Author of "The Call of the Wild," "The Sea Wolf," etc.
ALL lines had been cast off, and the Seattle No. 4 was pulling slowly
out from the shore. Her decks were piled high with freight and baggage, and
swarmed with a heterogeneous company of Indians, dogs, and dog-mushers,
prospectors, traders, and homeward-bound gold-seekers. A goodly portion of
Dawson lined up on the bank, saying good-by. As the gang-plank come in and the
steamer nosed into the stream, the clamor of farewell became deafening. Also,
in that eleventh moment, everybody began to remember final farewell messages
and to shout them back and forth across the widening stretch of water. Louis
Bondell, curling his yellow mustache with one hand and languidly waving the
other hand to his friends on shore, suddenly remembered something and sprang to
the rail.
"Oh, Fred!" he bawled. "Oh,
Fred!"
The "Fred" desired thrust a strapping
pair of shoulders through the forefront of the crowd on the bank and tried to
catch Louis Bondell's message, who grew red in the face with vain vociferation.
Still the water widened between steamboat and shore.
"Hey, you, Captain Scott!" he yelled at
the pilot-house. "Stop the boat!"
The gongs clanged, and the big stern wheel
reversed, then stopped. All hands on the steamboat and on bank took advantage
of this respite to exchange final, new, and imperative farewells. More futile
than ever was Louis Bondell's effort to make himself heard. The Seattle No.
4 lost way and drifted down-stream, and Captain Scott had to go ahead with
her and reverse a second time. His head disappeared inside the pilot-house,
coming into view a moment later behind a big megaphone.
Now Captain Scott had a remarkable voice, and the
"Shut up!" he launched at the crowd on deck and on shore could have
been heard at the top of Moosehide Mountain and as far as Klondike City. This
official remonstrance from the pilot-house spread a film of silence over the
tumult.
"Now, what do you want to say?" Captain
Scott demanded.
"Tell Fred Churchill - he 's on the bank
there - tell him to go to Macdonald. It 's in his safe - a small gripsack of
mine. Tell him to get it and bring it out when he comes."
In the silence Captain Scott bellowed the message
ashore through the megaphone:
"You, Fred Churchill, go to Macdonald - in
his safe - small gripsack - belongs to Louis Bondell - important! Bring it out
when you come! Got it?"
Churchill waved his hand in token that he had got
it. In truth, had Macdonald, half a mile away, opened his window, he 'd have
got it, too. The tumult of farewell rose again, the gongs clanged, and the
Seattle No. 4 went ahead, swung out into the stream, turned on her heel,
and headed down the Yukon, Bondell and Churchill waving farewell and mutual
affection to the last.
That was in mid-summer. In the fall of the year,
the W. H. Willis started up the Yukon with two hundred homeward-bound
pilgrims on board. Among them was Churchill. In his state-room, in the middle
of a clothes-bag, was Louis Bondell's grip. It was a small, stout leather
affair, and its weight of forty pounds always made Churchill nervous when he
wandered too far from it. The man in the adjoining state-room had a treasure of
gold-dust hidden similarly in a clothes-bag, and the pair of them ultimately
arranged to stand watch and watch. While one went down to eat, the other kept
an eye on the two state-room doors. When Churchill wanted to take a hand at
whist, the other man mounted guard, and when the other man wanted to relax his
soul, Churchill read four-months'-old newspapers on a camp-stool between the
two doors.
There were signs of an early winter, and the
question that was discussed from dawn till dark, and far into the dark, was
whether they would get out before the freeze-up or be compelled to abandon the
steamboat and tramp out over the ice. There were irritating delays. Twice the
engines broke down and had to be tinkered up, and each time there were snow
flurries to warn them of the imminence of winder. Nine times the W. H.
Willis essayed to ascend the Five-Finger Rapids with here impaired
machinery, and when she succeeded, she was four days behind her very liberal
schedule. The question that then arose was whether or not the steamboat
Flora would wait for her above the Box Cañon. The stretch of
water between the head of the Box Cañon and the foot of the White Horse
Rapids was unnavigable for steamboats, and passengers were trans-shipped at
that point, walking around the rapids from one steamboat to the other. There
were no telephones in the country, hence no way of informing the waiting
Flora that the Willis was four days late, but coming.
