laboratory had been
found to contain.
Beyond this, the bubbling springs
of youth were in full flood, and the tide ran strong
in his rich veins. A passionate enthusiasm was
the outlet for this tide. A buoyant, fearless
energy, a youthful pride in strenuous achievement.
It was with these he faced the bitterness of the cruel
Northland which he had grown to look upon like the
Indians, who knew no better, as the whole setting
of human life and all that was to be desired.
He was a hunter and a man of the trail
before all things. His every thought was wrapt
up in the immensity of the striving. He had absorbed
the teachings of Steve, and added to them his own natural
instincts. And in all this he had raised himself
to that ideal of manhood which nature had implanted
in An-ina’s Indian heart. If she had thought
of him as she would have thought of him years ago
in the teepees of her race, she would have been content
that he was a great “brave” and a “mighty
hunter.” As it was her feelings were restricted
to an immense pride that she had been permitted the
inestimable privilege of raising a real white child
to well-nigh perfect manhood.
Marcel knocked out the pipe he was
smoking. It was with something like reluctance
he withdrew his gaze from the far distance.
“I’ve only two days more,
An-ina,” he said. “The outfit’s
ready to the last ounce of tea and the filling of
the last cartridge. The Sleepers are wide awake,
and squatting around waiting for the word to ‘mush.’
We just daren’t lose the snow for the run to
our headquarters. I wish Uncle Steve would get
around. I just can’t quit till he comes.”
“No.”
The squaw’s reply was one of
complete agreement. She understood. The
long summer trail was claiming the man. The hunter
in him was clamouring for the silent forests, where
King Moose reigned supreme, the racing mountain streams
alive with trout and an untold wealth of salmon, the
open stretches of plain where the caribou browsed upon
the weedy, tufted Northern grass, the marsh land and
lakes, where the beavers spend the open season preparing
their winter quarters. Then the traps, and the
wealth of fox pelts they would yield, while the eternal
dazzle of the much-prized black fox was always before
his eyes. But stronger than all was his thought
for Steve. No passion, so far, was greater in
his life than his regard for this man who had been
father, mother, and mentor to him in the years of
his helplessness.
An-ina pointed down the course of
the winding river where it came out of the southern
hills.
“He come that way,” she
said. Then she smiled. “The same he
come always. The same he come long time gone,
when Marcel hide by waters and make big shout.
Him much scared. Marcel think? Oh, yes.”
The man laughed in a happy boyish way.
“I’d like to, but I just
can’t,” he said. Then he added:
“You always think of that, An-ina. No,”
he went on with a shake of the head. “I
remember riding Uncle Steve’s back. Seems
it was for days and days. I sort of remember
sitting around and watching him while he looked down
at a pair of feet like raw meat, with the flies all
trying to settle on them. The sort of way flies
have. Then there were his eyes. I’ve
still got the picture of ’em in my mind.
They were red red with blood, it seemed.
They were sort of straining, too. And they shone shone
like the blazing coals of a camp-fire.”
An-ina nodded, and into her dark eyes
came a look of the dread of the days he had recalled.
“That so,” she said, in
a tone of suppressed emotion. “It was bad so
bad. Him carry Marcel. Oh, yes. Carry
all time, like the squaw carry pappoose. So you
live, and An-ina glad.”
“Yes.” The man bestirred
himself abruptly. He stood up from his lounging
against the gatepost, and his great height and breadth
of muscular shoulders seemed suddenly to have grown.
“So I live. And you are glad. That’s
it. So I live. It’s always that way with
you and Uncle Steve. It’s for me.
All the time for me. Not a thing for yourselves ever.”
The woman’s eyes were suddenly
filled with startled questioning and solicitude.
“Oh, yes? That so,”
she said simply. “Why not? You all
Uncle Steve got. You all An-ina got. So.”
“And aren’t you both all I’ve
got?” The man’s smile disarmed the sudden
passionate force which had taken possession of his
voice and manner. “Can’t I act that
way, too? Can’t I sort of carry you and
Uncle Steve on my back? Can’t I come along
and say, ’Here, you’ve done all this for
me when I couldn’t act for myself, now it’s
my turn? You sit around and look on, and act
foolish, like I’ve done all the time, while I
get busy.’ Can’t I say this, same
as you’ve acted all these years? No.
