Smoke Bellew
Last month Smoke Bellew, the tenderfoot, got his first "smell of the meat" on a rugged mining trail in the Yukon country. This month he gets a real taste of the "meat" itself—and it's strong meat, too, the kind that makes or breaks a man. As we said at the beginning of this series by Mr. London, we don't want you to miss reading these stories if you care for the good, clean, red-blooded kind of tales that make your blood tingle |
By Jack London
Illustrated by Anton Otto Fischer
Tale Two: The Meat
NEXT DAY the gale still
blew. Lake Lindeman was no more than a narrow mountain gorge filled with water.
Sweeping down from the mountains through this funnel, the wind was irregular,
blowing great guns at times and at other times dwindling to a strong
breeze.
"If you give me a shot at it, I think I can
get her off," Kit said, when all was ready for the start.
"What do you know about it?" Stine
snapped at him.
"Search me," Kit answered, and
subsided.
It was the first time he had worked for wages in
his life, but he was learning the discipline of it fast. Obediently and
cheerfully he joined in various vain efforts to get clear of the beach.
"How would you go about it?" Sprague
finally half panted, half whined at him.
"Sit down and get a good rest till a lull
comes in the wind, and then buck in for all we're worth."
Simple as the idea was, he had been the first to
evolve it; the first time it was applied it worked, and they hoisted a blanket
to the mast and sped down the lake. Stine and Sprague immediately became
cheerful. Shorty, despite his chronic pessimism, was always cheerful, and Kit
was too interested to be otherwise. Sprague struggled with the steering-sweep
for a quarter of an hour, and then looked appealingly at Kit, who relieved
him.
"My arms are fairly broken with the strain
of it," Sprague muttered apologetically.
"You never ate bear-meat, did you?" Kit
asked sympathetically.
"What the devil do you mean?"
"Oh, nothing; I was just wondering."
But behind the employer's back Kit caught the approving grin of Shorty, who had
already caught the whim of his metaphor.
Kit steered the length of Lindeman, displaying an
aptitude that caused both young men of money and disinclination for work to
name him boat-steerer. Shorty was no less pleased, and volunteered to continue
cooking and leave the boat work to the other.
Between Lindeman and Lake Bennett was a portage.
The boat, lightly loaded, was lined down the small but violent connecting
stream, and here Kit learned a vast deal more about boats and water. But when
it came to packing the outfit, Stine and Sprague disappeared, and their men
spent two days of back-breaking toil in getting the outfit across. And this was
the history of many miserable days of the trip—Kit and Shorty working to
exhaustion, while their master toiled not and demanded to be waited upon.
But the iron-bound arctic winter continued to
close down, and they were held back by numerous and unavoidable delays. At
Windy Arm Stine arbitrarily dispossessed Kit of the steering-sweep and within
the hour wrecked the boat on a wave-beaten lee shore. Two days were lost here
in making repairs, and the morning of the fresh start, as they came down to
embark, on stern and bow, in large letters, was charcoaled "The
Chekako."
Kit grinned at the appropriateness of the
invidious word.
"Huh!" said Shorty, when accused by
Stine. "I can sure read and spell, an' I know that Chekako means
tenderfoot, but my education never went high enough to learn me to spell a
jaw-breaker like that."
Both employers looked daggers at Kit, for the
insult rankled; nor did he mention that the night before Shorty had besought
him for the spelling of that particular word.
"That's 'most as bad as your bear-meat slam
at 'em," Shorty confided later.
Kit chuckled. Along with the continuous discovery
of his own powers had come an ever-increasing disapproval of the two masters.
It was not so much irritation, which was always present, as disgust. He had got
his taste of the meat, and liked it; but they were teaching him how not to eat
it. Privily he thanked God that he was not made as they. He came to dislike
them to a degree that bordered on hatred. Their malingering bothered him less
than their helpless inefficiency. Somewhere in him old Isaac Bellew and all the
rest of the hardy Bellews were making good.
