copyright,
Kellscraft Studio 1999-2004 (Return to Web Text-ures) |
Click Here to return to |
CHAPTER
NINETEEN
DURING
the last few days in December all trails for ten thousand square miles around
led to Post Fort O' God. It was the eve of
Ooske Pipoon – of the New Year –
the mid-winter carnival time of the people of the wilderness, when from teepees
and cabins far and near come the trappers and their families to sell their
furs and celebrate for a few days with others of their kind. To this New Year
gathering men, women, and children look forward through long and weary months.
The trapper's wife has no neighbour. Her husband's "line" is a little
kingdom inviolate, with no other human life within many miles of it; so for the
women the Ooske Pipoon is a time of rejoicing; for the children it is the
"big circus," and for the men a reward for the labour and hardship of
catching their fur. During these few days old acquaintanceships are renewed and
new ones are made. It is here that the "news" of the trackless
wilderness is spread, the news of deaths, of marriages, and of births; of
tragic happenings that bring horror and grief and tears, and of others that
bring laughter and joy. For the first and last time in all the seven months'
winter the people of the forests "come to town." Indian, half-breed,
"blood," and white man, join in the holiday without distinction of
colour or creed.
This
year there was to be a great caribou roast, a huge barbecue, at Fort O' God,
and by the time Henri Durant came within half a dozen miles of the Post the
trails from north and south and east and west were beaten hard by the tracks of
dogs and men. That year a hundred sledges came in from the forests, and with
them were three hundred men and women and children and half a thousand dogs.
Durant
was a day later than he had planned to
be, but he had made good use of his time. For Miki, while still muzzled,
now followed at the end of the babiche that was tied to Henri's sledge.
In the afternoon of the third day after leaving Nanette Le Beau's cabin Durant
turned off the main-travelled trail until he came to the shack of Andre Ribon,
who kept the Factor and his people at the Post supplied with fresh meat.
Andre, who was becoming over-anxious at Durant's delay, was still waiting when
his friend came. It was here that Henri's Indian had left his fighting dog, the
big husky. And here he left Miki, locked in Andre's shack. Then the two men
went on to the Post which was only a mile away.
Neither
he nor Ribon returned that night. The cabin was empty. And with the beginning
of dusk Miki began to hear weird and strange sounds which grew louder as
darkness settled deeper. It was the sound of the carnival at the Post – the
distant tumult of human voice mingled with the howling of a hundred dogs. He
had never heard anything like it before, and for a long time he listened
without moving. Then he stood up like a man before the window with this fore-paws
resting against the heavy sash. Ribon's cabin was at the crest of a knoll that
overlooked the frozen lake, and far off, over the tops of the scrub timber
that fringed the edge of it, Miki saw the red glow in the sky made by a score
of great camp fires. He whined, and dropped on his four feet again. It was a
long wait between that and another day. But the cabin was more comfortable than
Le Beau's prison-cage had been. All through the night his restless slumber was
filled with visions of Nanette and the baby.
Durant and Ribon did not return until nearly noon the next day. They brought with them fresh meat, of which Miki ate ravenously, for he was hungry. In an unresponsive way he tolerated the advances of these two. A second night he was left alone in the cabin. When Durant and Ribon came back again in the early dawn they brought with them a cage four feet square made of small birch saplings. The open door of this cage they drew close to the door of the cabin, and by means of a chunk of fresh meat Miki was induced to enter through it. Instantly the trap fell, and he was a prisoner. The cage was already fastened on a wide toboggan, and scarcely was the sun up when Miki was on his way to Fort O' God.
This
was the big day at the carnival – the day of the caribou-roast and the fight.
For many minutes before they came in. sight of Fort O' God Miki heard the
growing sound. It amazed him, and he stood up on his feet in his cage,
rigid and alert, utterly unconscious of the men who were pulling him. He was
looking ahead of them, and Durant chuckled exultantly as they heard him growl,
and his teeth click.
"Oui,
he will fight! He would fight now," he chuckled.
They were
following the shore of a lake. Suddenly they came around the end of a point,
and all of Fort O' God lay on the rising shelf of the shore ahead of them. The
growl died in Miki's throat. His teeth shut with a last click. For an instant
his heart seemed to grow dead and still. Until this moment his world had held
only half a dozen human beings. Now, so suddenly that he had no flash of
warning, he saw a hundred of them, two hundred, three hundred. At sight of
Durant and the cage a swarm of them began running down to the shore. And
everywhere there were wolves, so many of them that his senses grew dazed as he
stared. His cage was the centre of a clamouring, gesticulating horde of men and
boys as it was dragged up the slope. Women began joining the crowd, many of
them with small children in their arms. Then his journey came to an end. He was
close to another cage, and in that cage was a beast like himself. Beside this
cage there stood a tall, swarthy, shaggy-headed half-breed who looked like a
pirate. The man was Grouse Piet, Durant's rival.
A
contemptuous leer was on his thick-lipped face as he looked at Miki. He turned,
and to the group of dark-faced Indians and breeds about him he said something
that roused a guttural laugh.
Durant's
face flamed red.
"Laugh,
you heathen," he challenged, "but don't forget that Henri Durant is
here to take your bets!" Then he shook the two cross and ten red foxes in
the .face of Grouse Piet.
"Cover
them, Grouse Piet," he cried. "And I have ten times more where they
came from!" With his muzzle lifted, Miki was sniffing the air. It was
filled with strange scents, heavy with the odours of men, of dogs, and of the
five huge caribou roasting on their spits fifteen feet over the big fires that
were built under them. For ten hours those caribou would roast, turning slowly
on spits as thick as a man's leg. The fight was to come before the feast.
For
an hour the clatter and tumult of voices hovered about the two cages. Men
appraised the fighters and made their bets, and Grouse Piet and Henri Durant
made their throats hoarse flinging banter and contempt at each other. At the
end of the hour the crowd began to thin out. In the place of men and women half
a hundred dark-visaged little children crowded about the cages. It was not
until then that Miki caught glimpses of the hordes of beasts fastened in ones
and twos and groups in the edge of the clearing. His nostrils had at last
caught the distinction. They were not wolves. They were like himself.
It
was a long time before his eyes rested steadily on the wolf-dog in the other
cage. He went to the edge of his bars and sniffed. The wolf-dog thrust his
gaunt muzzle toward him. He made Miki think of the huge wolf he had fought one
day on the edge of the cliff, and instinctively he showed his fangs, and
snarled. The wolf-dog snarled back. Henri Durant rubbed his hands exultantly,
and Grouse Piet laughed softly.
"Oui;
they will fight!" said Henri again.
"Ze wolf, he will fight, oui," said Grouse Piet. "But
your dog, m'sieu, he be vair seek, lak a puppy, w'en ze fight come!"
A
little later Miki saw a white man standing close to his cage. It was MacDonnell,
the Scotch factor. He gazed at Miki and the wolf-dog with troubled eyes. Ten
minutes later, in the little room which he had made his office, he was saying
to a younger man:
"I'd like to stop it, but I can't. They wouldn't stand for it. It would lose us half a season's catch of fur. There's been a fight like this at Fort O' God for the last fifty years, and I don't suppose, after all, that it's any worse than one of the prize fights down there. Only, in this case –"
"They
kill," said the younger man.
"Yes,
that's it. Usually one of the dogs dies." The younger man knocked the ash
out of his pipe.
"I
love dogs," he said, simply. "There'll never be a fight at my post,
Mac – unless it's between men. And I'm not going to see this fight, because I'm
afraid I'd kill some one if I did."
Click the book image to continue to the next chapter