Children of the Frost by Jack London

of it, civilization will be sweet? What do you say?”

Fairfax’s face took on a stolid expression. “Oh, I don’t know. At least

they’re honest folk and live according to their lights. And then they are

amazingly simple. No complexity about them, no thousand and one subtle

ramifications to every single emotion they experience. They love, fear,

hate, are angered, or made happy, in common, ordinary, and unmistakable

terms. It may be a beastly life, but at least it is easy to live. No

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philandering, no dallying. If a woman likes you, she’ll not be backward in

telling you so. If she hates you, she’ll tell you so, and then, if you feel

inclined, you can beat her, but the thing is, she knows precisely what you

mean, and you know precisely what she means. No mistakes, no

misunderstandings. It has its charm, after civilization’s fitful fever.

Comprehend?”

“No, it’s a pretty good life,” he continued, after a pause; “good enough for

me, and I intend to stay with it.”

Van Brunt lowered his head in a musing manner, and an imperceptible

smile played on his mouth. No philandering, no dallying, no

misunderstanding. Fairfax also was taking it hard, he thought, just because

Emily Southwaithe had been mistakenly clawed by a bear. And not a bad

sort of a bear, either, was Carlton Southwaithe.

“But you are coming along with me,” Van Brunt said deliberately.

“No, I’m not.”

“Yes, you are.”

“Life’s too easy here, I tell you.” Fairfax spoke with decision. “I

understand everything, and I am understood. Summer and winter alternate

like the sun flashing through the palings of a fence, the seasons are a blur

of light and shade, and time slips by, and life slips by, and then . . . a

wailing in the forest, and the dark. Listen!”

He held up his hand, and the silver thread of the woman’s sorrow rose

through the silence and the calm. Fairfax joined in softly.

“O-o-o-o-o-o-a-haa-ha-a-ha-aa-a-a, O-o-o-o-o-o-a-ha-a-ha-a,” he sang.

“Can’t you hear it? Can’t you see it? The women mourning? the funeral

chant? my hair white-locked and patriarchal? my skins wrapped in rude

splendor about me? my hunting-spear by my side? And who shall say it is

not well?”

Van Brunt looked at him coolly. “Fairfax, you are a damned fool. Five

years of this is enough to knock any man, and you are in an unhealthy,

morbid condition. Further, Carlton Southwaithe is dead.”

Van Brunt filled his pipe and lighted it, the while watching slyly and with

almost professional interest. Fairfax’s eyes flashed on the instant, his fists

clenched, he half rose up, then his muscles relaxed and he seemed to

brood. Michael, the cook, signalled that the meal was ready, but Van

Brunt motioned back to delay. The silence hung heavy, and he fell to

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analyzing the forest scents, the odors of mould and rotting vegetation, the

resiny smells of pine cones and needles, the aromatic savors of many

camp-smokes. Twice Fairfax looked up, but said nothing, and then:

“And. . . Emily. . . ?”

“Three years a widow; still a widow.”

Another long silence settled down, to be broken by Fairfax finally with a

naive smile. “I guess you’re right, Van Brunt. I’ll go along.”

“I knew you would.” Van Brunt laid his hand on Fairfax’s shoulder. “Of

course, one cannot know, but I imagine—for one in her position— she has

had offers—”

“When do you start?” Fairfax interrupted.

“After the men have had some sleep. Which reminds me, Michael is

getting angry, so come and eat.”

After supper, when the Crees and voyageurs had rolled into their blankets,

snoring, the two men lingered by the dying fire. There was much to talk

about,—wars and politics and explorations, the doings of men and the

happening of things, mutual friends, marriages, deaths,— five years of

history for which Fairfax clamored.

“So the Spanish fleet was bottled up in Santiago,” Van Brunt was saying,

when a young woman stepped lightly before him and stood by Fairfax’s

side. She looked swiftly into his face, then turned a troubled gaze upon

Van Brunt.

“Chief Tantlatch’s daughter, sort of princess,” Fairfax explained, with an

honest flush. “One of the inducements, in short, to make me stay. Thom,

this is Van Brunt, friend of mine.”