"Shorty," he said one day, in the usual
delay of getting started, "I could almost fetch them a rap over the head
with an oar and bury them in the river."
"Same here," Shorty agreed.
"They're not meat-eaters. They're fish-eaters, and they sure stink."
THEY came to the rapids;
first, the Box Canyon, and then, several miles below, the White Horse. The Box
Canyon was adequately named. It was a box, a trap. Once in it, the only way out
was through. On either side arose perpendicular walls of rock. The river
narrowed to a fraction of its width and roared through this gloomy passage in a
madness of motion that heaped the water in the center into a ridge fully eight
feet higher than at the rocky sides. This ridge, in turn, was crested with
stiff, upstanding waves that curled over yet remained each in its unvarying
place. The canyon was well feared, for it had collected its toll of dead from
the passing gold-rushers.
Tying to the bank above, where lay a score of
other anxious boats, Kit and his companions went ahead on foot to investigate.
They crept to the brink and gazed down at the swirl of water. Sprague drew
back, shuddering.
"My God!" he exclaimed. "A swimmer
hasn't a chance in that."
Shorty touched Kit significantly with his elbow
and said in an undertone:
"Cold feet. Dollars to doughnuts they don't
go through."
Kit scarcely heard. From the beginning of the
boat trip he had been learning the stubbornness and inconceivable viciousness
of the elements, and this glimpse of what was below him acted as a challenge.
"We've got to ride that ridge," he said. "If we get off it we'll
hit the walls."
"And never know what hit us," was
Shorty's verdict. "Can you swim?"
"I'd wish I couldn't if anything went wrong
in there."
"That's what I say," a stranger,
standing alongside and peering down into the canyon, said mournfully. "And
I wish I were through it."
"I wouldn't sell my chance to go
through," Kit answered.
He spoke honestly, but it was with the idea of
heartening the man. He turned to go back to the boat.
"Are you going to tackle it?" the man
asked.
Kit nodded.
"I wish I could get the courage to,"
the other confessed. "I've been here for hours. The longer I look the more
afraid I am. I am not a boatman, and I have with me only my nephew, who is a
young boy, and my wife. If you get through safely, will you run my boat
through?"
Kit looked at Shorty, who delayed to answer.
"He's got his wife with him," Kit
suggested. Nor had he mistaken his man.
"Sure," Shorty affirmed. "It was
just what I was stopping to think about I knew there was some reason I ought to
do it."
Again they turned to go, but Sprague and Stine
made no movement.
"Good luck, Smoke," Sprague called to
him. "I'll—er—" He hesitated. "I'll just stay here
and watch you."
"We need three men in the boat, two at the
oars and one at the steering-sweep," Kit said quietly.
Sprague looked at Stine.
"I'm cursed if I do," said that
gentleman. "If you're not afraid to stand here and look on, I'm
not."
"Who's afraid?" Sprague demanded hotly.
Stine retorted in kind, and their two men left them in the thick of a
squabble.
"We can do without them," Kit said to
Shorty. "You take the bow with a paddle, and I'll handle the
steering-sweep. All you'll have to do is just to help keep her straight. Once
we're started, you won't be able to hear me, so just keep on keeping her
straight."
They cast off the boat and worked out to middle
in the quickening current. From the canyon came an ever-growing roar. The river
sucked in to the entrance with the smoothness of molten glass, and here, as the
darkening walls received them, Shorty took a chew of tobacco and dipped his
paddle. The boat leaped on the first crests of the ridge, and they were
deafened by the uproar of wild water that reverberated from the narrow walls
and multiplied itself. They were half-smothered with flying spray. At times Kit
could not see his comrade at the bow. It was only a matter of two minutes, in
which time they rode the ridge three-quarters of a mile and emerged in safety
and tied to the bank in the eddy below.
