Children of the Frost by Jack London

digging, tearing, and scouring the face of nature.

Li Wan was appalled at the tremendous upheaval. “Truly, these men are

mad,” she said to Canim.

“Small wonder. The gold they dig after is a great thing,” he replied. “It is

the greatest thing in the world.”

For hours they threaded the chaos of greed, Canim eagerly intent, Li Wan

weak and listless. She knew she had been on the verge of disclosure, and

she felt that she was still on the verge of disclosure, but the nervous strain

she had undergone had tired her, and she passively waited for the thing,

she knew not what, to happen. From every hand her senses snatched up

and conveyed to her innumerable impressions, each of which became a

dull excitation to her jaded imagination. Somewhere within her,

responsive notes were answering to the things without, forgotten and

undreamed-of correspondences were being renewed; and she was aware of

it in an incurious way, and her soul was troubled, but she was not equal to

the mental exultation necessary to transmute and understand. So she

plodded wearily on at the heels of her lord, content to wait for that which

she knew, somewhere, somehow, must happen.

After undergoing the mad bondage of man, the creek finally returned to its

ancient ways, all soiled and smirched from its toil, and coiled lazily among

the broad flats and timbered spaces where the valley widened to its mouth.

Here the “pay” ran out, and men were loth to loiter with the lure yet

beyond. And here, as Li Wan paused to prod Olo with her staff, she heard

the mellow silver of a woman’s laughter.

Before a cabin sat a woman, fair of skin and rosy as a child, dimpling with

glee at the words of another woman in the doorway. But the woman who

sat shook about her great masses of dark, wet hair which yielded up its

dampness to the warm caresses of the sun.

For an instant Li Wan stood transfixed. Then she was aware of a blinding

flash, and a snap, as though something gave way; and the woman before

the cabin vanished, and the cabin and the tall spruce timber, and the

jagged sky-line, and Li Wan saw another woman, in the shine of another

sun, brushing great masses of black hair, and singing as she brushed. And

Li Wan heard the words of the song, and understood, and was a child

again. She was smitten with a vision, wherein all the troublesome dreams

merged and became one, and shapes and shadows took up their

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100

accustomed round, and all was clear and plain and real. Many pictures

jostled past, strange scenes, and trees, and flowers, and people; and she

saw them and knew them all.

“When you were a little bird, a little moose-bird,” Canim said, his eyes

upon her and burning into her.

“When I was a little moose-bird,” she whispered, so faint and low he

scarcely heard. And she knew she lied, as she bent her head to the strap

and took the swing of the trail.

And such was the strangeness of it, the real now became unreal. The mile

tramp and the pitching of camp by the edge of the stream seemed like a

passage in a nightmare. She cooked the meat, fed the dogs, and unlashed

the packs as in a dream, and it was not until Canim began to sketch his

next wandering that she became herself again.

“The Klondike runs into the Yukon,” he was saying; “a mighty river,

mightier than the Mackenzie, of which you know. So we go, you and I,

down to Fort o’ Yukon. With dogs, in time of winter, it is twenty sleeps.

Then we follow the Yukon away into the west—one hundred sleeps, two

hundred—I have never heard. It is very far. And then we come to the sea.

You know nothing of the sea, so let me tell you. As the lake is to the

island, so the sea is to the land; all the rivers run to it, and it is without

end. I have seen it at Hudson Bay; I have yet to see * in Alaska. And then

we may take a great canoe upon the sea, you and I, Li Wan, or we may

follow the land into the south many a hundred sleeps. And after that I do

not know, save that I am Canim, the Canoe, wanderer and far-journeyer

over the earth!”

She sat and listened, and fear ate into her heart as she pondered over this

plunge into the illimitable wilderness. “It is a weary way,” was all she

said, head bowed on knee in resignation.

Then it was a splendid thought came to her, and at the wonder of it she

was all aglow. She went down to the stream and washed the dried clay

from her face. When the ripples died away, she stared long at her mirrored

features; but sun and weather-beat had done their work, and, what of

roughness and bronze, her skin was not soft and dimpled as a child’s. But

the thought was still splendid and the glow unabated as she crept in beside

her husband under the sleeping-robe.

She lay awake, staring up at the blue of the sky and waiting for Canim to

sink into the first deep sleep. When this came about, she wormed slowly

and carefully away, tucked the robe around him, and stood up. At her

second step, Bash growled savagely. She whispered persuasively to him

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101

and glanced at the man. Canim was snoring profoundly. Then she turned,

and with swift, noiseless feet sped up the back trail.

Mrs. Evelyn Van Wyck was just preparing for bed. Bored by the duties

put upon her by society, her wealth, and widowed blessedness, she had

journeyed into the Northland and gone to housekeeping in a cosy cabin on

the edge of the diggings. Here, aided and abetted by her friend and

companion, Myrtle Giddings, she played at living close to the soil, and

cultivated the primitive with refined abandon.

She strove to get away from the generations of culture and parlor

selection, and sought the earth-grip her ancestors had forfeited. Likewise

she induced mental states which she fondly believed to approximate those

of the stone-folk, and just now, as she put up her hair for the pillow, she

was indulging her fancy with a Paleolithic wooing. The de- tails consisted

principally of cave-dwellings and cracked marrow-bones, intersprinkled

with fierce carnivora, hairy mammoths, and combats with rude flaked

knives of flint; but the sensations were delicious. And as Evelyn Van

Wyck fled through the sombre forest aisles before the too arduous

advances of her slant-browed, skin-clad wooer, the door of the cabin

opened, without the courtesy of a knock, and a skin-clad woman, savage

and primitive, came in.

“Mercy!”

With a leap that would have done credit to a cave-woman, Miss Giddings

landed in safety behind the table. But Mrs. Van Wyck held her ground.

She noticed that the intruder was laboring under a strong excitement, and

cast a swift glance backward to assure herself that the way was clear to the

bunk, where the big Colt’s revolver lay beneath a pillow.

“Greeting, O Woman of the Wondrous Hair,” said Li Wan.

But she said it in her own tongue, the tongue spoken in but a little corner

of the earth, and the women did not understand.

“Shall I go for help?” Miss Giddings quavered.

“The poor creature is harmless, I think,” Mrs. Van Wyck replied. “And

just look at her skin-clothes, ragged and trail-worn and all that. They are

certainly unique. I shall buy them for my collection. Get my sack, Myrtle,

please, and set up the scales.”

Li Wan followed the shaping of the lips, but the words were unintelligible,

and then, and for the first time, she realized, in a moment of suspense and

indecision, that there was no medium of communication between them.

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And at the passion of her dumbness she cried out, with arms stretched

wide apart, “O Woman, thou art sister of mine!”

The tears coursed down her cheeks as she yearned toward them, and the

break in her voice carried the sorrow she could not utter. But Miss

Giddings was trembling, and even Mrs. Van Wyck was disturbed.

“I would live as you live. Thy ways are my ways, and our ways be one.

My husband is Canim, the Canoe, and he is big and strange, and I am

afraid. His trail is all the world and never ends, and I am weary. My

mother was like you, and her hair was as shine, and her eyes. And life was

soft to me then, and the sun warm.”

She knelt humbly, and bent her head at Mrs. Van Wyck’s feet. But Mrs.

Van Wyck drew away, frightened at her vehemence.

Li Wan stood up, panting for speech. Her dumb lips could not articulate

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