[Illustration: THE PAGAN’S PROGRESS]




[Illustration: FLED HOWLING INTO THE NORTH

Page 159]




                                   THE
                            PAGAN’S PROGRESS

                                   By
                            GOUVERNEUR MORRIS
                                Author of
                  “Tom Beauling” and “Aladdin O’Brien”

                         Illustrated by JOHN RAE

                             [Illustration]

                                New York
                         A. S. BARNES & COMPANY
                                  1904

                           COPYRIGHT, 1904, BY
                         A. S. BARNES & COMPANY
                           ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

                             [Illustration]

                               _SEPTEMBER_




DEDICATION

To M. B. H. and F. B. H.


Under a wide roof, in the midst of flowers, trees, sunshine, horses,
dogs, meat, wine, wit, friendly faces and all good things, whither my
affection had brought me at the invitation of yours, this violent story
of the Pagan born to darkness, and progressing to the first glimmer of
light, was written. But you must do me the further kindness to believe
that it is with no thought of squaring accounts that I dedicate it to
you. Except in the valvy heart, there is no squaring of accounts among
friends; except in that lively organ, there is no bringing of the credits
and debits of intercourse to an honest balance and a delicate.

It is my pleasure to owe you far more than I can pay ever. In dedicating
this story, it may be that I am adding grossly to that debt. If so,
I ask your most lenient consideration. If not, I still ask your
consideration—not for the dedication of my Pagan, but for the affection
with which he is dedicated. For I believe this: that without affection,
the world, Pagan and Christian, would become like unto the tottering
moon, “staple in desolation.”

                                                                    G. M.




[Illustration]




PREFACE


Those to whom he had been charitable brought the body of the great hunter
to his cave, and laid it within. But first they carried out the clubs and
the nets and the fish spears and the war spears, and all that was of use,
to be divided among them, for the great hunter would not need such things
any more.

Dissolution—decay—dust—nothing. It was thus that they conceived the end
of man.

No brutish face in that hairy circle looked upward; no eagle eye saw
aught but the cadavre, the cave, the weapons and the surrounding forest.
The great hunter was dead; the keen eyes closed, the sensitive ears deaf,
the nostrils still.

Bring down the roof of the cave and cover him, close up the mouth of the
cave and forget him. He is dead and done for. Give his weapons to those
that can use them. The great hands are inert; the mighty thighs have
lost their springs. He will run no more on any trail. His hunting is
over. He has made his last journey to a dark place and a long sleep.

For you, tribesman, a short span wherein to shout the war cry and swing
the club, a little sunlight to see by, a few springs of desire, a few
rains, a few snows. The longer the better, for after,—all will be at an
end. Like the great hunter, insensate and unaware, you will lie in the
dark for the ages of ages.

Wail, tribeswomen and beat your breasts! You shall bring life into the
world, but you shall not take life away.

The sleep of life is a good sleep, for man awakens therefrom happy and
refreshed. But from the sleep of death there is no awakening. Man born to
light, dies into darkness.

Thus it was in the forest ten million years ago.


II

There lies to-day, in the midst of a great house, the body of a man
awaiting the last honors which can be rendered to it.

A week ago the doings of that man stirred two countries; two countries,
to-day, are shaken by the news of his death. The hundreds to whom he was
good and generous, mourn it; those who bore him ill-will are shocked by
it; the world regrets it. For all join in remembering that the man,
human and frail as other men, was still broad, brilliant and fabulous, a
choice and master spirit of his age.

There he lies, the great man, in the midst of his earthly treasures.
Presently he will be laid in the narrow house, and they will remain
behind. Nothing of the man shall go with him out of the world but that
which he brought into the world with him. And tho’ it may be that there
is none so presumptuous as to proclaim where and how the man shall
arise, yet there are few indeed so obstinate as to believe that he has
perished utterly.

For we know that all things move onward and upward. The cell became the
ape, the ape became the man, and the man shall become—what? That we must
not know clearly. But we must know that it will be something above man,
and beyond.

Who is so beholden to life as not to look upon the idea of death with
comfort? Not to-morrow, but in the course of years, services and honors?
By all means, when the trumpet calls, let us pass comfortably upward into
death. For this death is no descent into darkness, but rather a progress
of time and soul; and the body of the barren woman shall be fertile in
death, and the soul of the wicked man shall be cleansed. And we that were
born to darkness shall die into the light.

Thus it is to-day after the schooling of the ages.


III

Read then, how Sunrise, the pagan, was born in the dark, and having
suffered at the hands of death, came to see the light glimmering beyond,
and the life.

                                                                    G. M.




CONTENTS

[Illustration]


    Chapter                                   Page

        I One Eye                                1

       II No Man                                10

      III The Blasted Tree and the Blue Jay     26

       IV No Man and No Foot                    40

        V The Moose                             51

       VI She Wolf                              66

      VII The Wooing of She Wolf                75

     VIII The Faint Heart of No Man             90

       IX The Birth of Sunrise                 106

        X The Death of No Man                  111

       XI The Passing of Strong Hand           121

      XII Maku and She Wolf                    124

     XIII The Weakness of Maku                 134

      XIV Sunrise and Dawn                     139

       XV Fire!                                150

      XVI The Flight of the Tribe              158

     XVII Heat and Cold                        164

    XVIII The Death of One Eye                 181

      XIX The Courting of Dawn                 197

       XX Sunrise Digs a Cave                  207

      XXI The Trail of Two                     218

     XXII On the Trail of One                  230

    XXIII The Long Trail                       244

[Illustration]




ILLUSTRATIONS


    Fled Howling into the North       Frontispiece

    He Scratched Pictures on Bone          Page 12

    Unconquered—Bleeding to Death           ”   59

    “Not Till I am Dead”                    ”  122

    The Knitter of Nets                     ”  185

    She Sobbed in His Arms                  ”  227




[Illustration]




CHAPTER I

ONE EYE


Old One Eye sat in the mouth of his cave and blinked. Though he blinked
both eyes, he could see only out of one of them. Years ago, when One Eye
was called Swift Foot, and could run down a deer in the open, the other
had been pierced by a thorn and destroyed.

It was wonderful when you came to look at him, to think that old One
Eye ever could have been a swift runner, for his legs were no longer nor
bigger than his arms. His body was long, heavily paunched and massive;
his head hung forward on his hairy chest and he sat hunched over like an
ape.

In truth, One Eye looked very much like an ape. His forehead was flat
and retreating, his jaw undershot and powerful, and he was covered with
matted hair pretty much all over.

His one eye at times was beady black with intelligence, and the next
minute it would waver and become plaintive and unreasoning like the eye
of a frightened little child. His manner of life was like his eye.

At times he would behave after a cunningly-thought-out schedule, and the
next minute he would be doing something that was purely instinctive.

As he sat in the mouth of his cave blinking, and scratching his stomach
with a blunt flint, he was revolving a mighty question. One Eye had a
daughter.

According to our notions she was very ugly, but the men of the tribe to
which One Eye belonged were after her. It was the mating season and she
was of suitable age to pair. She looked like her father, but was not so
hairy. Her mother had been eaten by wolves when Maku (for that was the
girl’s name) was only a few years old. And so she had been brought up by
her father, who was very fond of her. And now that it was time for them
to part, he naturally wanted a considerable compensation for the loss of
his daughter. She made him very comfortable.

[Illustration]

Strong Hand had offered three very finely balanced clubs. You had only
to swing one to be confident of getting your man. And One Eye wanted the
clubs very dearly. He loved to fight—and get the best of it. But then,
Fish Catch, the renowned maker of nets, had offered him one of his best
for the girl. And One Eye, who could not make nets himself, knew that
his own private net was so rotted as to be useless, and that in order to
live comfortably it was necessary to have a net—for a good net meant good
food. So he was sadly torn in his mind.

There had been other offers for the girl, but none so glittering. And One
Eye had promised on this very afternoon to decide between Strong Hand and
Fish Catch.

When they came up, stooping, hairy, bent of knee, and stealthy, the
one bearing the net, the other the clubs, One Eye had not come to any
decision.

They sat down before him, without salutation, and for some moments
blinked and dug at the earth with their toes. Strong Hand was the first
to speak.

“With any of these clubs—” he began.

But Fish Catch broke in.

“Clubs!” and grunted. “What are the use of weapons to one that is
without means of procuring food. It is well known that One Eye is too old
to hunt with success. If he would live he must fish. Now this net—see it
is of the best fibre, and knotted as I alone can knot. It will last you
twenty years—maybe twenty-five—”

“One Eye,” said Strong Hand, “is first of all a fighter. If he gives me
the girl I will see to it that he never wants for food.”

“That is the best talk yet,” said One Eye.

“Then you give her to me?” said Strong Hand.

“Slowly—slowly,” said One Eye. “I must have time to consider. But whom
have we here?”




[Illustration]




CHAPTER II

NO MAN


The three paused to listen. The intelligent look went out of their eyes,
and gave place to the plaintive child look—the animal look.

“That will be No Man,” said Fish Catch presently.

Now if you or I had been in the glade in front of One Eye’s cave, we
would not have known that there was anybody but One Eye, Strong Hand
and Fish Catch within a hundred miles. But these three men having the
acuteness of dogs, had heard footsteps that were half a mile away, and
not only that, but they had almost instantly known to whom the footsteps
belonged. If the wind had been right, they could have told also by sense
of smell.

“He is coming in this direction,” said One Eye.

“He steps stronger with one foot than the other,” said Strong Hand. “He
is carrying something heavy.”

“Perhaps No Man wants One Eye’s daughter,” said Fish Catch with an ugly
laugh.

“I wonder what he is carrying?” said One Eye.

[Illustration: HE SCRATCHED PICTURES ON BONE]

This No Man was so called, because he would neither hunt, fish, make
weapons, nets, or marry. Therefore he was No Man. He lived on charity,
and scratched pictures on bone. That was the only thing that interested
him. He was suffered to live only because he was mysterious and because
the tribe liked to go to his cave and look at the pictures when there
was nothing better to do.

Presently he came out of the woods, slope-shouldered and long-armed like
the others, but not so heavily built, nor so apishly skulled. He seemed,
besides, less stealthy, but more timid.

[Illustration]

He had tucked under his right arm a huge flat bone. This he laid before
One Eye. It was covered with little etched scenes of the chase and of
the fight—throughout which a man, palpably having but one eye, deported
himself with the utmost heroism—now strangling a bear, and now beating
the life out of an enemy.

“This,” said No Man, “is the whole story of One Eye from the beginning.
It is the most beautiful picture bone that has ever been made in the
world. Sitting alone in my cave, it befell on a time that a great
loneliness came upon me. And the woman whose image rose most often
before me, was the daughter of One Eye. Therefore I have wrought the
bone, sparing no labor, and now I offer it to One Eye for the loss of his
daughter. It is a thing which will keep him company in his old age. For
to look upon it is to be reminded of his glorious deeds.”

As One Eye examined the picture bone, the intelligence went out of his
one eye. It wavered and became plaintive. Reason told him that nets were
more valuable than clubs and clubs more valuable than pictures. But
desire, which is a thing apart from reason, clamored for the bone.

“I wish this picture bone,” he said presently. “It is of no use, neither
is it of any value. Yet I wish it.”

Strong Hand and Fish Catch looked at one another stealthily and then at
No Man. It would be impossible to say which sprang upon him first, nor at
whose hands he suffered the most. They so choked, beat and clubbed him
that he screamed for mercy. One Eye blinked in the mouth of his cave and
chuckled.

“Is it enough?” cried Strong Hand presently,
“Filthy-do-nothing—Marrowless-bone.”

“It is enough,” said No Man, and they let him go.

Directly he had gained his feet, he ran from that place with incredible
swiftness, and howled as he ran.

“The picture bone,” said Fish Catch to One Eye, “is now ours, but knowing
that you desire it, we give it to you to be a solace in your old age.
And now it remains for you to choose between those admirably balanced but
somewhat antiquated clubs which Strong Hand offers and this invaluable
net knotted by myself.”