Shorty emptied his mouth of tobacco juice he had
forgotten to spit, and spoke. "That was bear-meat," he exulted,
"the real bear-meat. Say, we went a few, didn't we? Smoke, I don't mind
tellin' you in confidence that before we started I was the gosh-dangdest
scaredest man this side of the Rocky Mountains. Now I'm a bear-eater. Come on
an' we'll run that other boat through."
Midway back, on foot, they encountered their
employers, who had watched the passage from above.
"There comes the fish-eaters," said
Shorty. "Keep to win'ward."
AFTER running the stranger's
boat through, Kit and Shorty met his wife, a slender, girlish woman whose blue
eyes were moist with gratitude. Breck himself tried to hand Kit fifty dollars,
and then attempted it on Shorty.
"Stranger," was the latter's rejection,
"I come into this country to make money outa the ground an' not outa my
fellow critters."
Breck, the stranger, rummaged in his boat and
produced a demijohn of whiskey. Shorty's hand half went out to it and then
stopped abruptly. He shook his head.
"That's that blamed White Horse right below,
an' they say it's worse than the Box. I reckon I don't dast tackle any
lightning."
Several miles below they ran in to the bank, and
all four walked down to look at the bad water. The river, which was a
succession of rapids, was here deflected toward the right bank by a rocky reef.
The whole body of water, rushing crookedly into the narrow passage, accelerated
its speed frightfully and was up-flung into huge waves, white and wrathful.
This was the dread Mane of the white Horse, and here an even heavier toll of
dead had been exacted. On one side of the Mane was a corkscrew curl-over and
suck-under, and on the opposite side was the big whirlpool. To go through, the
Mane itself must be ridden.
"This plumb rips the strings outa the
Box," Shorty concluded.
As they watched, a boat took the head of the
rapids above. It was a large boat, fully thirty feet long, laden with several
tons of outfit, and handled by six men. Before it reached the Mane it was
plunging and leaping, at times almost hidden by the foam and spray.
Shorty shot a slow, sidelong glance at Kit and
said: "She's fair smoking, and she hasn't hit the worst. They've hauled
the oars in. There she takes it now. God! She's gone! No; there she
is!"
Big as the boat was, it had been buried from
sight in the flying smother between crests. The next moment, in the thick of
the Mane, the boat leaped up a crest and into view. To Kit's amazement he saw
the whole long bottom clearly outlined. The boat, for the fraction of an
instant, was in the air, the men sitting idly in their places, all save one in
the stern, who stood at the steering-sweep. Then came the downward plunge into
the trough and a second disappearance. Three times the boat leaped and buried
itself, then those on the bank saw its nose take the whirlpool as it slipped
off the Mane. The steersman, vainly opposing with full weight on the
steering-gear, surrendered to the whirlpool and helped the boat to take the
circle.
Three times it went around, each time so close to
the rocks on which Kit and Shorty stood that either could have leaped on board.
The steersman, a man with a reddish beard of recent growth, waved his hand to
them. The only way out of the whirlpool was by the Mane, and on the third round
the boat entered the Mane obliquely at its upper end. Possibly out of fear of
the draw of the whirlpool, the steersman did not attempt to straighten out
quickly enough. When he did, it was too late. Alternately in the air and
buried, the boat angled the Mane and was sucked into and through the stiff wall
of the corkscrew on the opposite side of the river. A hundred feet below, boxes
and bales began to float up. Then appeared the bottom of the boat and the
scattered heads of six men. Two managed to make the bank in the eddy below. The
others were drawn under, and the general flotsam was lost to view, borne on by
the swift current around the bend.
There was a long minute of silence. Shorty was
the first to speak.
"Come on," he said. "We might as
well tackle it. My feet'll get cold if I stay here any longer."
"We'll smoke some," Kit grinned at
him.
"And you'll sure earn your name," was
the rejoinder. Shorty turned to their employers. "Comin'?" he
queried.
Perhaps the roar of the water prevented them from
hearing the invitation.
