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I
INTO THE
PRIMITIVE
"Old
longings nomadic leap,
Chafing at
custom's chain,
Again
from its brumal
sleep
Wakens
the ferine strain."
B
UCK
did not read the
newspapers, or he would have
known that
trouble
was brewing, not alone for
himself, but for every
tide-
water
dog, strong of muscle and
with warm, long hair,
from
Puget
Sound to San Diego. Because
men, groping in the Arctic
darkness,
had
found a yellow metal, and
because steamship and
transportation
companies
were booming the find,
thousands of men were
rushing into
the
Northland. These men wanted
dogs, and the dogs
they wanted were
heavy
dogs, with strong muscles by
which to toil, and furry
coats to
protect
them from the frost.
Buck
lived at a big house in the
sun-kissed Santa Clara Valley.
Judge
Miller's
place, it was called. It stood back
from the road, half
hidden
among
the trees, through which
glimpses could be caught of the
wide
cool
veranda that ran around
its four sides. The
house was approached
by
gravelled driveways which
wound about through
wide-spreading
lawns
and under the interlacing
boughs of tall poplars. At the
rear things
were
on even a more spacious
scale than at the front. There
were great
stables,
where a dozen grooms and
boys held forth, rows of
vine-clad
servants'
cottages, an endless and
orderly array of outhouses,
long grape
5
6
THE
CALL OF THE WILD
arbors,
green pastures, orchards,
and berry patches. Then
there was the
pumping
plant for the artesian
well, and the big
cement tank where
Judge
Miller's boys took their
morning plunge and kept
cool in the hot
afternoon.
And
over this great demesne Buck
ruled. Here he was born,
and here
he
had lived the four
years of his life. It was
true, there were other
dogs.
There
could not but be other dogs
on so vast a place, but they
did not
count.
They came and went,
resided in the populous
kennels, or lived
obscurely
in the recesses of the house
after the fashion of Toots,
the
Japanese
pug, or Ysabel, the Mexican
hairless,--strange creatures
that
rarely
put nose out of doors or
set foot to ground. On the other
hand,
there
were the fox terriers, a
score of them at least, who
yelped fearful
promises
at Toots and Ysabel looking
out of the windows at them
and
protected
by a legion of housemaids armed
with brooms and
mops.
But
Buck was neither house-dog
nor kennel-dog. The whole
realm
was
his. He plunged into the
swimming tank or went
hunting with the
Judge's
sons; he escorted Mollie and
Alice, the Judge's daughters, on
long
twilight or early morning
rambles; on wintry nights he
lay at the
Judge's
feet before the roaring
library fire; he carried the
Judge's
grandsons
on his back, or rolled them in
the grass, and guarded
their
footsteps
through wild adventures down to
the fountain in the
stable
yard,
and even beyond, where the
paddocks were, and the berry
patches.
Among
the terriers he stalked
imperiously, and Toots and
Ysabel he
utterly
ignored, for he was
king,--king over all creeping,
crawling,
flying
things of Judge Miller's place,
humans included.
His
father, Elmo, a huge St.
Bernard, had been the
Judge's
inseparable
companion, and Buck bid fair
to follow in the way of
his
father.
He was not so large,--he
weighed only one hundred
and forty
pounds,--for
his mother, Shep, had
been a Scotch shepherd
dog.
Nevertheless,
one hundred and forty
pounds, to which was added
the
dignity
that comes of good living
and universal respect, enabled
him to
carry
himself in right royal
fashion. During the four
years since his
puppyhood
he had lived the life of a
sated aristocrat; he had a fine
pride
in
himself, was even a trifle
egotistical, as country gentlemen
sometimes
become
because of their insular
situation. But he had saved
himself by
INTO
THE PRIMITIVE
7
not
becoming a mere pampered house-dog.
Hunting and kindred
outdoor
delights
had kept down the
fat and hardened his
muscles; and to him, as
to
the cold-tubbing races, the
love of water had been a
tonic and a health
preserver.