“Fish Catch—Strong Hand,” said One Eye, “I have thought of a way by which
we may all be satisfied. The thought came to me when you fell upon No
Man. Let each one of you take a club, and at the word fight, the one who
wins shall give me his present and take the girl.”

Fish Catch measured Strong Hand with his eye; Strong Hand measured Fish
Catch. They nodded, which meant that what the old man said was good talk.

The latter called over his shoulder into the cave.

“Maku, come out! There will be a fight!”

Maku came at once, eagerly. She was, as we have said, the image of her
father, only less hairy. She was considered very alluring by the young
men of the tribe.

Meanwhile Strong Hand and Fish Catch had each taken a club and backed
away from each other.

“Is it about me?” asked Maku.

“It is.”

She laughed happily.

“Fight!” commanded One Eye.

At the word Strong Hand and Fish Catch sprang forward and fell upon each
other with roars and blows. There was no question of fence involved, only
the ability to hit hardest and take the most punishment. As they fought
they became beasts, yelping, snarling, snapping and foaming—totally
unlike articulate men. Blows that would have splintered a modern skull
to atoms were given and taken. Now the clubs cracked upon bone and
now thudded upon muscle. One Eye and Maku roared with laughter and
screamed with pleasure. The fight ended with a blow that broke Fish
Catch’s forehead into two halves. But, although he fell as if struck
by lightning, he did not die at once; he moaned and his lips twitched.
His eyes were plaintive and uncomprehending like those of a frightened
child. He blinked, too, as he died.

Strong Hand tossed his club down at One Eye’s feet.

“The girl is yours,” said One Eye.

Strong Hand’s eyes glittered and he looked the girl over. He reached
forward a vast hairy hand and took her by the shoulders. But she wrenched
loose, half laughing, half screaming, and fled into the cave. Strong Hand
followed. One Eye chuckled and thought upon the days of his youth.

In the darkness of the cave there was a sudden fierce struggle, a cry
of pain from Strong Hand, and Maku, bounding from the entrance, made
swiftly down the slope toward the forest. But Strong Hand, bleeding on
the shoulder where her teeth had met, was close behind. Swift as she was,
he caught up with her in a few bounds and felled her with a blow on the
head. Stunned and motionless she lay at his feet.

Strong Hand twined his left hand in her long black hair and dragged her
after him until the trees had closed behind them both.

When One Eye had done laughing, for the whole scene had seemed very
humorous to him, he gathered together his treasures and hid them in the
cave.

“I now have,” he said, “the clubs, the net, the strongest among three for
a son-in-law, and also the picture bone. I am, therefore, the richest man
in the tribe, save only Moon Face, and than him there is none richer in
all the forest.”

When One Eye thought about the clubs his eye flashed and he clinched his
hands. When he thought about the net he scratched his stomach—either with
hand or foot. But when he thought about the picture bone, the reason went
out of his eye, and it became strange and plaintive.

And as for Maku, it was not long before she followed her husband like a
dog, whimpering and laughing when he spoke to her, craving his caresses
and enjoying his blows.




[Illustration]




CHAPTER III

THE BLASTED TREE AND THE BLUE-JAY


No man was very sore because he had been beaten and robbed. Fish Catch
being dead, he particularly hated Strong Hand and wanted Strong Hand’s
blood. But he was afraid to go and take it, and so he dwelt in his cave
and plotted mischief.

And because no artist can work when he is angry, he gave up scratching
pictures on bone.

No Man was undoubtedly a coward, but he was very cunning. He had schemes
in his head that nobody else had yet thought of. He had the creative
spirit.

So far it had been useful only in evolving pictures and ingenious ways
of scratching them on bone; but now, so No Man swore, it should evolve
him a weapon against which none could stand and his vengeance would be
accomplished.

He thought over the different kinds of weapons then in use; clubs with
stone-heads, wooden clubs, smooth round stones for throwing, and spears.

These last were just coming into fashion, we may say. They were short,
stiff shafts with heads of chipped flint lashed to them with deer sinew,
which if put on wet and allowed to dry, shrank and became as tight and
hard as wire. No Man thought these over, and resolved to think of
something entirely new. Clubs and spears brought you to close quarters,
and that was not the way No Man wanted to fight. Throwing stones required
a proficiency which he did not possess, and was not often fatal—even at
best. He went back to the spear. Why not throw it? This was an entirely
new idea. No use. Same business as stones—uncertain.

Then he pictured in his agile mind, how, the spear having missed, Strong
Hand would chase him with a club and beat his brains out.

He went so far as to dream this unpleasant scene several times at night.
When this happened he howled in his sleep.

No, he must have something entirely new, something that would
kill—unerringly—at a good distance. But with all his cleverness, he could
not think of just the right thing.

And if his fellow-tribesmen had not been charitable, he would have
starved to death while he was thinking.

One day the big nut tree in front of No Man’s cave was struck by
lightning, and when he got the courage to go and look, he discovered that
it had been split into fine wands, half as big as his wrist. He tried to
break one but it would only bend. When he let go it sprang back nearly
straight, but not quite because it was sappy and unseasoned.

No Man sat down and thought. His face was all covered with puzzle
wrinkles. He knew that he had an idea, but he did not know what it was.

“Never mind,” he said, “I will take some of these sticks and play with
them and, perhaps, that idea will come out.”

So with grunts and twists and heaves, he managed to break off half a
dozen of the sticks. But it was hard work, for the wood was as tough as
hickory—which was just the kind of wood it happened to be.

No Man played with his sticks and became very fond of them. At night he
hid them in his cave, but all day he had them out in the sunshine, where
he could bend them and let them snap straight, and think about the idea
that wouldn’t come out. The dryer the sticks got, the tougher they got,
the more bendable and the more springy. Sometimes No Man got angry with
his sticks for the very bendiness that he loved in them.

“Why don’t you stay bent, when I bend you?” he said. “Perhaps you don’t
think I’m the master here? I’m going to take you”—he addressed the
biggest and most refractory—“and bend you and tie your ends together with
deer sinew and then you’ll I stay bent.”

[Illustration]

He was as good as his word. He lashed one end of the deer sinew to one
end of the stick, bent the stick, took a hitch round the other end, and
made fast. Then he took the stick by the middle with one hand, the sinew
with the other, pulled and let go. The sinew twanged loudly.

“This is a good thing that I have made,” said No Man, and then like a
flash the idea that had been struggling in his head came out.

First he looked about cautiously, then he listened, and as he listened
his nostrils quivered and you could see that he was scenting as well.
There was nobody near. He then fitted a straight stick to the string of
his bow, pulled and let fly. The stick sprang into the air, and travelled
what seemed a great distance to No Man—but it did not fly true and it
wabbled. “That,” he said to himself, “is because the spear is not even
all over, and because the twang thing is not properly made. These things
require much thought.”

So he thought, and labored and experimented, and hid in his cave and
glowed with the joy of creation. In time he had made a proper enough bow.
But it was so powerful that no man of our time could have bent it, and
No Man chuckled when he saw the power with which it hurled the little
equal shafts which he had made.

But they did not fly as straight as he wished. Often the back end of the
shaft would somersault over the front end, or the shaft would hit the
object aimed at with its side instead of with its point. One day, as he
was trying to perfect this part of his weapon, a blue jay came and sat a
little way off on the top of a little pine, spread its tail feathers and
laughed at him.

“Now I will show you what flying is really like,” he said. And he let
fly, and the shaft flew as straight as a bird, but much more swiftly.
Then No Man rolled on the ground and laughed. Then he sat up and crooned,
a long inarticulate croon of triumph. And he finished up by saying:

“I am the greatest man in the world. Nobody else is nearly as great.
There is nobody of whom there is any record that is so great. I will
soon kill Strong Hand and take his woman to my cave. It is not good to
live alone when one is great. No, I will not take Strong Hand’s woman, I
will get a woman that is all new, and she shall be mine. But first I must
get some sharp points for these things. And there is no one so clever
with flint as No Foot and to him I will go.”




[Illustration]




CHAPTER IV

NO MAN AND NO FOOT


And so he hid away his secret invention and started off to the flinty
hillside where No Foot had his work shop.

This No Foot had once been a mighty hunter, but as luck would have it a
great stone had rolled upon him as he climbed a hill and smashed one of
his feet so that it dragged after him. Forced to abandon the chase, he
studied how best to work in flint, and became in time so clever that he
made the best knives and clubs of which there was any record. He invented
the spear. In return for his work, the tribe gave him fish and meat,
nuts and berries, so that he lived on the fat of the land and was held
in great esteem. But he was a surly old beggar, difficult to approach,
avaricious and susceptible to nothing but flattery. He had an ugly old
wife who kept cave for him. No Man found No Foot sitting in the midst
of his chipped flints, chipping busily. A goodly row of sharp polished
knives and spear heads spoke also of his industry. He did not look up as
No Man approached tho’ undoubtedly he both heard and smelt him.

No Man squatted directly in front of No Foot, and blinked at him. No Foot
blinked at the flint that he was chipping.

“These are the most beautiful flints that I have ever seen,” said No Man
presently.

“You are not telling me anything new,” said No Foot in a surly voice.
Tho’ he was very much flattered inside.

“But how large they are,” said No Man.

“They are for men,” said No Foot, “not for bone scratchers.”

“I have thought,” said No Man, without taking offence, “that you made
them of this size, because you were unable to make them smaller.”

“Unable!” said No Foot, flaring up, “I can make them of any size I
choose.”

No Man laughed provokingly.

“Go back to your cave, Do nothing, No Man,” said No Foot. “You are
between me and the light. Furthermore your person is offensive and your
face of appalling ugliness.”

No Man continued to laugh. Then he addressed the hillside.

“He is angry,” he said. “Ho-Ho—because he can’t make them small. He
has three feet and two of them are hands. Ho-Ho. He has three feet but
he cannot run on legs. He has two hands but he cannot make little spear
heads. He is a lump of mud, a filthy bear, a litterer of the ground.
Furthermore, if he were not so humorous to look at, I could not bear the
neighborhood of him.”

Even to No Foot this seemed a clever sally, and he could not help
laughing.

“Why do you want me to make little spear heads?” he said presently.

“I will tell you,” said No Man, “but do not repeat it. I want them to put
on little spears.”

“You have a ready tongue,” said No Foot, “considering that you are a
filthy ne’er-do-well.”

“I want three of them,” said No Man.

“And what will you give me in exchange for my time and my flint.”

“I will come sometimes and talk to you,” said No Man.

“You will get a clubbing between the eyes, if you do.”

“I will draw the story of your life on a nice white bone, and give it to
you. It will consist entirely of hunts and fights in which you get the
best of it.”

“That is something,” said No Foot, and he scratched his stomach
thoughtfully.

“I will also,” said No Man, “put in a great many pictures of very
beautiful women who have run away from their husbands for desire of you.”

No Foot grinned.

“You shall have the little spear heads.”

“They must be of this bigness,” said No Man, and he showed No Foot just
what he wanted.

“And when do I get my bone?”

“I shall labor hard, but it will be some time. When do I get my flints?”

“On the very day that I get my bone.”

“I would like them in two days.”

“You can’t have them—not till I get my bone.”

[Illustration]

And No Man was obliged to be content with that. So he ran all the way
to his cave, got him a flat, white, clean bone and fell to scratching
upon it the totally imaginative life of No Foot, his mighty deeds, and
his mighty virtues. When it was finished he carried it to No Foot, and
received in exchange three beautiful little spear heads of sea green
flint.

“I have no doubt you will become a hunter,” said No Foot politely, for he
was pleased with his bone.

“These flints are even better than what I expected from so clever a
maker,” said No Man.

“And as for this bone,” said No Foot, “it makes me feel as if I were
young again and two-footed.” And so with mutual compliments they parted.




[Illustration]




CHAPTER V

THE MOOSE


But No Foot carried the flints to his cave, and fitted them to his
arrows, and he fitted feathers to the string ends, and having devoured,
raw, a seven pound fish that had been given him (for fire and cooking
had not yet been discovered) he lay down and slept till the hour before
sunrise.