Shorty and Kit tramped back through a foot of
snow to the head of the rapids and cast off the boat. Kit was divided between
two impressions: one, of the caliber of his comrade, which served as a spur to
him; the other, likewise a spur, was the knowledge that old Isaac Bellew, and
all the other Bellews, had done things like this in their westward march of
empire. What they had done, he could do. It was the meat, the strong meat, and
he knew, as never before, that it required strong men to eat such meat.
"You've sure got to keep the top of the
ridge," Shorty shouted at him, the plug of tobacco lifting to his mouth as
the boat quickened in the quickening current and took the head of the
rapids.
Kit nodded, swayed his strength and weight
tentatively on the steering-gear, and headed the boat for the plunge.
Several minutes later, half-swamped and lying
against the bank in the eddy below the White Horse, Shorty spat out a mouthful
of tobacco juice and shook Kit's hand.
"Meat! Meat!" Shorty chanted. "We
eat it raw! We eat it alive!"
At the top of the bank they met Breck. His wife
stood at a little distance. Kit shook his hand.
"I'm afraid your boat can't make it,"
he said. "It is smaller than ours and a bit cranky."
The man pulled out a roll of bills. "I'll
give you each a hundred if you run it through."
Kit looked out and up the tossing Mane of the
White Horse. A long, gray twilight was falling, it was turning colder, and the
landscape seemed taking on a savage bleakness.
"It ain't that," Shorty was saying.
"We don't want your money. Wouldn't touch it nohow. But my pardner is the
real meat with boats, and when he says yourn ain't safe I reckon he knows what
he's talkin' about."
Kit nodded affirmation, and chanced to glance at
Mrs. Breck. Her eyes were fixed upon him, and he knew that if ever he had seen
prayer in a woman's eyes he was seeing it then. Shorty followed his gaze and
saw what he saw. They looked at each other in confusion and did not speak.
Moved by the common impulse, they nodded to each other and turned to the trail
that led to the head of the rapids. They had not gone a hundred yards when they
met Stine and Sprague coming down.
"Where are you going?" the latter
demanded.
"To fetch that other boat through,"
Shorty answered.
"No, you're not. It's getting dark. You two
are going to pitch camp."
So huge was Kit's disgust that he forebore to
speak.
"He's got his wife with him," Shorty
said.
"That's his lookout," Stine
contributed.
"And Smoke's and mine," was Shorty's
retort.
"I forbid you," Sprague said harshly.
"Smoke, if you go another step I'll discharge you."
"And you, too, Shorty," Stine
added.
"And a devil of a pickle you'll be in with
us fired," Shorty replied. "How'll you get your blamed boat to
Dawson? Who'll serve you coffee in your blankets and manicure your
finger-nails? Come on, Smoke. They don't dast fire us. Besides, we've got
agreements. If they fire us they've got to divvy up grub to last us through the
winter."
Barely had they shoved Breck's boat out from the
bank and caught the first rough water, when the waves began to lap aboard. They
were small waves, but it was an earnest of what was to come. Shorty cast back a
quizzical glance as he gnawed at his inevitable plug, and Kit felt a strange
rush of warmth at his heart for this man who couldn't swim and who couldn't
back out.
The rapids grew stiffer, and the spray began to
fly. In the gathering darkness, Kit glimpsed the Mane and the crooked fling of
the current into it. He worked into this crooked current, and felt a glow of
satisfaction as the boat hit the head of the Mane squarely in the middle. After
that, in the smother, leaping and burying and swamping, he had no clear
impression of anything save that he swung his weight on the steering-oar and
wished his uncle were there to see. They emerged, breathless, wet through, the
boat filled with water almost to the gunwale. Lighter pieces of baggage and
outfit were floating inside the boat. A few careful strokes on Shorty's part
worked the boat into the draw of the eddy, and the eddy did the rest till the
boat softly touched the bank. Looking down from above was Mrs. Breck. Her
prayer had been answered, and the tears were streaming down her cheeks.
"You boys have simply got to take the
money," Breck called down to them.