Van Brunt held out his hand, but the woman maintained a rigid repose

quite in keeping with her general appearance. Not a line of her face

softened, not a feature unbent. She looked him straight in the eyes, her

own piercing, questioning, searching.

“Precious lot she understands,” Fairfax laughed. “Her first introduction,

you know. But as you were saying, with the Spanish fleet bottled up in

Santiago?”

Thom crouched down by her husband’s side, motionless as a bronze statue,

only her eyes flashing from face to face in ceaseless search. And Avery

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Van Brunt, as he talked on and on, felt a nervousness under the dumb

gaze. In the midst of his most graphic battle descriptions, he would

become suddenly conscious of the black eyes burning into him, and would

stumble and flounder till he could catch the gait and go again. Fairfax,

hands clasped round knees, pipe out, absorbed, spurred him on when he

lagged, and repictured the world he thought he had forgotten.

One hour passed, and two, and Fairfax rose reluctantly to his feet. “And

Cronje was cornered, eh? Well, just wait a moment till I run over to

Tantlatch. He’ll be expecting you, and I’ll arrange for you to see him after

breakfast. That will be all right, won’t it ?” He went off between the pines,

and Van Brunt found himself staring into Thom’s warm eyes. Five years,

he mused, and she can’t be more than twenty now. A most remarkable

creature. Being Eskimo, she should have a little flat excuse for a nose, and

lo, it is neither broad nor flat, but aquiline, with nostrils delicately and

sensitively formed as any fine lady’s of a whiter breed—the Indian strain

somewhere, be assured, Avery Van Brunt. And, Avery Van Brunt, don’t

be nervous, she won’t eat you; she’s only a woman, and not a bad-looking

one at that. Oriental rather than aborigine. Eyes large and fairly wide

apart, with just the faintest hint of Mongol obliquity. Thom, you’re an

anomaly. You’re out of place here among these Eskimos, even if your

father is one. Where did your mother come from? or your grandmother?

And Thom, my dear, you’re a beauty, a frigid, frozen little beauty with

Alaskan lava in your blood, and please don’t look at me that way.

He laughed and stood up. Her insistent stare disconcerted him. A dog was

prowling among the grub-sacks. He would drive it away and place them

into safety against Fairfax’s return. But Thom stretched out a detaining

hand and stood up, facing him.

“You?” she said, in the Arctic tongue which differs little from Greenland

to Point Barrow. “You?”

And the swift expression of her face demanded all for which “you” stood,

his reason for existence, his presence there, his relation to her husband—

everything.

“Brother,” he answered in the same tongue, with a sweeping gesture to the

south. “Brothers we be, your man and I.”

She shook her head. “It is not good that you be here.”

“After one sleep I go.”

“And my man ?” she demanded, with tremulous eagerness.

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Van Brunt shrugged his shoulders. He was aware of a certain secret

shame, of an impersonal sort of shame, and an anger against Fairfax. And

he felt the warm blood in his face as he regarded the young savage. She

was just a woman. That was all—a woman. The whole sordid story over

again, over and over again, as old as Eve and young as the last new lovelight.

“My man! My man! My man!” she was reiterating vehemently, her face

passionately dark, and the ruthless tenderness of the Eternal Woman, the

Mate-Woman, looking out at him from her eyes.

“Thom,” he said gravely, in English, “you were born in the Northland

forest, and you have eaten fish and meat, and fought with frost and famine,

and lived simply all the days of your life. And there are many things,

indeed not simple, which you do not know and cannot come to understand.

You do not know what it is to long for the flesh-pots afar, you cannot

understand what it is to yearn for a fair woman’s face And the woman is

fair, Thom, the woman is nobly fair. You have been woman to this man,

and you have been your all, but your all is very little, very simple. Too

little and too simple, and he is an alien man. Him you have never known,

you can never know. It is so ordained. You held him in your arms, but you

never held his heart, this man with his blurring seasons and his dreams of

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