As he slept, his brow wrinkled and unwrinkled, his hands and feet
twitched and contracted. Sometimes he made a noise in his throat that was
like growling, sometimes he started as if in fear.

For when the first men dreamed, they dreamed, for the most part, about
the ancient ages when they had not been men; of long, cool leaps from
tree to tree; of feet that had the grip of strong hands, and of the great
fear that had driven them to become men—fear of the other beasts, fear
of the night.

That which turned into man, differed only from the other beasts in the
acuteness of its sensations. Fear, pain, shadows, and lust. Fear worked
upon its intelligence and it survived, where nobler and stronger and more
courageous animals perished—the ship-size creatures of the deep, and the
mastadon and the mammoth.

Man in his fear found out many inventions by which he proved his fitness
to survive. And the battle did not go to the strong.

But when No Man awoke, he did not remember his dreams. He arose, shook
himself, took up his bow and his arrows, and trotted into the forest. He
trotted with caution, for he wished his secret to be his secret, until
the sun stood over his head and he was far from the caves of his tribe.
Then he began to hunt.

He had probably less notion of hunting than any member of the tribe, but
if we had seen him and had not seen the others, we would have thought
him the most astute hunter imaginable.

He had the instinct of the chase, dormant in all of us, but better, he
had senses nearly as acute as those of a dog. Eyes that could see in
the dark, ears that could hear the rose-leaf footfall of a wolf on soft
ground, and a nose that could scent that same wolf half a mile away if
the wind blew right.

All the time that he had been running, from sunrise to high noon, his
nose and ears had been twitching with the smells and sounds of the
forest. But now he ran in a great circle, with his eyes on the ground,
and paid strict attention.

Presently clear, deep, black, and shining in the wet, rank ground by a
stream, he saw where a moose had stepped. The track pointed into the
wind, and was fresh and clear. He followed, twitching and silent.

The track followed the stream bed, and then turned a steep angle and
made for the deep shades of the forest, where the moose goes to rest
during the heat of the day.

No Man came upon him lying on his side among cool, green bushes. Trees,
two hundred feet high and straight as masts, towered above in a twilight
of their own making. And there was a mighty hush and silence, the silence
of high noon in the forest where no beast stirs save only man.

Then there was a twanging jar and the sound of an arrow cleaving the air
and jolting into flesh and muscle.

The great moose rose to his feet, very black, maned, bearded, extended
of horn and terrible. He searched for his enemy with little, venomous,
blood-shot eyes. But he swayed as he searched, for just behind his
fore-shoulder, as if part of him, as if something that had mysteriously
grown out of him, there projected a bunch of bright blue feathers, and
dark blood throbbed forth like a spring at their root.

[Illustration: UNCONQUERED—BLEEDING TO DEATH]

No Man, for he knew that the moose is not good at seeing, had hidden
himself among the bushes, and he looked cautiously between the leaves to
watch his victim die.

For an hour he did not move. And the moose, save for swaying of the head
from side to side, and dartings of his dimming eyes, did not move either.
He stood grandly in his tracks, arrogant, fearless, unconquered, and
bleeding to death. At the end of the hour he had staggered and recovered.
But he only stiffened his legs and held his head the more proudly.

A little later, dizziness overcame him and he fell like a thing struck.
But instantly he sprang to his feet, alert and menacing. But he knew that
the end was near.

Once he turned his head and sniffed at the thing that was killing him—not
angrily, not even impatiently, but curiously, to see what it was. Then
when he felt that unsupported he must fall, he walked slowly and quietly
to a great tree and leaned against it.

He remained there till late in the afternoon, then his knees buckled, and
he fell, and when No Man went to him, he was dead.

No Man drew the arrow from the moose and withdrawing a little distance
shot it into him again, together with his two other arrows. And he kept
this up till dark; for it was in his mind that it would be best not to
miss when it came to shooting at Strong Hand.

When night came, No Man tore meat from the moose and ate till he was
full; then he went back to the stream and drank deep; then he returned to
the moose’s carcass and, lying against it, slept.

Wolves came up thro’ the forest, and looked longingly at the dead moose,
and smelt him—at a safe distance; but it was the summer season and they
were not hungry enough to run straight into the smell of man. And they
withdrew, coughing, whining, snarling, and returned again to feast in
imagination.

When the moon rose, they went to an open space in the forest and howled
dismally, so that No Man twitching as to ears and nose awoke. It was some
little time before he composed himself to sleep, for his mind was teeming
with thoughts. But he did not think of Strong Hand and woman and revenge
as had been his wont of late. He thought rather of the pictures that he
made upon bone, for what little soul he had was the soul of an artist.
And he planned in the dark of the night, how upon a great, clean bone,
the shovel of its own antlers, he would inscribe the moose with the arrow
in him, standing arrogantly among the bushes as he bled to death, and
leaning unconquered against the tree. Then fear of the night descended
upon No Man, and he closed his eyes and slept—twitching, coughing and
snarling as the dreams of ancient days possessed him.

But when he awakened in the strong light of day, he thought of the bow
and arrows which he had made, of how he was going to hunt man, and of the
sweetness which is revenge. But he put off that hunt until another day.




[Illustration]




CHAPTER VI

SHE WOLF


She Wolf was the name of a woman. She lived in a cave of her own, and
supported herself by hunting and fishing. Men had wooed her, but had been
so ferociously rejected, that they had been content thereafter to leave
her strictly alone.

She could run, swim, climb, use the club or jab the spear nearly as well
as a man, and it was said that she lived apart because she was barren
and ashamed. She was long of arm and flank, deep-breasted, deep-bellied,
hairy and powerful. No Man cast his eyes upon this woman, who was more
man than himself, and desired her. He hung about her cave, as a bear
hangs about a tree full of honey—and bees. He stuck bright feathers
in his hair and smiled and nodded whenever she cast a glance in his
direction. He scratched upon bone scenes in which she figured as a
heroine and he left them in places where she would find them. He grew
sick with lust and forgot all about Strong Hand and the vengeance which
was ripe. He made attempts to enter into conversation with her, only to
be cut short.

[Illustration]

The less his suit prospered the more keenly did he wage it. But when he
found that ordinary methods were of no avail, he turned to that old
friend of his, cunning, and thought out a plan.

Early upon a morning before the sun had risen, he took his bow and
arrows, and went in silence and sat down before the mouth of She Wolf’s
cave. Then he laid his arrows on the ground and began to twang the string
of his bow. At the first twang, She Wolf woke twitching; at the second,
she crawled to a place where she could see what was going on outside the
cave and yet not be seen.

When she saw that it was only No Man, playing the fool, with a bent stick
and a stretched skin, she was disgusted.

No Man knew perfectly well that he was being watched, and so the next
time he twanged the bow, he closed his eyes and rolled his head, as if
pleasure unutterable possessed him. Then She Wolf’s curiosity was aroused
and she came out of the cave, and in the white mist of the morning she
seemed wonderfully alluring to No Man, so that little shivers ran thro’
him.

But he twanged his string and pretended that he found it more interesting
than the woman.

“This is something that I do not understand,” said She Wolf to herself.
And aloud, “What are you doing, No Man?” It was the first time she had
ever spoken to him.

“This string,” said No Man, without looking up, “is telling me how to get
all the things that I wish; the beasts of the forest, the blood of my
enemies, and the woman I desire.”

“It is telling you lies, then,” said She Wolf. “For altho’ it may go on
talking ’till night, it will not tell you how to get me.”

“Listen,” said No Man, and he twanged the string.

“Well?” said She Wolf.

“It has just told me how to get you,” said No Man.

“Then it is still lying,” said She Wolf. “For I do not wish to go to your
cave and I am stronger than you.”

“That is as it may be,” said No Man, and he twanged his string, and
closed his eyes, and rocked his head.

“Let me see it,” said She Wolf.

“You do not understand it,” said No Man, “and it would turn against you.”

“I am not afraid,” said She Wolf, but she did not speak the whole truth.

“In my hands,” said No Man, “this thing is stronger than any man or
beast, but in another’s hands it is only a bent stick and a length of
stretched hide.”

“I do not believe you,” said She Wolf, but she half believed.

“Let us hunt together,” said No Man, “and I will show you.”

She Wolf went into the cave and came out with her club and her spear and
her flint knife.

“I am ready,” she said.




[Illustration]




CHAPTER VII

THE WOOING OF SHE WOLF


And so they trotted into the forest. But She Wolf ran ahead of No Man to
show that she was not afraid of him.

Old One Eye, who was just awake, heard them as they passed up the valley
below his cave. And he said, “that is No Man and he is running with She
Wolf, I do not see why she has accepted the advances of such a weak
good-for-nothing. He will make her do the hunting while he sits in the
cave and scratches on bone.”

She Wolf and No Man trotted steadily for two hours until they had come to
a good hunting ground. And as they ran their noses and ears twitched.

Presently and of one accord they stopped, and She Wolf pointed to a
dense thicket of alders that stood about a pool of a stream. They could
hear the occasional clink of hoofs on submerged stones, and a sound of
cropping and munching.

She Wolf and No Man dropped to the ground, and crawled to the alders and
into them as silently as two serpents. A buck with a fine head was wading
in the midst of the pool and feeding among the lily pads.

There was no way in which She Wolf could get at him with club or spear,
and she had about made up her mind to rush into the pool, on the chance
of striking before he could get away. But it was a poor chance and she
knew it. Still she gathered herself to spring, and just then—twang—she
turned with a snarl, for she had forgotten all about No Man and his bent
stick. No Man was looking innocently at his right hand, and holding the
bow in his left.

“You don’t even know enough to keep still,” said She Wolf angrily, “no
wonder everybody despises you.”

“Look in the pool,” said No Man imperturbably.

The open place that the buck had occupied among the lily pads, was red
and oily with blood. But the buck had gone.

“He went out upon the other side,” said No Man. “Let us follow him.”

So they waded thro’ the pool and the stones clicked under their feet, but
this time it was No Man who went ahead.

Here and there the leaves of the alders were splashed with blood, and
some of the sharp tracks that the buck had made as he leaped were full of
blood.

The track led out of the alders, across a gray marsh and into a thicket
of beechnut bushes and wild raspberries.

Out of the midst of this thicket the buck suddenly sprang, clear to the
hooves, and leaped away. His antlers were laid back on his shoulders and
he made a noise that was between a whimper and a scream.

They came upon him further on in another thicket, but he could not get
up, he could only look at them with his great brown eyes, and tremble.

There was a bunch of blue feathers that seemed to be sprouting from his
side. Every now and then the buck turned his head and licked the feathers
with his rough tongue.

She Wolf was now thoroughly afraid of No Man and she was sorry she had
come into the forest with him. Therefore, to give herself heart she
stepped forward and hit the buck a terrible blow with her club, right
between the eyes.

“Take your knife and cut off some meat,” said No Man, “for it is a good
time to eat.”

She Wolf did what she was told, and for the first time in her life. When
they had eaten as much as they could, No Man said:

“Now, we will go and drink.”

They found a place above the alder pool, where the brook grass was sweet
and soft to lie in, and the brook tinkled clear and cold among the stones.

No Man lay on his belly and drank till he swelled. Presently he rose with
dripping face and mouth.

“When I have drank,” said She Wolf, “I shall sleep as is my custom. But
if you come near me, I will take my club to you.”

“Drink,” said No Man.

She Wolf placed her club and her spear and her knife carefully to one
side, and lay down to drink. When she had finished she started to rise,
pushing against the ground with her hands. But No Man who had possessed
himself secretly of the club, now brought it down on her head so that she
pitched face downward into the stream.

No Man dragged her out and waited patiently for her to recover
consciousness.

After a time she came to, but she was dazed and looked about
uncomprehendingly.

“Which is the stronger of us?” said No Man. Then She Wolf knew that No
Man had struck her, and she sprang at him furiously, her big sharp teeth
flashing, and her lips curling. But her hands were empty and No Man
struck her again with the club.

“They are all alike,” he repeated as she lay for the second time
insensible on the grass. “Some are stronger than others, but no one of
them is so strong as a man.”

As she lay insensible, her lips twitched and she groaned.