When the W. H. Willis pulled into White
Horse, it was learned that the Flora had waited three days over the
limit, and had departed only a few hours before. Also, it was learned that she
would tie up at Tagish Post till nine o-clock, Sunday morning. It was then four
o'clock, Saturday afternoon. The pilgrims called a meeting. On board was a
large Peterborough canoe, consigned to the police post at the head of Lake
Bennett. They agreed to be responsible for it and to deliver it. Next, they
called for volunteers. Two men were needed to make a race for the Flora.
A score of men volunteered on the instant. Among the was Churchill, such begin
his nature that he volunteered before he thought of Bondell's gripsack. When
this thought came to him, he began to hope that he would not be selected; but a
man who had made a name as captain of a college foot-ball eleven, as a
president of an athletic club, as a dog-musher and a stampeder in the Yukon,
and, moreover, who possessed such shoulders as he, had no right to avoid the
honor. It was thrust upon him and upon a gigantic German, Nick Antonsen.
While a crowd of the pilgrims, the canoe on their
shoulders, started on a trot over the portage, Churchill ran to his state-room.
He turned the contents of the clothes-bag on the floor and caught up the grip,
with the intention of intrusting it to the man next door. Then the thought
smote him that it was not his grip, and that he had no right to let it out of
his own possession. So he dashed ashore with it and ran up the portage,
changing it often from one hand to the other, and wondering if it really did
not weight more than forty pounds.
It was half-past four in the afternoon when the
two men started. The current of the Thirty Mile River was so strong that rarely
could they use the paddles. It was out on one bank with a tow-line over the
shoulders, stumbling over the rocks, forcing a way through the underbrush,
slipping at times and falling into the water, wading often up to the knees and
waist; and then, when an insurmountable bluff was encountered, it was into the
canoe, out paddles, and a wild and losing dash across the current to the other
bank, in paddles, over the side, and out tow-line again. It was exhausting
work. Antonsen toiled like the giant he was, uncomplaining, persistent, but
driven to his utmost by the powerful body and indomitable brain of Churchill.
They never paused for rest. It was go, go, and keep on going. A crisp wind blew
down the river, freezing their hands and making it imperative, from time to
time, to beat the blood back, into the numb fingers.
As night came on they were compelled to trust to
luck. They fell repeatedly on the untraveled banks and tore their clothing to
shreds in the underbrush they could not see. Both men were badly scratched and
bleeding. A dozen times, in their wild dashes from bank to bank, they struck
snags and were capsized. The first time this happened, Churchill dived and
groped in three feet of water for the gripsack. He lost half an hour in
recovering it, and after that it was carried securely lashed to the canoe. As
long as the canoe floated it was safe. Antonsen jeered at the grip, and toward
morning began to curse it; but Churchill vouchsafed no explanations.
Their delays and mischances were endless. On one
swift bend, around which poured a healthy young rapid, they lost two hours,
making a score of attempts and capsizing twice. At this point, on both banks,
were precipitous bluffs, rising out of deep water, and along which they could
neither tow nor pole, while they could not gain with the paddles against the
current. At each attempt they strained to the utmost with the paddles, and each
time, with hearts nigh to bursting from the effort, they were played out and
swept back. They succeeded finally by an accident. In the swiftest current,
near the end of another failure, a freak of the current sheered the canoe out
of Churchill's control and flung it against the bluff. Churchill made a blind
leap at the bluff and landed in a crevice. Holding on with one hand, he held
the swamped canoe with the other till Antonsen dragged himself out of the
water. They pulled the canoe out and rested. A fresh start at this crucial
point took them by. They landed on the bank above, and plunged immediately
ashore and into the brush with the tow-line.