And
this was the manner of
dog Buck was in the
fall of 1897, when
the
Klondike strike dragged men
from all the world
into the frozen
North.
But Buck did not
read the newspapers, and he
did not know
that
Manuel,
one of the gardener's helpers,
was an undesirable acquaintance.
Manuel
had one besetting sin. He
loved to play Chinese
lottery. Also, in
his
gambling, he had one besetting
weakness--faith in a system; and
this
made
his damnation certain. For
to play a system requires money,
while
the
wages of a gardener's helper do
not lap over the
needs of a wife and
numerous
progeny.
The
Judge was at a meeting of
the Raisin Growers' Association,
and
the
boys were busy organizing an
athletic club, on the memorable
night
of
Manuel's treachery. No one
saw him and Buck go
off through the
orchard
on what Buck imagined was
merely a stroll. And with
the
exception
of a solitary man, no one saw
them arrive at the little
flag
station
known as College Park. This
man talked with Manuel,
and
money
chinked between them.
"You
might wrap up the goods
before you deliver 'm," the
stranger
said
gruffly, and Manuel doubled
a piece of stout rope around
Buck's
neck
under the collar.
"Twist
it, an' you'll choke 'm
plentee," said Manuel, and
the
stranger
grunted a ready
affirmative.
Buck
had accepted the rope
with quiet dignity. To be
sure, it was an
unwonted
performance: but he had learned to trust
in men he knew, and
to
give them credit for a
wisdom that outreached his
own. But when
the
ends
of the rope were placed in
the stranger's hands, he
growled
menacingly.
He had merely intimated his
displeasure, in his
pride
believing
that to intimate was to command.
But to his surprise the
rope
tightened
around his neck, shutting
off his breath. In quick
rage he
sprang
at the man, who met him
halfway, grappled him close
by the
throat,
and with a deft twist
threw him over on his back.
Then the rope
tightened
mercilessly, while Buck
struggled in a fury, his
tongue lolling
8
THE
CALL OF THE WILD
out
of his mouth and his
great chest panting
futilely. Never in all his
life
had
he been so vilely treated,
and never in all his life
had he been so
angry.
But his strength ebbed,
his eyes glazed, and he knew
nothing
when
the train was flagged
and the two men threw
him into the
baggage
car.
The
next he knew, he was dimly
aware that his tongue
was hurting
and
that he was being jolted
along in some kind of a
conveyance. The
hoarse
shriek of a locomotive whistling a
crossing told him where
he
was.
He had travelled too often
with the Judge not to
know the sensation
of
riding in a baggage car. He opened
his eyes, and into
them came the
unbridled
anger of a kidnapped king.
The man sprang for his
throat, but
Buck
was too quick for
him. His jaws closed on
the hand, nor did
they
relax
till his senses were choked
out of him once
more.
"Yep,
has fits," the man said,
hiding his mangled hand
from the
baggageman,
who had been attracted by
the sounds of struggle.
"I'm
takin'
'm up for the boss to 'Frisco. A
crack dog-doctor there thinks
that
he
can cure 'm."
Concerning
that night's ride, the man
spoke most eloquently
for
himself,
in a little shed, back of a saloon on
the San Francisco
water
front.
"All
I get is fifty for it," he
grumbled; "an' I wouldn't do it over for
a
thousand,
cold cash."
His
hand was wrapped in a bloody
handkerchief, and the
right
trouser
leg was ripped from
knee to ankle.
"How
much did the other mug
get?" the saloon-keeper
demanded.
"A
hundred," was the reply.
"Wouldn't take a sou less, so
help me."
"That
makes a hundred and fifty,"
the saloon-keeper calculated;
"and
he's
worth it, or I'm a
squarehead."
The
kidnapper undid the bloody
wrappings and looked at
his
lacerated
hand. "If I don't get the
hydrophoby--"
"It'll
be because you was born to
hang," laughed the
saloon-keeper.
"Here,
lend me a hand before you
pull your freight," he
added.