“She will not wish to fight with me any more,” said No Man.

She opened her eyes. But they were not the eyes of a woman; they were
those of a frightened animal.

“Which is the stronger of us,” said No Man.

“You are the stronger,” said She Wolf.

And she crawled to his feet, whining and moaning.

“Will you come and live in my cave?” said No Man.

But She Wolf was not yet conquered, and she made a crafty snatch for the
club. Failing in this she flung herself on the ground, for she made sure
No Man would kill her.

“I will show you who is the master,” said No Man.

And he took up the spear and beat her with the handle. But She Wolf did
not scream or cry out. She grunted only and moaned a little, for knowing
that she had found her master, she took a certain pleasure in the blows.

No Man did not stop beating her until he was tired of plying the spear
handle.

For the second time she crawled to his feet whimpering and seeking to
ingratiate herself with him.

“I will go to your cave,” she said.

“That is good talk,” said No Man “and I will not beat you any more
to-day.”

She Wolf whimpered and touched his feet.

“There is a thorn in your foot,” said No Man, and he drew it out for her.

At that tears gushed from She Wolf’s eyes and she sobbed, and it was
because her master had been kind to her.

“This,” said No Man to himself, “is something that I have never seen
before. It may be that I have struck her too hard and that she will die.
And that will be a great trouble for she is very alluring.”

But She Wolf did not die; and she abode with No Man for three days in
that place, and afterward she went with him to his cave, and fawned upon
him.




[Illustration]




CHAPTER VIII

THE FAINT HEART OF NO MAN


No Man and She Wolf kept the secret of the bow safe in their cave, and in
the early mornings She Wolf went forth to hunt armed with spear and club,
while No Man sat in the sun, and scratched the story of his life upon a
fine white bone.

He scratched away with much boastful imagination; picturing in order
all the clever things that he really had done and as many others that he
hadn’t as he could possibly think of.

[Illustration]

Whenever She Wolf came back from the hunting, she would admire the
progress of the bone, and think to herself that No Man was the bravest
and cleverest man of whom there was any record.

For the most part No Man was kind to her, but when she returned empty
handed, or his work did not please him, he would beat her till she was
half dead. And she loved him alike for the caresses and the blows.

The pictures that she liked best were those in which she herself
figured—first savage, untamable and to be feared—then hunting with No Man
in the forest, then lying insensible by the brook, then fawning at No
Man’s feet, and then following him to his cave.

That was the last scene depicted on the bone, but No Man had taken care
to leave space for one scene more. And when She Wolf asked what it was he
would not tell her.

So he put the bone aside and went to work on others. And the most of a
year passed, and the rest of the tribe began to think well of No Man, for
he hunted occasionally and always he killed.

One day, She Wolf said that she did not wish to go hunting. But No Man
struck her and made her go.

“Do not come back,” he said, “without two haunches of moose for I have
promised one to No Foot in return for some flints which he is making for
me. And the other one we will eat ourselves.”

When the sun was high, No Man started on a round of visits, for he dearly
loved conversation, and boasting. But he got no further than the cave of
old Moon Face, for there he heard news which sent him packing after his
bow and arrows.

Moon Face was the oldest man in the tribe and the richest. He looked
precisely like a baboon, only the hairs fringing his face were white, and
that was why he was called Moon Face. Moon Face never let go of anything
that he got his hands on. All his life he had been a collector. His cave
was full of clubs, nets, spears, flints, bright-colored feathers, and
smooth round stones for throwing. He was very stingy and never exchanged
except at advantage to himself. He had outlived a number of wives, and
there were many of his descendants among the tribe. His youngest son, and
his last wife, a half grey, apish old creature, lived in the cave with
him; the boy hunted and the woman attended to the wants of all three.

No Man found Moon Face blinking in the sunlight before his cave. No Man
squatted and waited for his host to begin.

“How are your affairs getting on?” said the old man presently.

“I have nothing to complain of,” said No Man. “And how is it with you?”

“I do not get the attention to which I am entitled,” said Moon Face. “But
I am able to exist.”

Now he squirmed and fell to scratching himself between the shoulder
blades.

“Maybe I can help you,” said No Man.

“It is nothing,” said Moon Face. But he only squirmed and scratched the
harder.

No Man approached, bent over the old man, and began to search thro’ the
snarled mat of hair that covered his back. Presently he crushed something
between his thumb and forefinger and threw it away.

“That is a great relief,” said Moon Face, “I have been after that fellow
all the morning. And now we can talk at our ease. Have you heard what has
at last happened in Strong Hand’s cave?”

“No,” said No Man, betraying no interest, “I have not heard of him or
seen him in a long time.”

“Well, at last he has a child,” said Moon Face.

“A daughter I should imagine,” said No Man spitefully.

“Yes. A daughter.”

“They have been a long time about it,” said No Man. “I was beginning to
think they were both as dry as old bones.”

“Strong Hand passed this morning,” said Moon Face, “on his way to the
hunt. He was strutting like a cock partridge. You might have thought that
his was the first child of which we have any record.”

“So he has gone hunting, has he?” said No Man. “I think I will drop round
to his cave and have a look at the child.”

“Anything that has taken so long to make should be worth looking at,”
said Moon Face. And they laughed heartily, and parted with mutual
compliments and good will.

But No Man did not go at once to Strong Hand’s cave. First he went to his
own and got his bow and arrows. And then he hid himself in a clump of
birches and poplars that Strong Hand would have to pass on the way home.

“This is just the time for killing,” said No Man. “Strong Hand is very
proud and I will strike him. When he is dead there will be no one to hunt
for his woman; and her milk will give out and the child will also die.
Matters could not have been better arranged.”

He waited patiently all thro’ the afternoon and reviewed the prospective
scene of his vengeance. It was the scene for which he had left a blank
space on the big clean bone. Here would be the runway that Strong Hand
must follow, here the thicket where he himself lay in hiding with his bow
and arrows.

[Illustration]

But it began to grow dark, and No Man was disturbed for at heart all men
fear the dark. And when he heard Strong Hand strolling up the runway he
was even more disturbed. But he steadied himself and waited.

Suddenly he heard Strong Hand calling his name.

“What are you doing in there, No Man?”

No Man was seized with fear. And he said to himself, “I am a fool, for
the wind was blowing from me to him all the time and he has smelled me
out.”

He went out of the thicket and yawned when he saw Strong Hand. Strong
Hand had slung a doe over his back and in his free hand were two spears
and a club.

“I have been asleep,” said No Man. “It was cool in the thicket and I was
weary.”

“Come to my cave?” said Strong Hand. “And I will give you a piece of meat
and show you something.”

So he trotted along with Strong Hand to his cave, and was given meat and
shown the girl-child. After which they parted with mutual compliments.

“May She Wolf bear you a son,” Strong Hand called after him.

But No Man went home to his cave raging, for he had played the fool and
the coward and his vengeance was no nearer than ever.

When he got to his cave and found that She Wolf had not come back, his
anger turned from himself to her. And he promised himself to give her a
taste of the great stick which he kept for the purpose.

He sat in the cool, waiting and glowing like a coal.




[Illustration]




CHAPTER IX

THE BIRTH OF SUNRISE


After a time she came wearily, and slowly. With her left hand she dragged
along the ground two great haunches of moose. In her right hand she held
her club and her spear and her knife, and in the hollow of her right arm
there was a downy bundle that moved a little.

[Illustration]

Her face was ever turned toward it.

No Man called to her angrily, and reached for his stick.

“Don’t strike me, No Man,” she said, “for I have brought you a good
thing.”

“What good thing have you brought?” asked No Man.

“I have brought the moose-meat,” she let it fall to the ground as also
her weapons, “and I have brought this.”

“But it is alive,” said No Man, “where did you get it?”

“It is mine—mine,” said She Wolf, “see how little it is—but already it is
very strong and clings with its hands.”

Then she knelt before No Man and showed him the fruit of her deep forest
labor.

“So that was why—” said No Man.

“Yes, that was why, and I am very weary,” said She Wolf. “Take him in
your hands, for he is yours also.”

Then No Man forgot his anger, and his breast swelled with pride, and for
once he was grateful to She Wolf.

“I was not so long about it as Strong Hand,” he said, and there was a
kind of strut in his voice, “and furthermore it is a man-child while his
is but a girl.”

Then he took the child and held it clumsily. It was very little and
covered with soft down, for all the world like a tiny monkey, and it
clung to No Man’s fingers with its little hands.

“He has not cried out once,” said She Wolf. “He came to me in the
morning as the sun rose, but I dared not come back without the
moose-meat, and therefore all the day we have hunted together, I and the
man.” Her bosom swelled with pride. “Already he has hunted the moose,”
she cried, “and because he came with the sun, we will call him Sunrise,
and he will be a mighty hunter. Give him back to me—give him to me.”




[Illustration]




CHAPTER X

THE DEATH OF NO MAN


No Man was out bright and early the next morning visiting this cave and
that to boast of his good fortune.

He strutted and made such a fuss generally that Old Moon Face said one
might think No Man’s was the first man-child of whom there was any
record.

When he had finished strutting and boasting, No Man trotted off into the
woods to get what he needed for the safe accomplishment of the deed which
he was still minded to do. And late in the afternoon he crept into a
thicket near Strong Hand’s cave and lay in wait.

But this time he had smeared himself from head to foot with moose dung,
and he knew that it would take a keener nose than Strong Hand’s to detect
him.

Strong Hand had not killed that day, and as he drew near his cave, the
strong smell of moose came to him from a thicket on the left of the
runway.

Ears and nose twitching and eyes alert he turned cautiously into the
thicket. Almost in his face there was a loud twanging jar, and at the
same instant a pain like fire darted through his entrails, and he knew
that he had been struck to death.

He dropped his spear, and felt foolishly at the little tuft of feathers
that had suddenly become attached to him at a point just below the
breast bone, and midway between the curling of the ribs.

[Illustration]

Then his eyes grew red, and a roar that shook the thicket burst from his
lips. He seized his club and rushed forward—and to the right, crouching,
sneaking and whimpering with fear he saw No Man running for dear life.

Once more Strong Hand bellowed, and when he heard that bellow No Man
screamed, and dropping his bow and arrows, fled with redoubled speed. But
Strong Hand was hard after him.

No Man was so frightened that he did not follow the runways and glades
of the forest tho’ these were well known to him. He ran aimlessly and
without husbanding his strength, slashing into bushes and through them,
crashing into thickets of young trees, doubling and running in circles.

They crossed a brook that was waist deep, and No Man bounding up the
further bank turned his head to locate Strong Hand and smashed straight
into a tree. He was a moment recovering himself, during that moment
Strong Hand gained.

A few minutes later Strong Hand tripped on a rock and fell at full
length, so that his club whirled out of his hand and dropped at a
distance.

He arose and pursued unarmed. But No Man had gained. Still Strong Hand
was the swifter runner, and if he had not been wounded, No Man could
never have kept away from him so long.

Both were panting, and catching at the air with gulping mouths; but No
Man was the more distressed, and his speed was diminishing. Inch by inch
Strong Hand reduced the distance between them. The smell of the moose
dung with which No Man had smeared himself became nearer, more pungent.
Now Strong Hand was only four leaps behind, now three, now two—but his
strength was going.

Then No Man tripped and fell screaming, and Strong Hand crushed down on
him. They lay there for a little, and panted.

Presently, but slowly and cautiously Strong Hand raised himself until he
was sitting astride of No Man. He dug his knees into No Man’s sides, and
he dug his fingers into the long matted hair of No Man’s head.

They had fallen, as chance would have it, upon ground covered with jagged
and broken rocks.

Strong Hand lifted No Man’s head until it was level with his own breast,
and then he smashed it down upon the rocks. And after that first blow No
Man had no face, and after the second, the life went out of him.

But lest there be any mistake Strong Hand turned him over, and with his
sharp, thick nails and gorilla fingers, tore him open, and dragged out
his entrails and scattered them upon the rocks.