Daylight found them far below Tagish Post. At
nine o'clock Sunday morning they could hear the Flora whistling her
departure. And when, at ten o'clock, they dragged themselves in to the Post,
they could just barely see the Flora's smoke far to the southward. It
was a pair of worn-out tatterdemalions that Captain Jones of the Mounted Police
welcomed and fed, and he afterward averred that they possessed two of the most
tremendous appetites he had ever observed. They lay down and slept in their wet
rags by the stove. At the end of two hours Churchill got up, carried Bondell's
grip, which he had used for a pillow, down to the canoe, kicked Antonsen awake,
and started in pursuit of the Flora.
"There 's no telling what might happen -
machinery break down, or something," was his reply to Captain Jones's
expostulations. "I 'm going to catch that steamer and send her back for
the boys."
Tagish Lake was white with a fall gale that blew
in their teeth. Big, swinging seas rushed upon the canoe, compelling one man to
bail and leaving one man to paddle. Headway could not be made. They ran along
the shallow shore and went overboard, one man ahead on the tow-line, the other
shoving on the canoe. They fought the gale up to their waists in the icy water,
often up to their necks, often over their heads, and buried by the big, crested
waves. There was no rest, never a moment's pause from the cheerless,
heart-breaking battle. That night, at the head of Tagish Lake, in the thick of
a driving snow-squall, they overhauled the Flora. Antonsen fell on
board, lay where he had fallen, and snored. Churchill looked like a wild man.
His clothes barely clung to him. His face was iced up and swollen from the
protracted effort of twenty-four hours, while his hands were so swollen that he
could not close the fingers. As for his feet, it was an agony to stand upon
them.
The captain of the Flora was loath to go
back to White Horse. Churchill was persistent and imperative; the captain was
stubborn. He pointed out finally that nothing was to be gained by going back,
because the only ocean steamer at Dyea, the Athenian, was to sail on
Tuesday morning, and that he could not make the back grip to White Horse and
bring up the stranded pilgrims in time to make the connection.
"What time does the Athenian
sail?" Churchill demanded.
"Seven o'clock, Tuesday morning."
"All right," Churchill said, at the
same time kicking a tattoo on the ribs of the snoring Antonsen. "You go
back to White Horse. We 'll go ahead and hold the Athenian."
Antonsen, stupid with sleep, not yet clothed in
his waking mind, was bundled into the canoe, and did not realize what had
happened till he was drenched with the icy spray of a big sea, and heard
Churchill snarling at him through the darkness:
"Paddle, can't you! Do you want to be
swamped?"
Daylight found them at Caribou Crossing, the wind
dying down, and Antonsen too far gone to dip a paddle. Churchill grounded the
canoe on a quite beach, where they slept. He took the precaution of twisting
his arm under the weight of his head. Every few minutes the pain of the pent
circulation arouse him, whereupon he would look at his watch and twist the
other arm under his head. At the end of two hours he fought with Antonsen to
rouse him. Then they started. Lake Bennett, thirty miles in length, was like a
mill-pond; but, half-way across, a gale from the south smote them and turned
the water white. Hour after hour they repeated the struggle on Tagish, over the
side, pulling and shoving on the canoe, up to their waists and necks, and over
their heads in the icy water; toward the last the good-natured giant played
completely out. Churchill drove him mercilessly; but when he pitched forward
and bade fair to drown in three feet of water, the other dragged him into the
canoe. After that, Churchill fought on alone, arriving at the police post at
the head of Bennett in the early afternoon. He tried to help Antonsen out of
the canoe, but failed. He listened to the exhausted man's heavy breathing, and
envied him when he thought of what he himself had yet to undergo. Antonsen
could lie there and sleep; but he, behind time, must go on over mighty Chilcat
and down to the sea. The real struggle lay before him, and he almost regretted
the strength that resided in his frame because of the torment it could inflict
upon that frame.
Churchill pulled the canoe up on the beach,
seized Bondell's grip, and started on a limping dog-trot for the police
post.
"There 's a canoe down there, consigned to
you from Dawson," he hurled at the officer who answered his knock.
"And there 's a man in it pretty near dead. Nothing serious; only played
out. Take care of him. I 've got to rush. Good-by. Want to catch the
Athenian."