Shorty stood up, slipped, ,and sat down in the
water, while the boat dipped one gunwale under and righted again.
"Damn the money," said Shorty.
"Fetch out that whiskey. Now that it's over I'm getting cold feet, an' I'm
sure likely to have a chill."
IN the morning, as usual,
they were among the last of the parties to start. Breck, despite his boating
inefficiency, and with only his wife and nephew for crew, had broken camp,
loaded his boat, and pulled out at the first streak of day. But there was no
hurrying Stine and Sprague, who seemed incapable of realizing that they
freeze-up might come at any time. They malingered, got in the way, delayed, and
doubled the work of Kit and Shorty.
"I'm sure losing my respect for God, seein'
as he must 'a' made them two mistakes in human form," was the latter's
blasphemous way of expressing his disgust.
"Well, you're the real goods, at any
rate," Kit grinned back at him. "It makes me respect God the more
just to look at you."
"He was sure goin' some, eh?" was
Shorty's fashion of overcoming the embarrassment of the complement.
The trail by water crossed Lake Labarge. Here was
no fast current, but a tideless stretch of forty miles which must be rowed
unless a fair wind blew. But the time for fair wind was past, and an icy gale
blew in their teeth out of the north. This made a rough sea, against which it
was almost impossible to pull the boat. Added to their troubles was driving
snow; also, the freezing of the water on their oar-blades kept one man occupied
in chopping it off with a hatchet. Compelled to take their turn at the oars,
Sprague and Stine patently loafed. Kit learned how to throw his weight on an
oar, but he noted that his employers made a seeming of throwing their weights
and that they dipped their oars at a cheating angle.
At the end of three hours, Sprague pulled his oar
in and said they would run back into the mouth of the river for shelter. Stine
seconded him, and the several hard-won miles were lost. A second day, and a
third, the same fruitless attempt was made. In the river mouth, the continually
arriving boats from the White Horse made a flotilla of over two hundred. Each
day forty or fifty arrived, and only two or three won to the northwest shore of
the lake and did not come back. Ice was now forming in the eddies and
connecting from eddy to eddy in thin lines around the points. The freeze-up was
very imminent.
"We could make it if they had the souls of
clams," Kit told Shorty, as they dried their moccasins by the fire on the
evening of the third day. "We could have made it to-day if they hadn't
turned back. Another hour's work would have fetched that west shore.
They're—they're babes in the woods."
"Sure," Shorty agreed. He turned his
moccasin to the flame and debated a moment. "Look here, Smoke. It's
hundreds of miles to Dawson. If we don't want to freeze in here, we've got to
do something. What d'ye say?"
Kit looked at him, and waited.
"We've got the immortal cinch on them two
babes," Shorty expounded. "They can give orders an' shed mazuma, but,
as you say, they're plumb babes. If we're goin' to Dawson, we got to take
charge of this here outfit."
They looked at each other.
"It's a go," said Kit, as his hand went
out in ratification.
In the morning, long before daylight, Shorty
issued his call. "Come on!" he roared. "Tumble out, you
sleepers! Here's your coffee! Kick into it! We're goin' to make a
start!"
Grumbling and complaining, Stine and Sprague were
force to get under way two hours earlier than ever before. If anything, the
gale was stiffer, and in a short time every man's face was iced up, while the
oars were heavy with ice. Three hours they struggled, and four, one man
steering, one chopping ice, two toiling at the oars, and each taking his
various turns. The northwest shore loomed nearer and nearer. The gale blew ever
harder, and at last Sprague pulled in his oar in token of surrender. Shorty
sprang to it, though his relief had only begun.
"Chop ice," he said, handing Sprague
the hatchet.
"But what's the use?" the other whined.
"We can't make it. We're going to turn back."
"We're going on," said Shorty.
"Chop ice. An' when you feel better you can spell me."
It was heart-breaking toil, but they gained the
shore, only to find it composed of surge-beaten rocks and cliffs, with no place
to land.
"I told you so," Sprague whimpered.