Dazed,
suffering intolerable pain
from throat and tongue, with
the
life
half throttled out of him,
Buck attempted to face his
tormentors. But
he
was thrown down and choked
repeatedly, till they succeeded in
filing
INTO
THE PRIMITIVE
9
the
heavy brass collar from off
his neck. Then the
rope was removed,
and
he was flung into a cagelike
crate.
There
he lay for the remainder of
the weary night, nursing
his wrath
and
wounded pride. He could not
understand what it all meant.
What did
they
want with him, these
strange men? Why were
they keeping him
pent
up in this narrow crate? He
did not know why,
but he felt oppressed
by
the vague sense of impending
calamity. Several times during
the
night
he sprang to his feet when
the shed door rattled
open, expecting to
see
the Judge, or the boys at
least. But each time it
was the bulging
face
of
the saloon-keeper that peered in at
him by the sickly light of a
tallow
candle.
And each time the
joyful bark that trembled in
Buck's throat was
twisted
into a savage growl.
But
the saloon-keeper let him
alone, and in the morning
four men
entered
and picked up the crate.
More tormentors, Buck decided,
for
they
were evil-looking creatures,
ragged and unkempt; and he
stormed
and
raged at them through the
bars. They only laughed
and poked sticks
at
him, which he promptly
assailed with his teeth till
he realized that that
was
what they wanted. Whereupon
he lay down sullenly and
allowed the
crate
to be lifted into a wagon.
Then he, and the
crate in which he was
imprisoned,
began a passage through many
hands. Clerks in the
express
office
took charge of him; he was
carted about in another wagon; a
truck
carried
him, with an assortment of
boxes and parcels, upon a
ferry
steamer;
he was trucked off the
steamer into a great railway
depot, and
finally
he was deposited in an express
car.
For
two days and nights
this express car was
dragged along at the
tail
of
shrieking locomotives; and for
two days and nights
Buck neither ate
nor
drank. In his anger he had
met the first advances of
the express
messengers
with growls, and they had
retaliated by teasing him.
When
he
flung himself against the
bars, quivering and
frothing, they laughed
at
him
and taunted him. They
growled and barked like
detestable dogs,
mewed,
and flapped their arms
and crowed. It was all very
silly, he
knew;
but therefore the more
outrage to his dignity, and
his anger waxed
and
waxed. He did not mind
the hunger so much, but
the lack of water
caused
him severe suffering and
fanned his wrath to fever pitch.
For that
matter,
high-strung and finely sensitive,
the ill treatment had flung
him
10
THE
CALL OF THE WILD
into
a fever, which was fed by
the inflammation of his
parched and
swollen
throat and tongue.
He
was glad for one
thing: the rope was
off his neck. That
had given
them
an unfair advantage; but now
that it was off, he would
show them.
They
would never get another rope
around his neck. Upon
that he was
resolved.
For two days and
nights he neither ate nor
drank, and during
those
two days and nights of
torment, he accumulated a fund of
wrath
that
boded ill for whoever first
fell foul of him. His
eyes turned
bloodshot,
and he was metamorphosed
into a raging fiend. So
changed
was
he that the Judge himself
would not have recognized
him; and the
express
messengers breathed with
relief when they bundled
him off the
train
at Seattle.
Four
men gingerly carried the crate
from the wagon into a
small,
high-walled
back yard. A stout man, with a red
sweater that sagged
generously
at the neck, came out
and signed the book for the
driver. That
was
the man, Buck divined, the
next tormentor, and he
hurled himself
savagely
against the bars. The man
smiled grimly, and brought a
hatchet
and
a club.
"You
ain't going to take him out
now?" the driver
asked.
"Sure,"
the man replied, driving the
hatchet into the crate for a
pry.
There
was an instantaneous scattering of the
four men who had
carried
it in, and from safe
perches on top the wall they
prepared to
watch
the performance.