A mile portage connected Lake Bennett and Lake
Linderman, and his last word he flung back after him as he resumed the trot.
It was a very painful trot, but he clenched his teeth and kept on, forgetting
his pain most of the time in the fervent heat with which he regarded the
gripsack. It was a severe handicap. He swung it from one hand to the other,
and back again. He tucked it under his arm. He threw one hand over the opposite
shoulder, and the bag bumped and pounded on his back as he ran along. He could
scarcely hold it in his bruised and swollen fingers, and several times he
dropped it. Once, in changing from one hand to the other, it escaped his clutch
and fell in front of him, tripped him up, and threw him violently to the
ground.
At the far end of the portage he bought an old
set of pack-straps for a dollar, and in them he swung the grip. Also, he
charted a launch to run him the six miles to the upper end of Lake Linderman,
where he arrived at four in the afternoon. The Athenian was to sail from
Dyea next morning at seven. Dyea was twenty-eight miles away, and between
towered Chilcat. He sat down to adjust his foot-gear for the long climb, and
woke up. He had dozed the instant he sat down, though he had not slept thirty
seconds. He was afraid his next doze might be longer, so he finished fixing his
foot-gear standing up. Even then he was overpowered for a fleeting moment. He
experienced the flash of unconsciousness; becoming aware of it, in mid-air, as
his relaxed body was sinking to the ground, and as he caught himself together,
stiffened his muscles with a spasmodic wrench, and escaped the fall. The sudden
jerk back to consciousness left him sick and trembling. He beat his head with
the heel of his hand, knocking wakefulness into the numb brain.
Jack Burn's pack-train was starting back light
for Crater Lake, and Churchill was invited to a mule. Burns wanted to put the
gripsack on another animal, but Churchill held on to it, carrying it on the
saddle-pommel. But he dozed, and the grip persisted in dropping off the pommel,
one side or the other, each time wakening him with a sickening start. Then, in
the early darkness, Churchill's mule brushed him against a projecting branch
that laid his cheek open. To cap it, the mule blundered off the trail and fell,
throwing rider and gripsack out upon the rocks. After that, Churchill walked,
or stumbled, rather, over the apology for a trail, leading the mule. Stray and
awful odors, drifting from each side the trail, told of the horses that had
died in the rush for gold. But he did not mind. He was too sleepy. By the time
Long Lake was reached, however, he had recovered from his sleepiness; and at
Deep Lake he resigned the gripsack to Burns. But thereafter, by the light of
the dim stars, he kept his eyes on Burns. There were not going to be any
accidents with that bag.
At Crater Lake the pack-train went into camp, and
Churchill, slinging the grip on his back, started the steep climb for the
summit. For the first time, on that precipitous wall, he realized how tired he
was. He crept and crawled like a crab, burdened by the weight of his limbs. A
distinct and painful effort of will was required each time he lifted a foot. An
hallucination came to him that he was shod with lead, like a deep-sea diver,
and it was all he could do to resist the desire to reach down and feel the
lead. As for Bondell's gripsack, it was inconceivable that forty pounds could
weigh so much. It pressed him down like a mountain, and he looked back with
unbelief to the year before, when he had climbed that same pass with a hundred
and fifty pounds on his back. If those loads had weighed a hundred and fifty
pounds, then Bondesll's grip weighed five hundred.
The first rise of the divide from Crater Lake was
across a small glacier. Here was a well-defined trail. But above the glacier,
which was also above the timber-line, was naught but a chaos of naked rock and
enormous boulders. There was no way of seeing the trail in the darkness, and he
blundered on, paying thrice the ordinary exertion for all that he accomplished.
He won the summit in the thick of howling wind and driving snow, providentially
stumbling upon a small, deserted tent, into which he crawled. There he found
and bolted some ancient fried potatoes and half a dozen raw eggs.