Then he withdrew to a little distance and leaning his back against a
tree, prepared to die in peace. He tried many times to draw the arrow
from him but could not and he fell to fingering the feathers foolishly
and stroking them smooth. Then he began to itch between the shoulder
blades, and he was so weak that he could not scratch the place, so that
it troubled him a great deal.




[Illustration]




CHAPTER XI

THE DEATH OF STRONG HAND


It grew cold and dark and there was a singing in Strong Hand’s ears so
that he could distinguish no longer any but the most pronounced sounds of
the forest; for instance, the plat-plat of soft padded feet on the fallen
leaves.

The sound of these feet were very near and all around him. As it grew
darker he occasionally saw fiery eyes regarding him.

There was a whole circle of them, and the singing grew stronger and more
loud in his ears. All at once from the place where he had left the body
of No Man, arose whines, snarls, snappings, coughing, barking, and all
the noises that wolves make when they quarrel over their meat.

[Illustration: “NOT TILL I AM DEAD”]

“Not till I am dead,” said Strong Hand. “Not till I am dead,” and his
eyes became mysterious and plaintive like those of a child that is in
trouble and he turned them upward and saw where The Cause into which he
was returning had cast a scarf-of-stars across the sable shoulders of the
night.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]




CHAPTER XII

MAKU AND SHE WOLF


When the night, the day following, and the next night had passed, She
Wolf took her son in the hollow of her arm and went to look for No
Man. It was beginning to be autumn in the forest, the veins of the big
mosswood leaves were already scarlet; the sassafras were yellow and red;
the beeches yellow and crimson; the birches white and gold; the sky
thinly blue, with wispish puffs of cloud gusting over it. The air was
fine and keen.

She Wolf ran in a great circle, but slowly for she was very hungry, and
came upon No Man’s stale track in the thicket where he had lain in wait
for Strong Hand.

The track tho’ stale was very plain, for no rain had fallen on it, and No
Man had been running with all the weight of despair. She Wolf followed a
little way, and stooping picked up No Man’s bow and ten arrows which he
had dropped in his flight.

Here the track was joined by Strong Hand’s track, and She Wolf was
puzzled and did not understand any of it.

“Why did he drop his weapons?” she said.

And she went on. But she sat down in a sunny place by the brook to nurse
her son, who had begun to pipe aloud and clutch at her breasts with his
tiny paws. As he snuggled and sucked and gasped, she crooned a song over
him, making it up as she went along.

    “We went into the forest,
    The Man and I
    We were looking for No Man
    Who had not come back from the hunting
    We came on his track
    The Man and I
    And we found his weapons strewing the ground.
    And we do not understand—”

She stopped in the middle, quivering and twitching for she heard
footsteps behind her. It was Maku carrying her little daughter and out to
look for Strong Hand.

“Have you seen anything of Strong Hand?” she said.

“His track is with No Man’s,” said She Wolf. “I have followed them both
to this place.”

“The tracks are of the same age,” said Maku. “They were doubtless running
together on the same hunt.”

“Then let us follow them together,” said She Wolf. “Have done suckling,”
and she looked up and smiled at Maku. “He would drain me as dry as a bone
if I would let him,” she said.

“The girl, too, is always hungry,” said Maku with pride.

“They are of an age,” said She Wolf. “It may be that one day—”

And so talking and gossipping pleasantly, as women will, even when
anxious, they waded across the brook and followed the broad trail of No
Man and Strong Hand.

But when the trail ended they found nothing but bones, and not the whole
of a skeleton at that, for the wolves snarling, had carried away many of
the lesser bones. They found Strong Hand’s bones under the tree where he
had died, but some wolf had carried off the blood-smeared arrow that had
killed him. When the women knew that they were alone in the world, they
beat their breasts and howled, and threw themselves repeatedly upon the
ground.

[Illustration]

All day they wailed for the hunters who would not come any more, and in
the dark they scraped out a hollow on the hill side, and collecting the
bones of No Man and Strong Hand, placed them therein like the bones of
brothers and covered them with earth and stones and tears.

All this time the babies, curled like hedgehogs, and twitching, had slept
nose to nose in a sheltered place. They gripped each other with tiny
paws, and would not let go.

“See,” said Maku, thro her tears, “the little ones are already friends.”

“Let them be so,” said She Wolf, “and in order that we may not all
perish, let us all go to your cave to live. You shall tend the cave and
look to the children, and I will be the man and find food, for I am good
at hunting.”

So they went to Maku’s cave.

“What is the girl’s name?” asked She Wolf.

“We—she is not yet named,” said Maku.

“The man’s name is Sunrise,” said She Wolf, “because he came with the
sun. Let us therefore call the girl Dawn, for I am minded to think that
when they are well grown the sunrise will still follow the dawn.”




[Illustration]




CHAPTER XIII

THE WEAKNESS OF MAKU


A number of years passed, and Maku kept the cave while She Wolf did
the hunting. She Wolf was so occupied with the business of provider,
meat-getter and fish-catcher, that she did not have time to think about
any of the other business of life. But it was otherwise with Maku.

There was not much for her to do after the children were weaned and she
sat lazily in the sun and allowed her mind to run on old days.

It happened that a man began to hang about the cave. He had bright
feathers in his hair, and whenever Maku looked at him, he blinked and
nodded and showed his sharp white teeth, and sometimes she cast him a
word and then he would boast and tell her of his mighty deeds.

Sometimes Maku dreamed about this man at night; but she put off going
with him as long as she could, for that is the way with a woman. But
one day she got to thinking about Strong Hand, and the caresses and the
beatings that were equally sweet, and her blood began to run the more
swiftly.

And she thought too, on the pains of labor which are so terrible that
they are akin to a mighty joy, and of the downy little face that had
snuggled in her bosom, and of the little hands that had gripped and
tugged at her hair, and of the tiny voice that had piped in the night
because of hunger.

And thinking of these things and remembering, she could not resist any
longer. And the very next time the man presented himself before the cave
she went with him, to be caressed, and to be beaten, and to find her
happiness.

When She Wolf came back with the kill, the children ran out to meet her
and they told breathlessly, and at one and the same time, how a man,
adorned as to his head with bright feathers, had come and taken Maku away
with him.

She Wolf was very tired, for the hunt had been long.

“It is well,” she said “for now there is one less mouth to feed.”

[Illustration]




[Illustration]




CHAPTER XIV

SUNRISE AND DAWN


When the children were old enough, She Wolf took them with her on little
hunts, and taught them the signs of the forest, and the ways of the
beasts and as much as she knew of the ways of men.

Sunrise was an apt scholar, for he had the strength and hunting instincts
of his mother, and all the cleverness, with none of the cowardice, which
had distinguished his father. But Dawn did not take very kindly to the
life into which she had been born.

As much as people of those times could be, she was a dreamer. She would
pull out from a clear track to chase a butterfly, and she preferred wild
raspberries to moose-meat, but then she was only a little child, and not
very strong. This was a curious fact, considering her parentage.

She tired easily, and she had a habit of walking in the night and
crooning to herself. Altogether she was a trying pupil and She Wolf
rather despised her. But it was different with Sunrise.

As She Wolf had predicted, he followed Dawn, and was unhappy away from
her. She Wolf gave up the chase, and Sunrise armed with his father’s bow
and arrows did the hunting for the cave.

A time came when the nice collection of flints which No Man had left
behind him was almost entirely dispersed. Many of the flints had been
broken, many lost and it behooved Sunrise to replenish the supply. So
without saying anything to She Wolf he took his bow, some arrows with
broken heads, and one good arrow for a model, and trotted off to old No
Foot’s workshop on the flinty hillside.

[Illustration]

“Please,” said Sunrise, “I am nearly out of flints, and I must have new
ones or else She Wolf and Dawn will starve for want of meat.”

“Who are you to talk so big of hunting?” said No Foot, looking up.

“I am Sunrise, the son of No Man and She Wolf,” said Sunrise, “and I am
hard put to it for flints.”

“And what do you offer me in exchange for my trouble and my flints.”

“For so many,” said Sunrise and he opened his right hand twice “I will
give you as much moose-meat as I can bring hither in two trips.”

“I do not lack for meat,” said No Foot, “offer me something else.”

“But I do not know of anything else to offer,” said Sunrise with a catch
in his voice.

“What is that in your hand,” said No Foot and he indicated the bow.

“I do not know its name,” said Sunrise, “but with it I can strike things
that are far off.”

No Foot took the bow in his hands but could make nothing of it.

“It is some childishness,” he said.

In the hillside at the base of a flinty boulder a chipmunk had his hole
and was out sunning himself.

“If,” said Sunrise, “standing here I show you how to kill that chipmunk
will you give me the flints.”

“If you strike him from here,” said No Foot, “you shall have them.”

Sunrise took his one good arrow and fitted it to the string. Then he drew
it to the head, aimed a moment and let fly.

The flint point of the arrow struck a shower of sparks out of the flint
boulder just above the chipmunk’s head and the shaft was shattered into
pieces. The chipmunk dove into his hole, unharmed.

Sunrise was ready to cry with vexation, but when he turned to No Foot, he
saw that the old man’s face was wrapped with wonder.

“I am old,” said No Foot presently and slowly. “I have struck blows and I
have seen blows struck, but this blow was the most mighty.”

“It was badly aimed,” said Sunrise. “I am sorry, and it was my last good
flint.”

“Flints!” said No Foot. “Flints—you shall have flints. But strike me
another blow—mighty one.”

Again Sunrise smote the boulder mightily so that sparks flew, and the
shaft was shivered.

“He shivers the shafts,” said No Foot.

“My father, No Man, made this thing,” said Sunrise, “and now it is mine.”

“I, too, will make one and again others,” said No Foot, “and after this
day, men will no longer hunt with spear and club. But to him who first
makes these things great wealth will accrue, and because the thing is
young and was your father’s before you, you shall have half whatever men
bring to me in exchange. Of what wood is it made?”

And so old No Foot got hold of the bow. But he improved upon it, both in
workmanship and design, and he waxed very rich, but he gave a fair half
to Sunrise and many beautiful flints besides.




[Illustration]




CHAPTER XV

FIRE


Sunrise went away from No Foot’s cave, and his mind was full of the
sparks which his arrow head had struck from the boulder.

“They were like stars,” he told She Wolf, “only more bright; yet when I
went to pick them up there was nothing. Nor could old No Foot instruct
me, tho’ he said that in working with flints he had often seen the like
before.” But She Wolf was not interested and Sunrise told the tale of
the stars to Dawn, and she lent him both her ears, and opened her mouth
besides.

It befell after this, that often when Sunrise had a flint that was
damaged he would shoot it into a rock, for joy of seeing the sparks.
And it must be confessed that sometimes, when the desire of the sparks
was too heavy to bear, he would sacrifice a perfectly good arrow on
the flinty altar of his passion. But that did not matter much, because
Sunrise was now a very wealthy young man, and could afford to pay for his
pleasure.

He had one other greatest pleasure in life and that was the scratching of
pictures on bone.

[Illustration]

She Wolf had carried away many of the best examples by No Man from the
old cave, and Sunrise had been brought up on this gallery. Many a rainy
day he stayed at home imagining scenes and etching them into the bone,
while She Wolf and Dawn looked on and admired.

In time he excelled his father, and made the most wonderful pictures of
which there was any record.

And so matters went on until the summer of the big dryness. That was
a terrible time. No rain fell during the birth, life and death of two
moons. The grass turned yellow and brown, the little brooks dried up
completely, the rivers sank and became chains of pools, the pools sank
and retreated from each other, game became scarce, the wild raspberries
and blackberries and strawberries did not come to full fruition because
of the lack of water, and the struggle for existence became fierce and
intolerable.

But Sunrise was quite happy, for he had just discovered that any two
flints struck together with violence emitted stars, and wherever he went,
he carried two flints to be his solace in the heat of the noon. It was
no longer necessary to sacrifice good arrows. One day he halted for rest
in a valley not far from the caves of his tribe, and taking his flints,
one in each hand, fell to striking them lustily.

As luck would have it the sparks fell on a bed of tinder-dry, dusty white
lichen, and made black marks on it.

This interested Sunrise and he struck again and again. Then he examined
the black marks and wondered at the why and the wherefore.