"You never peeped," Shorty
answered.
"We're going back."
Nobody spoke, and Kit held the boat into the seas
as they skirted the forbidding shore. Sometimes they gained no more than a foot
to the stroke, and there were times when two or three strokes no more than
enabled to hold their own. He did his best to hearten the two weaklings. He
pointed out that the boats which had won to this shore had never come back.
Perforce, he argued, they had found a shelter somewhere ahead. Another hour
they labored, and a second.
"If you fellows'd put into your oars some of
that coffee you swig in your blankets, we'd make it," was Shorty's
encouragement. "You're just goin' through the motions an' not pullin' a
pound."
A few minutes later, Sprague drew in his oar
again. "I'm finished," he said, and there were tears in his
voice.
"So are the rest of us," Kit answered,
himself ready to cry or to commit murder, so great was his exhaustion.
"But we're going on just the same."
"We're going back. Turn the boat
around."
"Shorty, if he won't pull, take that oar
yourself," Kit commanded.
"Sure," was the answer. "He can
chop ice."
But Sprague refused to give over the oar; Stine
had ceased rowing, and the boat was drifting backward.
"Turn around, Smoke," Sprague
ordered.
And Kit, who never in his life had curse any man,
astonished himself. "I'll see you in hell first," he replied.
"Take hold of that oar and pull."
It is in moments of exhaustion that men lose all
their reserves of civilization, and such a moment had come. Each man had
reached the breaking-point. Sprague jerked off a mitten, drew his revolver, and
turned it on his steersman. This was a new experience to Kit. He had never had
a gun presented at him in his life. And now, to his surprise, it seemed to
mean nothing at all. It was the most natural thing in the world.
"If you don't put that gun up," he
said, "I'll take it away and rap you over the knuckles with it."
"If you don't turn the boat around I'll
shoot you," Sprague threatened.
Then Shorty took a hand. He ceased chopping ice
and stood up behind Sprague. "Go on an' shoot," said Shorty, wiggling
the hatchet. "I'm just aching for a chance to brain you. Go on an' start
the festivities."
"This is mutiny," Stine broke in.
"You were engaged to obey orders."
Shorty turned on him. "Oh, you'll get yours
as soon as I finish with your pardner, you little hog-wallopin' snooper,
you."
"Sprague," Kit said, "I'll give
you just thirty seconds to put away that gun and get that oar out."
Sprague hesitated, gave a short hysterical laugh,
put the revolver away, and bent his back the work.
For two hours more, inch by inch, they fought
their way along the edge of the foaming rocks, until Kit feared he had made a
mistake. And then, when on the verge of himself turning back, they came abreast
of a narrow opening, not twenty feet wide, which led into a land-locked
enclosure where the fiercest gusts scarcely flawed the surface. It was the
haven gained by the boats of previous days. They landed on a shelving beach,
and the two employers lay in collapse in the boat, while Kit and Shorty pitched
the tent, built a fire, and started the cooking.
"What is a hog-walloping snooper,
Shorty?" Kit asked.
"Blamed if I know," was the answer;
"but he's one, just the same."
The gale, which had been dying quickly, ceased at
nightfall, and it came on clear and cold. A cup of coffee, set aside to cool
and forgotten, a few minutes later was found coated with half an inch of ice.
At eight o'clock, when Sprague and Stine, already rolled in their blankets,
were sleeping the sleep of exhaustion, Kit came back from a look at the
boat.
"It's the freeze-up, Shorty," he
announce. "There's a skin of ice over the whole pond already."
"What are you going to do?"
"There's only one thing. The lake of course
freezes first. The rapid current of the river may keep it open for days. This
time to-morrow any boat caught in Lake Labarge remains there until next
year."
"You mean we got to get out to-night?
Now?"
Kit nodded.
"Tumble out, you sleepers!" was
Shorty's answer, couched in a roar, as he began casting off the guy-ropes of
the tent.