You two great creatures won’t let me. And
sometimes it makes me mad. And sometimes it makes
me want to stretch out these fool arms of mine and
hug you for the kindest, bravest, and best in the world.”
An-ina laughed in her silent Indian
fashion, and the delight in her eyes was a reflection
of the joy in her soul.
“You say all those. It make no matter,”
she said.
“But it does make matter.”
The man’s handsome face flushed, and his keen
blue eyes shone with a half angry, half impatient light.
With a curious gesture of suppressed feeling he passed
a hand over his clean-shaven mouth, as though to smooth
the whiskers that had never been permitted to disfigure
it. “It makes me feel a darn selfish, useless
hulk of a man. And I’m not,” he cried.
“I’m neither those things. Say An-ina,”
he went on, more calmly, and with a light of humour
in his eyes, “Don’t you dare to laff at
me. Don’t you dare deny the things I’m
saying. I won’t stand for it. For
all you’re my old nurse I’ll just pick
you up like nothing and throw you to the dogs back
in the yard there. And maybe that’ll let
you see I can do the things I figure to. I’m
a grown man, and Uncle Steve says ‘no’
every time I ask to take on the work of locating where
the weed grows, which he hasn’t found in fourteen
years, and which my father was yearning to find before
he died. ‘No,’ he says. ’This
is for me. It’s my work. It’s
the thing I set out to do for you.’
When I ask to do the trade at Seal Bay, it’s
the same. He guesses the ‘sharps’
would beat me. Me! who could break a dozen of
their heads in as many minutes. So I’m
left to the trail the summer trail to
gather pelts, and learn a craft I know by heart.
I keep the Sleeper boys busy, and in good heart.
I’m the big hunter they like to follow.
I’m the son of a great white chief they say,
and, for me, they’re sort of fool dolls I pull
the strings of, while Uncle Steve does the big man’s
work. Can you beat it? It’s all wrong.
You and Uncle Steve are twice my age. You’ve
crowded a life’s work for me.
You both reckon to go on always for me.
While I sit around guessing I’m a man because
I know a jack-rabbit from a bull-moose. It’s
got to alter. It’s going to alter after
the summer. I want the big scrap, An-ina.
The real scrap life can hand a feller that can write
‘man’ to his name. I’m out for
it all. I want it all. And if Uncle Steve’s
right, and I’m wrong, and I go under, I’m
ready to take the med’cine however it comes.”
The smile of the woman was full of
the mother. It was full of the Indian, too.
“Oh, yes,” she said quickly.
“What you call him, ‘chance.’
The ’big chance.’ So it is.
It good. So very, very good for the big man.
Marcel the big man. I know. Oh, yes.
I know. The chance it come. Maybe easy.
Maybe not. It come. So it is always.
It come, you take it. You not must look, or you
find trouble. You take it. Always take it
when it come. That how An-ina think.”
Marcel laughed. His impatience
had vanished before the sun of his happy temperament.
“You’ve dodged the dogs,
An-ina,” he cried. “You’re too
cute for me. You’ve agreed with me, and
haven’t handed an inch of ground. But I
tell you right here, you dear old second mother of
mine, I’m going to play the man as I see the
game. And I’m going to play it good.”
The expression on the man’s
dusky face was deadly earnest. His lean brown
hands were spread out over the fire for warmth.
His fur-clad body was hunched upon his quarters, as
near to the glowing embers as safety permitted.
And as he talked a look of awe and apprehension dilated
his usually unexpressive eyes.
“The fire run this way that
way,” he cried, in a voice of monotonous cadence,
but with a note of urgency behind it. “The
man stand by dogs. He look look all
the time. Fire all same everywhere. It burn
up all. Nothing left. Only two men.
Boss Steve and Julyman. Oh, yes. They stan’.
They look, too. They no fear. So they not
burn all up. The man by the dogs much scare.
He left him club, an’ beat all dogs. So
they all crazed with him club. They run.
Oh, yes. An’ the man turn. He run,
too. Then Oolak see him face. Oh, yes.
Him face of Oolak. Him eyes big with fear.
Him cry out. So him run lak hell so the fire not
get him.”