Of a sudden he noticed that one of the marks was growing—it spread
rapidly in all directions, and its edges curled upward and were red. Then
a gust of wind whirled up the valley and the whole bed of lichen burst
into flame. Sunrise tried to catch the flames in his hands, and sprang
away with a yelp, for it seemed as if a snake had bitten him. The flames
sprang into a bush and roared. Sunrise backed away holding his hands
before his face. The wind and the flames seemed to increase together.
The whole side of the valley began to burn, brightly and fiercely, the
flames leaped up creepers and among the branches of trees, and the
roaring of them increased in power. And Sunrise, held by wonder and
driven by fear, backed slowly away; but fire and the fierce heat rushed
at him and billows of smarting smoke swept over him and presently he
turned and ran for his life. And the fire that he had kindled, snapped
and roared on his trail.




[Illustration]




CHAPTER XVI

THE FLIGHT OF THE TRIBE


Panting he bade She Wolf and Dawn leave the cave and run till they could
run no further, and he dashed from cave to cave and called upon his
people to run for their lives.

And the people looking to the southward beheld the black smoke and heard
the roaring of the fire, and snatching up whatever was dear to them,
turned and fled howling into the North.

There was no cave to which Sunrise did not run and when he had visited
the last cave of all, he struck out in a great circle, until he crossed
the trail of She Wolf and Dawn and then he followed, running at full
speed, crouching, and frenzied both with wonder and with fear.

He overtook slower runners, men overladen, women with children, little
children—and his heart became sick and heavy as he ran, for he knew that
in that hunt many must be overtaken. And he knew that the fault was his.

For the slow there was no mercy. The oldest, the youngest and the dearest
possessions were abandoned to the rapid fire. With despair, dormant
instinct came to life. For men sought safety in the tops of trees, and
fell presently to the ground charred and shrivelled.

No Foot, trailing his crushed foot after him was one of the first to
start into the North, but he went at a snail’s pace, and was soon
distanced by the others.

[Illustration]

The old man’s arms were full of unfinished bows, and his good tools and
his precious flints. He walked along, limping at the very tail of the
procession, and gradually dropping further and further behind.

And after a little as he was stumping along and dragging his crushed foot
after him, the fire caught up with him and threw him on his face, and
passed on.

So many thousands of years after No Foot died, that we may not even guess
at their number, men digging for a railroad came upon a skeleton lying
face down upon a pile of half finished flints.

The left foot of the skeleton was curiously twisted and deformed; but
presently, on being exposed to the air, the bones turned to powder and
nothing remained but the flints. At first the men thought that they had
opened a prehistoric grave; but considering that the skeleton was lying
face downward, in a sprawling attitude, and that the flints upon which
it lay, were but half finished and were charred by fire, something like
the truth dawned upon the workmen, and they wondered over their cans of
noonday food what manner of man the lame flint maker had been and what
life had been like in the old days.

But we know that the lame flint maker was old No Foot, and that first,
last and always he was a good workman.




[Illustration]




CHAPTER XVII

COLD AND HEAT


All that were left of the tribe, foot sore and uncomprehending, came at
length to rest on a high and barren plateau.

Miles behind them, to the southward, the fire still raged on their trail.
East and West as far as the eye could travel, black smoke poured upward,
but thro’ and above the smoke to the westward, the heavens flamed with
the glory of the setting sun.

To the North, the whole country pitched barrenly downward, and then
became an undulating level bare of trees and water courses; beyond this
desert expanse, rose a barren of purple mountains capped with snow.

It was not until he reached the plateau that Sunrise came up with She
Wolf and Dawn. She Wolf was keeping an anxious eye out for him; but Dawn,
broken with fatigue, had thrown herself face downward and was asleep.

Sunrise, sick with grief, greeted She Wolf, and went about counting
heads. Many had been overladen in that hunt; old men, women and children.
One Eye had saved his skin, but Moon Face had perished with his riches.
Maku was missing, and No Foot, and there were many others.

Sunrise urged this man and that to travel forward in the night, and put
the miles between them, and the hunter flames, but altho’ it was bitter
cold on the plateau, he could persuade no one to move.

The tribe was so tired that it could hardly stand up. Men, women and
children came close together for warmth, and in a tangled huddle prepared
to pass the night. It became colder, and the stars began to appear here
and there in the heavens.

The fire advanced upon the base of the plateau, and Sunrise raged at the
people, who cuddling against each other for warmth, sat stupidly and
regarded it.

But, in spite of his rage, he cuddled with them for the cold was now
intense. He sat and reflected upon the roaring and vindictive enemy which
he had aroused, and the cold increased. He recalled the warmth of the
fire in his face, and he would have given something for a little of that
warmth to stretch his hands against.

“And yet,” he said to himself, “in a little I shall be running at full
speed from that same warmth. It will not be long before the sons of my
stars come raging and roaring up the side of this hill, clearing the
rocks and the earth, and the moss and whatsoever is on the hill. And yet
the warmth was pleasant.”

His spine twisted him with a shiver. “If there were water here,” he said,
“it would be turned into stone by the cold.”

All of a sudden one of the women fell to howling and beating her breasts;
and the rest knew some one had died. It was the woman’s son, a boy,
nearly a year old, whom she had lugged all the way from the caves. The
cold had killed him.

“Be still, woman!” said old One Eye, coughing. “In a little we shall all
be dead either from the heat yonder or the cold here. Beat your breasts
as much as you wish for that will warm you; but do not howl, for some of
us are weary, and wish very much to sleep.”

So the woman’s howl became a whimper, but she continued to beat her
breasts. And the night went on, and the child lay frozen at her feet.

And now far below them, two thousand feet and more, the fire glowed in
broken curves along the base of the plateau: but beyond that it did not
seem to advance. The night wind blowing in the reverse direction rolled
the smoke back upon its tracks and kept the view clear.

“Better the warmth than the cold,” said Sunrise, and his teeth
chattered. “I am going down the hill to warm myself. Who comes?”

But the fear of the fire was on the people, and they whimpered and whined
and smote themselves, and told him that he was mad and would be killed.
He could not budge them.

“In a little,” said old One Eye, “we shall be rested and have strength to
go on—but not back.”

“Then I go alone,” said Sunrise, and he arose and called his mother by
name.

“I am here,” answered She Wolf, “but I think the girl is dead, for she is
cold to touch and will not answer.”

Sunrise fell as tho’ his belly had been filled with stones, so heavy was
his dread.

He knelt by Dawn and felt of her and listened for her breath. He could
feel her heart beating feebly against the palm of his hand, but she was
very cold.

He gathered her in his arms, and strode down the hill toward the fire.
She Wolf limped behind, (a thorn had pierced her foot) beating her
breasts and whimpering. But with every step of the descent the air became
warmer and in their faces was a pleasant glow from the fire.

A number of hundred feet from the fire they halted, for the heat was
becoming too great to bear. Sunrise bade his mother sit and he laid Dawn
in her arms.

“She will not die,” he said. Then with his hands before his face, he
descended further. And for a very long time he stood peering between his
fingers and observing the actions of the fire. Suddenly he cried aloud
for joy and turning bounded up the hill to where his mother sat with Dawn
in her arms.

“It does not eat the stones,” he cried, “nor the earth—I have watched
a long time and it has not come forward by the breadth of my arm. It
springs only upon trees and bushes and things which grow.”

“Then we are safe here!” said She Wolf.

“We are safe, and warm,” said Sunrise, and he felt of Dawn.

“Dawn!” He said, “Dawn!”

She opened her eyes and smiled upon him.

“Are you warm now?” he said. “Are you warm?”

“I am warm,” she said, “but very weary and it may be hungry.”

“Sleep, then,” he said, “for there is no food, and in the morning there
will be a hunt.”

Then, his heart light with happiness, he turned and ran up the hill. In
his absence two more children had died of the cold.

“O people!” he cried. “Below there is warmth and safety, for the stones
and the earth fighting for us have turned back the mighty hunter who
sought to devour us.”

The querulous voice of One Eye was heard in answer.

“Be still! Sunrise,” he said. “This is as good a place for dying as any.
Furthermore, we are weary, and some of us wish very much to sleep.”

“You at least,” said Sunrise furiously, “shall not die here, for I shall
drag you down the hill by the hair of your head and with such force that
you will die on the way.... Who follows me?”

But the people only whimpered.

Sunrise caught up a spear and brought down the handle on the nearest back.

“You shall not follow,” he cried in a mighty voice. “You shall go
before, and I will drive you.”

And he fell upon them with the handle of the spear. Now the people, up to
the boldest hunter among them, were numb with cold and had no fight in
them.

So the fear of Sunrise fell upon them, and they went before him like
herded sheep. And he kept smiting the backs of those who brought up the
rear.

Old One Eye was not one of these. Indeed he was one of those who led the
route.

When they came to where She Wolf and Dawn lay sleeping in the warmth,
Sunrise left off beating them, and they settled down with their hands
before their faces.

Delicious warmth crept into the icy crannies of their bones, and they
slept.




[Illustration]




CHAPTER XVIII

THE DEATH OF ONE EYE


From now on Sunrise was the leader of his people. They never got over the
bullying which he gave them, when they were numb and empty of fight. He
only had to command and he was obeyed; only once was there anything like
grumbling.

They crossed the plateau, and descended into the barren plains upon
the other side. Here night overtook them; and as before a bitter frost
threatened them with death. It was then that they grumbled. At least,
they said, they might have remained by the fire and have died warm, and
they cursed Sunrise for having disturbed them. Sunrise retorted that they
were little children and not hunters, chipmunks but not men, four-footed
do-nothings who were a stench in his nostrils.

Then he went apart in bitterness and gathering lichens and moss and sage
brush, made a heap, and placed rocks about the heap in a circle.

He struck flints together, and after no little toil, kindled a fire, and
they, sitting about it were warmed and comforted, and held their hands
before their faces and wondered.

Game was very scarce in the plains, but after a number of days, thirsty,
and half starved, Sunrise led his people in among the foothills of the
purple mountains with the snow tops.

[Illustration]

There the gullies and the natural runways were pricked thick with the
tracks of moose, elk, deer, and bear, streams were abundant, teeming
with trout, and best of all, for the tribe was a forest tribe, the whole
country was covered with splendid trees.

Men, women and children fell to burrowing out homes in the hillsides.
Long Arm, a disciple of old No Foot, gathered sea-green flint and set
up a workshop; Hunch Back, his son, established himself near at hand and
went in for manufacture of bows; Fish Catch, the nephew of Fish Catch,
collected tough fibres and began the intricate knitting of nets; and
Sunrise in an open rocky place experimented with fire, and brought it
under complete control.

[Illustration: THE KNITTER OF NETS]

One day as Sunrise, with smarting eyes, sat feeding his fire, a little
boy no higher than a man’s waist, came trotting up with the roughest kind
of a bowl shaped of grey white clay in his hands.

“See what I have made, Sunrise,” he said.

“But what is the use of it?” said Sunrise.

“I wish to lay it near your fire,” said the little boy, “for that will
make it hard and then it will hold water. The sun at this season is not
hot enough to do this.”

“What is your name?” said Sunrise, “for you seem very thoughtful, for so
little a child.”

“I have no name,” said the child.

“I will call you, Shaper,” said Sunrise, “for you have taken clay and
shaped it; not foolishly as it is customary for little children to do,
but with a purpose.”

They baked the bowl before the fire, and it became hard and brittle, and
altho’ parts about the edges of it crumbled, leaving it very shapeless,
they found on trial that it would hold water.

“I will teach you,” said Sunrise, “how to take care of a fire of your
own. You shall make many things of this kind and I will see to it that
people give you valuable presents in exchange. For I think that after
this when a man wakes in the night and is thirsty, it will be possible
for him to drink without running to the river for the water.”

[Illustration]

When the shaper had been taught how to build and tend a fire, he started
a little workshop near the place where he had found the clay, and worked
busily at the making and baking of bowls. And in both branches of trade
he made astonishing progress.