The other two awoke, groaning with the pain of
stiffened muscles and the pain of rousing from the sleep of exhaustion.
"What time is it?" Stine asked.
"Half-past eight."
"It's dark yet," was the objection.
Shorty jerked out a couple of guy-ropes, and the
tent began to sag. "It's not morning," he said. "It's evening.
Come on. The lake's freezin'. We got to get acrost."
Stine sat up, his face bitter and wrathful.
"Let it freeze. We're not going to stir."
"All right," said Shorty. "We're
goin' on with the boat."
"You were engaged—"
"To take your outfit to Dawson," Shorty
caught him up. "Well, we're takin' it ain't we?" He punctuated his
query by bringing half the tent down on top of them.
They broke their way through the thin ice in the
little harbor, and came out on the lake, where the water, heavy and glassy,
froze on their oars with every stroke. The water soon became like mush,
clogging the stroke of the oars and freezing in the air even as it dripped.
Later the surface began to form a skin, and the boat proceeded slower and
slower.
Often afterward, when Kit tried to remember that
night and failed to bring up aught but nightmare recollections, he wondered
what must have been the sufferings of Stine and Sprague. His one impression of
himself was that he struggled through biting frost and intolerable exertion for
a thousand years, more or less.
Morning found them stationary. Stine complained
of frosted fingers, and Sprague of his nose, while the pain in Kit's cheeks and
nose told him that he, too, had been touched. With each accretion of daylight
they could see farther, and as far as they could see was icy surface. The water
of the lake was gone. A hundred yards away was the shore of the north end.
Shorty insisted that it was the opening of the river and that he could see
water. He and Kit alone were able to work, and with their oars they broke the
ice and forced the boat along. And at the last gasp of their strength they made
the suck of the rapid river. One look back showed them several boats which had
fought through the night and were hopelessly frozen in; then they whirled
around a bend in a current running six miles an hour.
DAY BY DAY they floated down the swift river, and day by day the shore-ice extended farther out. When they made camp at nightfall, they chopped a space in the ice in which to lay the boat and carried the camp outfit hundreds of feet to shore. In the morning, they chopped the boat out through the new ice and caught the current. Shorty set up the sheet-iron stove in the boat, and over this Stine and Sprague hung through the long drifting hours. They had surrendered, no longer gave orders, and their one desire was to gain Dawson. Shorty, pessimistic, indefatigable, and joyous, at frequent intervals roared out the three lines of the first four-line stanza of a song he had forgotten. The colder it got the oftener he sang:
"Like Argus of the ancient
times,
We leave
this Modern Greece,
Tum-tum, tum-tum, tum-tum, tum-tum,
To shear
the Golden Fleece."
At they passed the mouths of the Hootalinqua and
the Big and Little Salmon, they found these streams throwing mush-ice into the
main Yukon. This gathered about the boat and attached itself, and at night they
found themselves compelled to chop the boat out of the current. In the morning
they chopped the boat back into the current.
The last night ashore was spent between the
mouths of the White River and the Stewart. At daylight they found the Yukon,
half a mile wide, running white from ice-rimmed bank to ice-rimmed bank. Shorty
cursed the universe with less of geniality than usual, and looked at Kit.
"We'll be the last boat this year to make
Dawson," Kit said.
"But they ain't no water, Smoke."
"Then we'll ride the ice down. Come
on."
Futilely protesting, Sprague and Stine were
bundled on board. For half an hour, with axes, Kit and Shorty struggled to cut
a way into the swift but solid stream. When they did succeed in clearing the
shore-ice, the floating ice forced the boat along the edge for a hundred yards,
tearing away half of one gunwale and making a partial wreck of it. Then, at the
lower end of the bend, they caught the current that flung off-shore. They
proceeded to work farther toward the middle. The stream was no longer composed
of mush-ice, but of hard cakes. In between the cakes only was mush-ice, that
froze solidly as they looked at it. Shoving with the oars against the cakes,
sometimes climbing out on the cakes in order to force the boat along, after an
hour they gained the middle. Five minutes after they ceased their exertions,
the boat was frozen in. The whole river was coagulating as it ran. Cake froze
to cake, until at last the boat was the center of a cake seventy-five feet in
diameter. Sometimes they floated sidewise, sometimes stern-first, while gravity
tore asunder the forming fetters in the moving mass, only to be manacled by
faster-forming ones. While the hours past, Shorty stoked the stove, cooked
meals, and chanted his war-song.