When the snow ceased and the wind eased down, he
began the almost impossible descent. There was no trail, and he stumbled and
blundered, often finding himself, at the last moment, on the edge of rocky
walls and steep slopes the depth of which he had no way of judging. Part way
down, the stars clouded over again, and in the consequent obscurity he slipped
and rolled and slid for a hundred feet, landing bruised and bleeding on the
bottom of a large, shallow hole. From all about him arose the stench of dead
horses. The hole was handy to the trail, and the packers had made a practice of
tumbling into it their broken and dying animals. The stench overpowered him,
making him deathly sick, and as in a nightmare he scrambled out. Half-way up,
he recollected Bondell's gripsack. It had fallen into the hole with him; the
pack-strap had evidently broken, and he had forgotten it. Back he went into the
pestilential charnel-pit, where he crawled around on hands and knees and vainly
groped for half an hour. Altogether he encountered and counted seventeen dead
horses (and one horse still alive that he shot with his revolver), before he
found Bondell's grip. Looking back upon a life that had not been without valor
and achievement, he unhesitatingly declared to himself that this return after
the grip was the most heroic act he had ever performed. So heroic was it that
he was twice on the verge of fainting before he crawled out of the hole.
By this time he had descended to the Scales, the
steep pitch of Chilcat was past, and the way became easier. Not that it was an
easy way, however, in the best of places; but it became a really possible
trail, along which he could have made good time if he had not been worn out, if
he had had light with which to pick his steps, and if it had not been for
Bondell's gripsack. To him, in his exhausted condition, it was the last straw.
Having barely strength to carry himself along, the additional weight of the
grip was sufficient to throw him nearly every time he tripped or stumbled. And
when he escaped tripping, branches reached out in the darkness, hooked the grip
between his shoulders, and held him back.
His mind was made up that if the missed the
Athenian it would be the fault of the gripsack. In fact, only two things
remained in his consciousness - Bondell's grip and the steamer. He knew only
those two things, and they became identified, in a way, with some stern mission
upon which he had journeyed and toiled for centuries. He walked and struggled
on as in a dream. As part of the dream was his arrival at Sheep Camp. He
stumbled into a saloon, slid his shoulders out of the straps, and started to
deposit the grip at his feet. But it slipped from his fingers and struck the
floor with a heavy thud that was not unnoticed by two men who were just
leaving. Churchill drank a glass of whisky, told the barkeeper to call him in
ten minutes, and sat down, his feet on the grip, his head on his knees.
So badly did his misused body stiffen, that when
he was called it required another ten minutes and a second glass of whisky to
unbend his joints and limber up the muscles.
"Hey! not that way!" the barkeeper
shouted, and then went after him and started him through the darkness toward
Canyon City. Some little husk of inner consciousness told Churchill that the
direction was right, and, still as in a dream, he took the cañon trail.
He did not know what warned him, but, after what seemed several centuries of
traveling, he sensed danger and drew his revolver. Still in the dream, he saw
two men step out and heard them halt him. His revolver went off four times, and
he saw the flashes and heard the explosions of their revolvers. Also, he was
aware that he had been hit in the thigh. He saw one man go down, and, as the
other came for him, he smashed him a straight blow with the heavy revolver full
in the face. Then he turned and ran. He came from the dream shortly afterward,
to find himself plunging down the trail at a limping lope. His first thought
was for the gripsack. It was still on his back. He was convinced that what had
happened was a dream till he felt for his revolver and found it gone. Next he
became aware of a sharp stinging of his thigh, and, after investigating, he
found his hand warm with blood. It was a superficial wound, but it was
incontestable. He became wider awake, and kept up the lumbering run to Canyon
City.
He found a man, with a team of horses and a
wagon, who got out of bed and harnessed up for twenty dollars. Churchill
crawled in on the wagon-bed and slept, the gripsack still on his back. It was a
rough ride, over water-washed boulders down the Dyea Valley; but he roused only
when the wagon hit the highest places. Any altitude of his body above the
wagon-bed of less than a foot did not faze him. The last mile was smooth going,
and he slept soundly.
He came to in the gray dawn, the driver shaking
him savagely and howling into his ear that the Athenian was gone.
Churchill looked blankly at the deserted harbor.
"There 's a smoke over a Skauguay," the
man said.