But this shaper was a remarkable child, for no sooner was he an adept at
the making of bowls than he wearied of it, and would sooner have starved
than make any more. But for that matter he was not in the least bent on
starving. So what did he do, but take two disciples of his own age, teach
them the craft, lie all day sleeping in the warmth of the fire, and, to
use a modernism, pocketing four-fifths of the profits. He became so fat
and lazy that he could hardly walk, and at the age of twelve was already
annoying the women with his attentions.

The tribe was more comfortable than ever it had been before. Bows and
arrows supplied game, bowls full of cold water stood handy in every cave,
and as the season advanced in severity fires were kindled and kept going.

One day Sunrise went to One Eye’s cave bearing a gift of venison. This
was after the first snow, and the weather was bitterly cold. In front of
One Eye’s cave was a cheery fire, and in the cave itself lay the old man
dead. He had died in the night of his great age and of the cold.

Now this is deserving of mention. That when One Eye fled from the great
fire, he carried with him but one treasure, and that was neither club,
nor spear, nor bow, nor net, but the flat bone upon which his own
glorious deeds had been recorded by the clever fingers of No Man.

At no time had his weariness or suffering been so great as to make him
part with this heavy article. Now he lay dead with the bone clenched in
his frozen hands.

“One Eye is dead and done with,” said Sunrise, musing. “There is no woman
to howl over him. He will never see with his one eye any more. He will
not hear the sounds of the forest any more; nor will he lick his lips at
the smell of meat.”

“When we have brought down the roof of his cave upon him, he will be
hidden to the eye, and forgotten by the mind. Yet I am told that he
was once the swiftest of all runners, a mighty hunter and a striker of
terrible blows. These things and others which are true and untrue have
been recorded on this bone which even in death he clings to.”

“The hands which kindled this fire are dead and in a little the fire too
will be dead for want of nourishment. Yet if I throw wood upon it, it
will live, and if I had the will I could keep it alive, as long as my
own life lasted, and afterward my son could do likewise and after him his
son.”

“Thus many years after old One Eye had become powdered bone in a filled
up cave, the fire which he started, would still be burning. And it might
happen that one, half dead of the cold, should be laid before that fire
and brought back to life. And would that be the work of him who lies here
without breath or motion, or would it be my work who gave food to the
fire when it was dying, or would it be the work of my son, or of him who
brought the half dead one and laid him in the warmth?”

Such were the thoughts that passed thro’ the mind of Sunrise, tho’ he did
not say them out in words as I have done. He simply stood and wondered
about death, and that is one of the reasons that man has become man. Like
the other animals he accepted all things, but unlike them, he wondered
about them, and asked questions.

Sunrise bent and regarded the fire closely. Then he thrust his hand into
it, and laughed.

“Food will not recover it now,” he said, “for it is dead, and that is the
end of One Eye.”




[Illustration]




CHAPTER XIX

THE COURTING OF DAWN


When Sunrise got back to his cave, he found She Wolf sitting alone by the
fire.

“Where is Dawn?” he said, for She Wolf was not first in his affections.

“She has gone to fish thro’ the ice,” said She Wolf, “and she will return
soon.”

“I have just found One Eye dead in his cave,” said Sunrise.

“It is well,” said She Wolf, “for now there is one less mouth to feed.”

“One mouth more or less matters little.”

“What you think, I think,” said She Wolf, “and therefore as you say a
mouth or two more in this cave would not matter.”

“Whom do you wish to bring to this cave?” said Sunrise.

“I wish you and Dawn to bring the extra mouth,” said She.

“I do not understand,” said Sunrise.

“The matter is simple,” said She Wolf, “and Dawn will not say no to you.”

Sunrise sat and thought.

“There is a time for all things,” he said presently, “Hitherto I have
been very busy with a number of things. But I have always intended one
day to make a cave of my own and take Dawn to it. For always when I am
away from her there is a something which keeps calling me back to her
side. But she is very young still, and not strong, and I will wait.”

“You are of an age,” said She Wolf, “and even if you are willing to wait,
I know of others that are not willing.”

“Who?” said Sunrise suspiciously.

“Dawn,” said She Wolf.

“You spoke of others.”

“When you are at a distance,” said She Wolf, “certain young men, sticking
bright feathers in their hair, come and hang about this cave.”

“They do, do they,” said Sunrise angrily. “And what do they want.”

“It may be that they want me,” said his mother with a grin, “but I do not
think so. Listen then. Whenever Dawn shows herself, these young men, fall
to blinking and nodding their heads and showing their teeth—.”

“I will kill them,” cried Sunrise and he reached for his bow.

“There is an easier way.”

“Name it.”

“Take her yourself.”

“Tell me one thing,” said Sunrise, “does she throw looks and words to
these young men.”

“She does not,” said She Wolf.

“Then,” said Sunrise, “I will not kill them, and when the spring comes,
I will hollow a cave and take Dawn to live in it. But now the ground is
like stone and no man may dig it. Furthermore it is customary to wait
until the spring. Let these things be understood.”

When Sunrise saw Dawn coming up from the river with her catch, he knew
that she must be cold. Therefore he threw sticks and brush upon the fire
so that it shot upward and gave out delicious warmth.

“Behold!” said Dawn, “I have caught three fishes, one for each. But they
are very little.”

“You are a mighty fisher,” said Sunrise, “and when we have a cave of our
own, you shall do the fishing and the hunting, while I lie in the sun or
before the fire.”

Thus in a bantering voice Sunrise proposed to Dawn.

And she turned away her face and was silenced. And thus she accepted him.
She Wolf took the fish and went aside to clean them.

“It will be in the spring,” said Sunrise, “when the earth is soft for
digging and the leaves are green on the trees. Are you willing?”

She turned and looked him full in the face.

“I am willing,” she said. Her eyes clung to his and his to hers. He tried
to speak but his voice choked in his throat, and for the first time in
his life, desire like a flame swept him from head to heel. And mingled
with the desire was a nameless shrinking and terror—a shrinking from
himself and a terror of Dawn.

He mastered himself and spoke in a thick voice.

“Dawn,” he said, “after this I will hunt for this cave, and collect wood
for this fire, but I will not live here any more.”

He rose and went silently into the forest.

“Where is he going,” asked She Wolf from a distance.

“He is not going to live in this cave any more,” said Dawn. “But he will
come every day and bring us meat and wood for the fire.”

Then She Wolf chuckled and went on cleaning the fish, but Dawn ran into
the cave and hid herself.




[Illustration]




CHAPTER XX

SUNRISE DIGS A CAVE


Sunrise went to the cave of Fish Catch—a young man a few years older than
himself, who was so ugly that no woman would have him, and who therefore
lived alone. Fish Catch was busy with a net.

“Fish Catch,” said Sunrise, “may I live with you until spring? I will see
that you do not lack for food.”

Now in winter when the rivers were frozen people did not have very much
use for nets, and Fish Catch consequently was often hard put to it for
food. Therefor this proposal met with his entire approval, and he said so.

“But what,” he said, “is the matter with your own cave?”

“It is a small cave at best,” said Sunrise, “and we were crowded.”

Fish Catch laughed cynically. He thought it not unlikely that Dawn had
taken a club to Sunrise and driven him away from her. But he was afraid
to say so openly.

One day Sunrise killed a bear and he hastened to She Wolf and Dawn,
taking the four feet with him. Usually he did not return from the hunting
till dark, but on this occasion he had killed early and was back by noon.

Squatting in the snow in front of the cave, he saw two young bachelors
with bright feathers stuck in their hair. They were waiting for Dawn to
come out. Sunrise strode up to them in a fury.

“Be off!” he cried, “I will have none of this. Let me catch you making
eyes at Dawn and I will strike to kill. Let this be clearly understood.”

They saw the fury in his eye and scuttled off.

“Do not come within shouting distance of this cave,” he shouted after
them, “for the sound or sight of you is not to be borne.”

She Wolf, sitting in the mouth of the cave, chuckled and grinned.

“They are always here,” she said.

Sunrise turned on her fiercely.

“Are you, too, against me?” he cried. “Faugh—you have a bow and arrows.
Use them.”

“The next time they come,” said his mother in a conciliating voice, “I
will use the bow and the arrows.”

But she did not. Nor the next time—nor the next time—nor the next.

But Sunrise went away appeased.

And when the frost went out of the ground he selected the side of a hill
where the sun smote from early morning till late afternoon and fell to
burrowing and digging a splendid cave, which was to be the very largest
and most splendid cave of which there was any record up to that time.

[Illustration]

But the work progressed slowly, for he was obliged to hunt betimes, and
the cave was to be of splendid proportions. It was not finished until the
spring was well advanced.

Tall violets stood by the brooks, flowers crowded between stones, and
grew over the open places, trees, bushes, hills, valleys and forests were
misty with new green.

Sunrise arose in the sparkling dawn and took up his bow and his arrows.
Birds were trilling in the forest.

“To-day,” he said, “I will hunt, and to-night—to-night—.”

Then he ran into the forest laughing and singing.

The sun was going down when Sunrise presented himself joyously before the
cave where She Wolf and Dawn lived. But when he called to them, they did
not answer, and when he went into the cave, he found that She Wolf had
been shot unto death, and that Dawn had vanished away.

Sunrise knelt by his mother and called her by name and felt of her. And
presently by the coldness of her body he knew she had been dead a long
time.

He went out of the cave and ran in a great circle. After a little he came
upon the trail of Dawn and a man, and it pointed away from the caves of
the tribe and was straight, like the flight of an arrow.

But Sunrise flung himself along the trail, and all night he ran like a
wolf.

“They will not dare stop,” he said, “and it may be that I shall not be
too late.”

With the first light he came to a flowery, grassy glade in the forest.
But the grass was greatly trampled and many of the flowers were broken,
for there had been a terrible struggle in that place. And Sunrise read
the signs of it as we read printed words in a book.

“She fought against him,” he cried, “she fought against him!”

He smiled a little then and looked upward, but after that in his life he
was to smile but once more.

He lay face downward, digging and tearing at the ground until the nails
of his fingers were broken and bloody.

Birds sang and the sun rose.




[Illustration]




CHAPTER XXI

THE TRAIL OF TWO


Sunrise ran in a great circle and found where the trail of Dawn and the
man left the grassy glade, and bending to the right, wound along among
the foothills of the mountains.

“One runs faster than two,” said Sunrise, “and there is now no need of
hurry.”

And he thought of what he would do when he caught up with them.

He was now in the complete possession of his abilities, calm deliberate
and constructive.

By stepping in the man’s tracks Sunrise was able to calculate his stride
and the speed at which he had been going.

“It is little better than a walk,” he said, “and if I run slowly, I shall
gain fast.”

Running, therefore, slowly, he suddenly stopped all a-quiver, for he
smelt blood. There was a little splash of it on the leaves of a young
moose-wood. Sunrise considered the blood to mean this:

“Dawn,” he said, “does not go willingly, the man is forcing her to run
ahead of him, and here he found it necessary to prick her with his spear.
She is still fighting against him,” he said, and that surmise shot a
pitiful little spasm of joy into his sick heart. He ran on.

“After a time,” he reflected, “the man will be obliged to hunt. It may
be that I shall find Dawn bound to a tree waiting for his return. In that
case I, too, will wait for his return. But lest he smell me out I will
take up the next fresh moose dung that I find and smear myself with it.”

In the cool bottom of a valley Sunrise found a confusion of tracks. Two
sets led from the valley and one set led in the reverse direction, that
is, back to it.

“They passed this place and went on,” said Sunrise. “Then they came
back, then they turned and went on again.”

He thought hard and when he had puzzled it out he laughed a short, harsh
laugh.

“The man,” he said, “made up his mind to hunt, but, being a fool, he
either did not tie Dawn to a tree or he tied her like a fool and she
broke loose. As soon as he had gone, she followed the trail backward,
running as hard as she could, for see these return tracks are far apart.
The man, coming back from the hunt, found that she had gone, and
followed. Here he caught up with her and made her turn again. But he had
to prick her with his spear to make her go—see, here is more blood. I am
not far behind.”