Buck
rushed at the splintering wood, sinking
his teeth into it,
surging
and
wrestling with it. Wherever
the hatchet fell on the outside, he
was
there
on the inside, snarling and
growling, as furiously anxious to
get out
as
the man in the red sweater
was calmly intent on getting
him out.
"Now,
you red-eyed devil," he
said, when he had made an
opening
sufficient
for the passage of Buck's
body. At the same time he
dropped
the
hatchet and shifted the club
to his right hand.
And
Buck was truly a red-eyed
devil, as he drew himself together
for
the
spring, hair bristling,
mouth foaming, a mad glitter
in his bloodshot
eyes.
Straight at the man he launched
his one hundred and
forty pounds
of
fury, surcharged with the
pent passion of two days
and nights. In mid
air,
just as his jaws were
about to close on the man, he
received a shock
INTO
THE PRIMITIVE
11
that
checked his body and brought
his teeth together with an
agonizing
clip.
He whirled over, fetching the
ground on his back and side.
He had
never
been struck by a club in his
life, and did not
understand. With a
snarl
that was part bark and
more scream he was again on
his feet and
launched
into the air. And again
the shock came and he was
brought
crushingly
to the ground. This time he
was aware that it was
the club,
but
his madness knew no caution.
A dozen times he charged, and
as
often
the club broke the
charge and smashed him
down.
After
a particularly fierce blow, he
crawled to his feet, too
dazed to
rush.
He staggered limply about,
the blood flowing from
nose and mouth
and
ears, his beautiful coat
sprayed and flecked with
bloody slaver. Then
the
man advanced and deliberately
dealt him a frightful blow
on the
nose.
All the pain he had endured
was as nothing compared with
the
exquisite
agony of this. With a roar
that was almost lionlike in
its
ferocity,
he again hurled himself at the man.
But the man, shifting
the
club
from right to left, coolly
caught him by the under
jaw, at the same
time
wrenching downward and
backward. Buck described a
complete
circle
in the air, and half of
another, then crashed to the
ground on his
head
and chest.
For
the last time he rushed. The man
struck the shrewd blow he
had
purposely
withheld for so long, and
Buck crumpled up and went
down,
knocked
utterly senseless.
"He's
no slouch at dog-breakin', that's
wot I say," one of the men
on
the
wall cried
enthusiastically.
"Druther
break cayuses any day, and
twice on Sundays," was
the
reply
of the driver, as he climbed on
the wagon and started
the horses.
Buck's
senses came back to him, but
not his strength. He lay
where
he
had fallen, and from there
he watched the man in the
red sweater.
"
`Answers to the name of
Buck,' " the man
soliloquized, quoting
from
the saloon-keeper's letter which
had announced the consignment of
the
crate and contents. "Well,
Buck, my boy," he went on in a
genial
voice,
"we've had our little
ruction, and the best
thing we can do is to
let
it
go at that. You've learned your place,
and I know mine. Be a good
dog
and
all'll go well and the goose
hang high. Be a bad dog,
and I'll whale
the
stuffin' outa you.
Understand?"
12
THE
CALL OF THE WILD
As
he spoke he fearlessly patted the
head he had so
mercilessly
pounded,
and though Buck's hair
involuntarily bristled at touch of
the
hand,
he endured it without protest. When
the man brought him water
he
drank
eagerly, and later bolted a
generous meal of raw meat,
chunk by
chunk,
from the man's
hand.
He
was beaten (he knew
that); but he was not
broken. He saw, once
for
all, that he stood no chance
against a man with a club. He
had
learned
the lesson, and in all
his after life he never forgot
it. That club
was
a revelation. It was his
introduction to the reign of
primitive law,
and
he met the introduction
halfway. The facts of life
took on a fiercer
aspect;
and while he faced that
aspect uncowed, he faced it
with all the
latent
cunning of his nature
aroused. As the days went
by, other dogs
came,
in crates and at the ends of
ropes, some docilely, and
some raging
and
roaring as he had come; and,
one and all, he watched
them pass
under
the dominion of the man in
the red sweater. Again and
again, as
he
looked at each brutal performance,
the lesson was driven
home to
Buck:
a man with a club was a
lawgiver, a master to be obeyed,
though
not
necessarily conciliated. Of this last
Buck was never guilty,
though he
did
see beaten dogs that fawned
upon the man, and wagged
their tails,
and
licked his hand. Also he
saw one dog, that
would neither
conciliate
nor
obey, finally killed in the
struggle for mastery.