The silent Oolak had committed himself
to speech. He had talked long out of the superstitious
dread that beset his Indian heart. He had dreamed
a dream that filled him with fear of the future, towards
which he looked for its fulfilment.
The grey dawn was searching the obscurity
of the fringe of woody shelter in which the camp was
made the last camp on the return journey
from Seal Bay to the fort. The smell of cooked
meat rose from the pan which Julyman held over the
fire. Steve sat on a fallen log, smoking, and
listening tolerantly to the man’s recital, while
the sharp yapping of the dogs near by suggested the
usual altercation over their daily meal of frozen
fish. The cold was intense, but the cracking,
splitting booming which came up out of the heart of
the woods told of the reluctant yielding of the tenacious
grip of winter.
Something of Oolak’s awe found
reflection in the eyes of Julyman. He, too, was
an easy prey to the other’s primitive superstition.
Steve alone seemed untroubled. He understood
these men. They were comrades on the trail.
There was no distinction. There was no master
and servant here. They fought the battle together,
the Indians only looking to him for leadership.
Thus he restrained the lurking smile of irony as he
listened to the awesome recital of a dream that filled
the dreamer with serious apprehension.
“And this fire? Where did
it come from?” he demanded, with a seriousness
he by no means felt.
Oolak met his gaze with a look of appeal.
“The earth all fire,”
he said. “The hills, the valleys, the trees.
All same. Him fire everywhere. Oh, yes.
It run so as water. It fill ’em up all
things everywhere. An’ it burn
all up. Not boss Steve an’ Julyman.
Oh, no.”
Steve meditated awhile. Oolak
needed an interpretation of his dream, or, anyway,
must listen to the voice of comfort. He understood
this as he gazed upon the partially crippled body
of the man who was still a giant on the trail.
The passing of years had touched Steve
lightly enough. Time might almost have stood
still altogether. A few grey hairs about the temples.
A thinning of his dark hair perhaps. Then the
lines of his face had perhaps deepened. But in
the fourteen years that had elapsed since his return
to Unaga the raw muscle and the powerful frame of his
youthful body had only gained in mass and left him
the more capable of withstanding the demands which
his life on the merciless plateau made upon his endurance.
Julyman, too, was much the Julyman
of bygone years. The only change in him was that
opportunity had robbed him of many of those lapses
he had been wont to indulge in. But he was still
no nearer the glory of a halo. Oolak alone displayed
the wear and tear of the life that was theirs.
His body was slightly askew from the disaster of the
return from the first visit to Unaga, and one leg
was shorter than the other. But the effect of
these things was only in appearance. His vigour
of body remained unimpaired. His silence was
even more profound. And his mastery of the trail
dogs left him a source of endless admiration to his
companions.
Steve dipped some tea into a pannikin.
“Oolak had a nightmare, I guess,”
he said, feeling that a gentle ridicule could do no
harm.
Julyman grinned his relief that the
white man saw nothing serious in that which all Indians
regard as the voice of the spirits haunting their
world.
“Oolak eat plenty, much,” he observed
slyly.
Steve helped himself to meat from
the pan and dipped some beans from the camp kettle
beside the fire.
“Dreams are damn-fool things,
anyway,” he said. Then he laughed, “Guess
we’ve dreamed dreams these fourteen years.
And we’re still sitting around waiting for things
to happen.”
Despite his concern Oolak tore at
the meat with his sharp teeth, and ate with noisy
satisfaction.
“Him all fire. Burn up
all things. Oh, yes. Bimeby we find him,”
he said doggedly.
Steve was in the act of drinking.
He paused, his pannikin remaining poised.
“You guess ”
“Him fire,” said Oolak,
wiping the grease from his lips on the sleeve of his
furs. “Him big fires. Oolak know.
Him not eat plenty. Him see this thing.
The spirits show him so he know all time.”
Steve gulped his tea down, and set
the pannikin on the ground.
“That’s crazy,”
he declared. “It’s not spirits who
show Oolak. It’s as Julyman says.
He eats plenty. So he dreams fool things that
don’t mean a thing. Oolak doesn’t
need to believe the spirits are busy around him when
he sleeps.”
He laughed in the face of the unsmiling
Oolak. But his laugh was cut short by the Indian’s
stolid response.