"What if we pass Dawson?" Shorty
queried.
"We'll walk back," Kit answered,
"if we're not crushed in a jam."
The sky was clear, and in the light of the cold,
leaping starts they caught occasional glimpses of the loom of mountains on
either hand. At eleven o'clock, from below, came a dull, grinding roar. Their
speed began to diminish and cakes of ice to up-end and crash and smash about
them. The river was jamming. One cake, forced upward, slid across their cake
and carried one side of the boat away. It did not sink, for its own cake still
upbore it, but in a whirl they saw dark water show for an instant within a foot
of them. Then all movement ceased. At the end of half an hour the whole river
picked itself up and began to move. This continued for an hour, when once again
it started, running swiftly and savagely, with a great grinding. Then they saw
lights ashore, and, when abreast, gravity and the Yukon surrendered, and the
river ceased for six months.
On the shore at Dawson, curious ones gathered to
watch the river freeze heard from out of the darkness the war-song of Shorty:
"Like Argus of the ancient
times,
We leave
this Modern Greece,
Tum-tum, tum-tum, tum-tum,
tum-tum,
To shear
the Golden Fleece."
FOR three days Kit and
Shorty labored, carrying the ton and a half of outfit from the middle of the
river to the log-cabin Stine and Sprague had bought on the hill overlooking
Dawson. This work finished, in the warm cabin, as twilight was falling, Sprague
motioned Kit to him. Outside the thermometer registered sixty-five below
zero.
"Your full month isn't up, Smoke,"
Sprague said. "But here it is in full. I wish you luck."
"How about the agreement?" Kit asked.
"You know there's a famine here. A man can't get work in the mines even
unless he has his own grub. You agreed—"
"I know of no agreement," Sprague
interrupted. "Do you, Stine? We engaged you by the month. There's your
pay. Will you sign the receipt?"
Kit's hands clenched, and for the moment he saw
red. Both men shrank away from him. He had never struck a man in anger in his
life, and he felt so certain of his ability to thrash Sprague that he could not
bring himself to do it.
Shorty saw his trouble and interposed.
"Look here, Smoke, I ain't traveilin' no
more with a ornery outfit like this. Right here's where I sure jump it. You an'
me stick together. Savvy? Now you take your blankets an' hike down to the
Elkhorn. Wait for me. I'll settle up, collect what's comin', an' give them
what's comin'. I ain't no good on the water, but my feet's on terry-firmy now,
an' I'm goin' to make smoke."
Half an hour later Shorty appeared at the
Elkhorn. From his bleeding knuckles and the skin off one cheek, it was evident
that he had given Stine and Sprague what was coming.
"You ought to see that cabin," he
chuckled, as they stood at the bar. "Rough-house ain't no name for it.
Dollars to doughnuts nary one of 'em shows up on the street for a week. An' now
it's all figgered out for you an' me. Grub's a dollar an' a half a pound. They
ain't no work for wages without you have your own grub. Moose-meat's sellin'
for two dollars a pound, an' they ain't none. We got enough money for a month's
grub an' ammunition, an' we hike up the Klondike to the back country. If they
ain't no moose, we go an' live with the Indians. But if we ain't got five
thousand pounds of meat six weeks from now, I'll—I'll sure go back an'
apologize to our bosses. Is it a go?"
Kit's hand went out, and they shook. Then he
faltered. "I don't know anything about hunting," he said.
Shorty lifted his glass. "But you're a sure
meat-eater, an' I'll learn you."
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