The solution proved correct, and Sunrise even found the thongs with which
Dawn had been insecurely bound, and the tree which the man had selected
to bind her to; the bark here and there was stained darkly.

After this he increased his pace.

“Dawn,” he said presently, “is growing weak for she no longer steps out
steadily. It is probable that she will die of her wounds and of her
weariness, and it is better so. But I would like to speak with her before
she dies, for she is little more than a child.”

Sunrise was very hungry, and being now sure of his quarry, he stopped to
hunt, and when he had killed, he ate, but sparingly, drank deep, and
slept for a few hours. He rose greatly refreshed, and taking a lump of
meat with him, ran swiftly on into the night.

Toward morning he was aware that Dawn and the man were increasing their
pace. But Dawn had begun to run very unsteadily, and in two places the
trail showed where she had tripped and fallen.

“He knows that I am on his trail,” said Sunrise, “and his belly is cold
with fear. Soon he will leave the woman and go on alone, but he will
not get away. And it were better for him that he had not been born. I am
minded to do things with him that have never been done to any man before.”

But it was not until noon that he came upon Dawn in the place where
the man had deserted her. She called to him before he saw her, tho’ he
already knew that she was near. And what she called to him was this:

“I fought against him, Sunrise—I fought against him.”

[Illustration: SHE SOBBED IN HIS ARMS]

He knelt by her, his eyes swimming with tears and pity, and fondled her
and comforted her.

“Here is meat,” he said, “only live till I return from this hunt, and I
will look after you.”

“You will take me—even now,” she said.

“Even now,” said Sunrise, “for the fault is not yours. And between us two
it shall be as tho’ this thing had never happened.”

She sobbed in his arms.

“Only live,” he said. “Only live—and I will return as soon as I may.”

As he turned tenderly from her, and shot along the trail, it seemed to
Dawn that Sunrise was shining with strength and beauty.

All that afternoon he ran, and all that night, and even to him it seemed
wonderful that it should be so. His breath came and went softly like
that of a sleeping child, his muscles were like those of a man who has
eaten and drunk and slept deep. There was no labor in his movements. He
was like a fire that feeds on its own progress. He was running on the
tireless feet of love and hate.

In the morning, he came out on a cup-like and barren plain that was
between the foothills of the mountains and the mountains themselves, and
a mile before him, running on the feet of fear, waist deep in the white
mist of the morning, he saw the man.




[Illustration]




CHAPTER XXII

THE TRAIL OF ONE


Fear and hate and love eats up the miles even as the sun eats up the
white mist of the morning. But the distance that was between the two men
neither increased nor diminished; it became terribly hot, and the going
was arduous. Tough, spiky bushes covered the plain to the height of a
man’s knee but they seemed less to grow out of the deep, shifting dust,
than to be stuck into it.

The progress the men made was rather by a succession of leaps than by
straight running. It was like trying to make speed over an unequal beach
covered with knee-deep water, and it told upon them fearfully.

A hot wind was blowing with fierce gusts. Sometimes it sent spinning
columns of dust high into the air, and with the same breath destroyed
them and hurled the dust fragments into the faces of the men. Now and
again, above the gusting of the wind, the pulseless, clicking, singing
signals of rattle snakes could be heard.

As the day advanced, black clouds shot with lightning began to bank up
in the West, and thunder no louder than the purring of a cat made itself
heard. And still the men staggered on, but their speed now was no more
than that of a fast walk.

Their throats and the roofs of their mouths were as if calcined by
fire; their eyes were red, burnt and dry. And those two valiant feet of
Sunrise, Hate and Love, began to doubt each other. “It may be,” they
said, “that Fear is stronger than we.” But they went on, bleeding and
bruised. And it was not otherwise with the feet of Fear. “We are done
for,” they said. But they went on.

And now the black, thunder-bearing clouds, rushing up from the west, came
between the sun and the plain, darkened the bushes and the dust and the
figures of the men. But the heat did not diminish. And the men crept on.

Between them the distance was now no more than the half of a mile.
Their pace had become that of children learning to walk. But of the two
children Sunrise was the more advanced in walking. And the world grew
darker, the wind began to howl, and a continuous cloud of stinging dust
smote into their faces.

There was no longer any blue sky, for the black thunder clouds had
covered it from one horizon to the other, and the mountains themselves
were hidden. The plain was like the floor of a great dark cave, and
in the midst of it were two little children that stumbled forward,
staggered, fell, and rose again. But Hate and Love was stronger than
their brother Fear, and he staggered to more purpose, and he did not fall
so often.

And presently he began to call upon Fear to stop and face him.

It was then that the whole cave was filled with a blue glare that shook
and was more bright than the light of the sun. And at the same moment
there was a detonation of thunder, more loud and terrible than the
falling-in upon themselves of mountains. And the hearts of the men stood
still in their breasts.

And long after the darkness had closed in again, their eyes were filled
with the shaking blue glare, and their ears with the thunder.

There was a long hush—even the wind ceased. Then again the glare—but more
bright, and again the thunder, but more terrible. And glare followed
glare, and the thunder became continuous, and the wind came with
redoubled fury, and the dust rose in clouds and hid the men, the one from
the other.

Then came the rain, but not in drops and jets. Its fall was more like
that of a solid, and the whole earth rose in smoke to meet it. The
blackness was now like the blackness of night, and a man could no longer
see the distance that is between two trees standing in a thick forest.

Sunrise lay upon his face, and sobbed in the storm, for he made sure that
his vengeance would escape him. He did not feel the cold rain on his
parched body; he no longer feared the lighting and the thunder. Time and
again he rose and tried to pierce the blackness of the storm. But the
man was hidden.

Now the curtain of the elements that was breaking the heart of one man,
was as a mighty stimulant to the feet of the other, and he made a crafty
turn and went forward.

The rain and the cool refreshed him and he made sure that he would escape.

But he was too crafty by a half, for he lost his way in that storm, and
after a little, with triumphant and relieved heart, he staggered straight
into the place, that of all places in the world he was most anxious to
avoid. And that was the place where Hate and Love stood with Despair and
sought to pierce the storm.

A few feet away, through the smoking deluge of the rain, Sunrise saw the
crouching figure of a man. It was outlined in a white steam, and was
coming on. At first Sunrise could not realize that it was The Man. When
he did he smiled peacefully and he stepped forward, and taking the man
gently by the shoulder turned his face upward and looked upon it long,
and quietly.

When the man felt the hand on his shoulder, and saw the face that
regarded him, hope that had sustained him perished. His fingers twitched
foolishly, and after a little, he sobbed once, and shivered and was
still. Then he collapsed and fell.

Sunrise sat down beside him.

“We must rest for a while,” said Sunrise, “I have not now the strength to
do that which I have come to do.”

The man nodded.

And after that, for a long time, no word was spoken and no sign made.

The man lay on the ground breathing hard, and Sunrise sat beside him. The
rain fell drenchingly upon them. About them the storm raged, and above.

“Put your feet close together,” said Sunrise, when he was rested enough.
“I am going to tie you.”

So the man put his feet close together, and Sunrise bound them with the
thongs that had bound Dawn. “Now lie on your breast,” said Sunrise, “and
cross your hands upon your back.” And he bound the hands.

Sunrise turned the man over, and after that the man kept his eyes on
Sunrise, to see what he was minded to do.

For hours screams pierced the storm, and could be heard above thunder.




[Illustration]




CHAPTER XXIII

THE LONG TRAIL


Sunrise, carrying his bow and arrows, toiled over the plain heavy with
moo the recent rain. The sun shone strongly and the sky was blue. Behind
him the snow capped mountains glistened in the bright light, before him a
barrier of lofty forest, fresh and green, marked the termination of the
plain. He was bent low to the ground, and extreme exhaustion marked his
going. His hands and forearms were dark and clotted with that which was
drying on them.

“If she will only live till I come,” he said, “if she will only live till
I come.”

The sun blazed; the feet of the man were springless; his eyes, deep
sunken, burned like red coals.

“If she will only live till I come,” he said, “if she will only live till
I come.”

He was following the back-trail by memory and instinct, for the rain
had wiped all signs of the pursuit from the face of the earth. At times
Sunrise thought of what he was leaving behind him; at times of the work
that was still to do.

These two thoughts, so opposite that it was paradoxical for them to be
contained in one skull, supported him thro the cruel toil of his going.

When he came to the forest it was wet and green and full of bird
singing: for at this time the birds were mating and it seemed sweet to
them.

That day he killed, ate greatly and drank deep. After which he slept; and
there was no log in the forest which lay more still. It was as tho’ he
had died.

In the night wolves came and sniffed at him and could hardly believe the
noses which told them that he was alive and not for them. In the morning
he came to life, and tho’ still aching in every bone, took up the
back-trail at the trot.

The going was easier in the forest and more secure, for there the rain
had not fallen so violently, and the tracks were still visible—his own
tracks and the tracks of those feet which would not press into moss any
more. He went on all that day, and the next night.

He came at length to the place where he had left Dawn, but she was not
there. He knew that she would not be, and yet somehow his heart sank.

“She had no weapons,” he said. “Furthermore she was very weak and it may
be that the meat was not sufficient.”

For an hour or more, running swiftly, he followed a winding and rambling
trail.

“She was searching for food,” he said, “but at this season there are no
berries, and she was without weapons.”

The trail finally turned abruptly downward into a gully filled with young
trees, from whose midst could be heard the chattering of a brook.

Sunrise paused on the brink. His head sank on his chest; his muscles
relaxed. He all but dropped his bow. As he stood thus the days of his
youth went from him forever.

“I shall find her below,” he said presently, “but she will not speak to
me. I have been too long in coming.”

He descended into the gully, slowly, like one in a dream.

She had died among the violets by the brook, and she was not yet cold. In
her hand was a branch of birch half stripped of its leaves; for she had
eaten them to stave off starvation.

He sat for a long time with her head on his knees. “I should have stayed
with you, Dawn,” he said. “I should have let the man go.”

And later.

“There will never be any solace to me in thinking of what I have done.
My cave will be always empty now. There will be no son to cling to my
fingers with his little hands. There will be nothing for me now. For I
shall always be finding you silent among the violets by the brook.”

For a long time the strong man was shaken with sobs, so that it seemed as
if they would kill him. After that a kind of exaltation possessed him and
he saw visions of her. Wherever he looked he saw her coming to him thro
the young trees.

“She is not dead,” he cried, “she is not dead.”

But the corpse at his feet was now icy cold.

Then he seemed to see her going thro a strange forest alone, and she was
without weapons or food. He called to her, but she only shook her head
and fell to the ground.

“She is starving,” he cried.

[Illustration]

But she staggered to her feet and went on. And now she was crossing an
arid plain, but upon the other side were the fires of a strange tribe,
and in the mouths of all the caves meat was hanging.

The people beckoned to her and called and she stretched out her arms to
them, but it seemed impossible that she should reach them, so slowly she
went and so wearily she dragged her feet.

But the vision went out, and the brook was loud in his ears.

“If she had had food,” he said, “she might have reached that friendly
tribe and they would have given her a cave to rest in and cool water to
drink.”

As he spoke a young deer stepped into the brook with a clinking of hooves
upon stones. Sunrise loosed an arrow, and the deer pierced thro the
heart, fell shapelessly in the shallow water.

“She shall not go on this journey without food,” said Sunrise.

He cleaned the kill and then toiling till his back was like to break, he
made a great excavation in the side of the gully, and therein he laid
Dawn and the young deer.

Then he looked lovingly upon his faithful bow and his good arrows.

“It may be,” he said at length, “that the journey is very long and the
deer will not suffice.”

And he opened Dawn’s left hand and clasped it about the grip of the bow
and in her right hand he laid the arrows.

“It may be,” he said, “that one day I shall follow on your trail again.”

Then he began to close the grave. But twice that he might look once
more on Dawn he desisted and undid what he had done. When the work was
finished, he turned slowly away.

“Now I will go back to my people,” he said.

The fires of the tribe were days distant, and, without food or weapons,
he was naked as he had come into the world. But he set his valiant feet
upon the long trail. And as he went he kept finding her silent among the
violets.


THE END

[Illustration]