Churchill's eyes were too swollen to see that
far, but he said: "It 's she. Get me a boat."
The driver was obliging, and found a skiff and a
man to row it for ten dollars, payment in advance. Churchill paid, and was
helped into the skiff. It was beyond him to get in by himself. It was six miles
to Skaguay, and he had a blissful thought of sleeping those six miles. But the
man did not know how to row, and Churchill took the oars and toiled for a few
more centuries. He never knew six longer and more excruciating miles. A snappy
little breeze blew up the inlet and held him back. He had a gone feeling at the
pit of the stomach, and suffered from faintness and numbness. At his command,
the man took the bailer and threw salt water into his face.
The Athenian's anchor was up-and-down when
they came alongside, and Churchill was at the end of his last remnant of
strength.
"Stop her! Stop her!" he shouted
hoarsely. "Important message! Stop her!"
Then he dropped his chin on his chest and slept.
When half a dozen men started to carry him up the gang-plank, he awoke, reached
for the grip, and clung to it like a drowning man.
On deck he became a center of horror and
curiosity. The clothing in which he had left White Horse was represented by a
few rags, and he was as frayed as his clothing. He had traveled for forty-five
hours at the top notch of endurance. He had slept six hours in that time, and
he was twenty pounds lighter than when he started. Face and hands and body were
scratched and bruised, and he could scarcely see. He tried to stand up, but
failed, sprawling out on the deck, hanging on to the gripsack, and delivering
his message.
"Now, put me to bed," he finished;
"I 'll eat when I wake up."
They did him honor, carrying him down in his rags
and dirt and depositing him and Bondell's grip in the bridal chamber, which was
the biggest and most luxurious state-room in the ship Twice he slept the clock around, and he had
bathed and shaved and eaten and was leaning over the rail smoking a cigar when
two hundred pilgrims from White Horse came alongside.
By the time the Athenian arrived in
Seattle, Churchill had fully recuperated, and he went ashore with Bondell's
grip in his hand. He felt proud of that grip. To him it stood for achievement
and integrity and trust. "I 've delivered the goods," was the way he
expressed these various high terms to himself. It was early in the evening, and
he went straight to Bondell's home. Louis Bondell was glad to see him, shaking
hands with both hands at the same time and dragging him into the house.
"Oh, thanks, old man; it was good of you to
bring it out," Bondell said when he received the gripsack.
He tossed it carelessly upon a couch, and
Churchill noted with an appreciative eye the rebound of its weight from the
springs. Bondell was volleying him with questions.
"How did you make out? How 're the boys?
What became of Bill Smithers? Is Del Bishop still with Pierce? Did he sell my
dogs? How did Sulphur Bottom show up? You 're looking fine. What steamer did
you come out on?"
To all of which Churchill gave answer, till half
an hour had gone by and the first lull in the conversation had arrived.
"Had n't you better take a look at it?"
he suggested, nodding his head at the gripsack.
"Oh, it 's all right," Bondell
answered. "Did Mitchell's dump turn out as much as he expected?"
"I think you 'd better look at it,"
Churchill insisted. "When I deliver a thing, I want to be satisfied that
it 's all right. There 's always the chance that somebody might have got into
it when I was asleep, or something."
"It 's nothing important, old man,"
Bondell answered, with a laugh.
"Nothing important," Churchill echoed
in a faint, small voice. Then he spoke with decision: "Louis, what 's in
that bag? I want to know."
Louis looked at him curiously, the left the room
and returned with a bunch of keys. He inserted his hand and drew out a heavy
44 Colt's revolver. Next came out a few boxes of ammunition for the revolver
and several boxes of Winchester cartridges.
"Churchill took the gripsack and looked into
it. Then he turned it upside down and shook it gently.
"The gun 's all rusted," Bondell said.
"Must have been out in the rain."
"Yes," Churchill answered. "Too
bad it got wet. I guess I was a bit careless."
He got up and went outside. Ten minutes later
Louis Bondell went out and found him on the steps, sitting down, elbows on
knees and chin on hands, gazing steadfastly out into the darkness.
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