“Boss white man know all things
plenty,” he said, with the patient calm of a
mind made up. “He big man. Oh, yes.
Him bigger as all Indian man. Sure. But
he not know the voice of the spirits that speak much
with Indian man. Oolak know him. So.
An’ the father of Oolak. Oh, yes. So
we find this fire sometime. We find him.
This fire of the world. The spirits tell Oolak,
so him not afraid nothing.”
Julyman set a pannikin down with a
clatter. He raised a brown hand pointing.
He was pointing at Oolak, and his eyes were wide with
inspiration.
“He dream of Unaga him fire of Unaga!
So!”
Steve started. In a moment, at
the challenge of Julyman, his mind had bridged a gulf
of fourteen years. He was gazing upon a scene
he had almost forgotten. A strange, magnificent
scene in the heart of a white world where snow and
ice held nature’s wonderful creation buried deep
in its crystal dungeons. The distant, towering
spire rising sheer above a surrounding of lofty mountains.
The pillar of ruddy smoke and mist piercing deep into
the heart of a cloud belt lit with the vivid reflection
of blazing volcanic fires. The splendour of it
had been awesome, terrific. He remembered it
now.
All thought of ridicule had died within
him. For the inspiration of Julyman had stirred
his own inspiration beyond all reason. In a moment
his mind was a surge of teeming thought, with Unaga the
fires of Unaga the centre of a vivid, reckless
imagination.
For fourteen years a wealth of dogged
effort had been expended in an accumulation of failure,
as he had admitted to Lorson Harris only a few weeks
back in Seal Bay. The whole purpose of his life
on Unaga had been denied him. Where he had sought
and striven for Marcel, he had only partially made
good. The promised fortune was amassing only slowly,
painfully, while the child had grown to manhood with
a rapidity that far outstripped it. The source
of the elusive Adresol had remained hidden. Nature,
and the Sleeper Indians, had refused him their secret.
For fourteen years the winter trail
had been faced under the direst perils. And in
all that time never once had the memory of the Spire
of Unaga come to inspire him. He had pursued
his endless search along the lines which the learning
of the dead chemist had laid down. He had sought
to trap the secret of the Sleeper men by every means
in his power. But always and everywhere he had
run upon the blank wall of failure.
Now now, at a time when
he had learned in Seal Bay disquieting news suggesting
jeopardy for his whole enterprise, a flash of imagination
had stirred in him an inspiration, which, against
all reason, had changed the whole outlook of the future.
Unaga! Could it be? Was
that the secret hiding-place of Nature? Could
he make it? How far? Where? Somewhere
within the boundaries of the Arctic ice? Maybe.
He could not tell. The Spire was for all to see.
Somewhere beyond. Somewhere lost in the grey
world of the North. A lure to what?
A hundred miles. Two. Three. Four.
No, he could not estimate. He did not know.
All he knew was that it was there, a fiery pillar,
the simple sight of which set the heart of the Indian
quaking. Was it there that the secret of the
Adresol plant lay hidden? Was it there that the
sturdy Sleepers dared the summer trail for their priceless
treasure? What monstrous conditions had produced
it? What amazing anachronism had Nature created
in the far-off Arctic world?
And the terror of that journey in
the dead of winter. It was a journey into the
unknown, unguessed heart of a world’s desolation.
Was it possible? Was it within human powers of
endurance? If the land of fire were the nursery
whence the Sleepers drew their supplies of Adresol
they made the journey. But it was in summer.
Winter? Was it possible?
Yes. It was possible. It
must be made possible. If it were not, if the
effort were too great he could always pay the price.
Marcel had grown to manhood. Fourteen years of
failure had elapsed since the taking of his great
decision. Here was a prospect. Here was a
chance. Had he not in the past fourteen years
taken every chance? Well, it was no time to shrink
before the fiery heart of Unaga.
The men devoured their food.
Steve had no desire to talk of his new-born inspiration.
Bald words would never convince these primitive creatures.
They looked to him for leadership. It was for
him to dictate. It was for them to follow.
To discuss the project he contemplated would weaken
his authority.
So he smoked on in silence, with a
tumult of thought passing behind the steady eyes gazing
so deeply into the heart of the fire.