Now
and again men came, strangers,
who talked excitedly,
wheedlingly,
and in all kinds of fashions
to the man in the red
sweater.
And
at such times that money passed between
them the strangers
took
one
or more of the dogs away
with them. Buck wondered
where they
went,
for they never came back;
but the fear of the
future was strong
upon
him, and he was glad
each time when he was
not selected.
Yet
his time came, in the end,
in the form of a little
weazened man
who
spat broken English and
many strange and uncouth
exclamations
which
Buck could not
understand.
"Sacredam!"
he cried, when his eyes lit
upon Buck. "Dat one
dam
bully
dog! Eh? How
moch?"
"Three
hundred, and a present at
that," was the prompt
reply of the
man
in the red sweater. "And
seein' it's government
money, you ain't
got
no kick coming, eh,
Perrault?"
INTO
THE PRIMITIVE
13
Perrault
grinned. Considering that
the price of dogs had
been
boomed
skyward by the unwonted
demand, it was not an unfair
sum for
so
fine an animal. The Canadian
Government would be no loser,
nor
would
its despatches travel the
slower. Perrault knew dogs,
and when he
looked
at Buck he knew that he was
one in a thousand--"One in
ten
t'ousand,"
he commented mentally.
Buck
saw money pass between them,
and was not surprised
when
Curly,
a good-natured Newfoundland, and he were
led away by the
little
weazened
man. That was the last he
saw of the man in the
red sweater,
and
as Curly and he looked at
receding Seattle from the
deck of the
Narwhal,
it was the last he saw of
the warm Southland. Curly
and he
were
taken below by Perrault and
turned over to a black-faced
giant
called
François. Perrault was a French-Canadian,
and swarthy; but
François
was a French-Canadian half-breed,
and twice as swarthy.
They
were
a new kind of men to Buck
(of which he was destined to
see many
more),
and while he developed no
affection for them, he none
the less
grew
honestly to respect them. He
speedily learned that
Perrault and
François
were fair men, calm and
impartial in administering justice,
and
too
wise in the way of dogs to
be fooled by dogs.
In
the 'tween-decks of the Narwhal,
Buck and Curly joined
two
other
dogs. One of them was a big,
snow-white fellow from
Spitzbergen
who
had been brought away by a
whaling captain, and who had
later
accompanied
a Geological Survey into the
Barrens.
He
was friendly, in a treacherous
sort of way, smiling into
one's face
the
while he meditated some underhand
trick, as, for instance,
when he
stole
from Buck's food at the
first meal. As Buck sprang to
punish him,
the
lash of François's whip sang
through the air, reaching
the culprit
first;
and nothing remained to Buck
but to recover the bone.
That was
fair
of François, he decided, and the
half-breed began his rise in
Buck's
estimation.
The
other dog made no advances,
nor received any; also, he
did not
attempt
to steal from the newcomers. He
was a gloomy, morose
fellow,
and
he showed Curly plainly that
all he desired was to be
left alone, and
further,
that there would be trouble if he
were not left alone. "Dave"
he
was
called, and he ate and
slept, or yawned between times, and
took
14
THE
CALL OF THE WILD
interest
in nothing, not even when
the Narwhal
crossed
Queen Charlotte
Sound
and rolled and pitched
and bucked like a thing
possessed. When
Buck
and Curly grew excited,
half wild with fear, he raised
his head as
though
annoyed, favored them with an
incurious glance, yawned,
and
went
to sleep again.
Day
and night the ship throbbed
to the tireless pulse of the
propeller,
and
though one day was
very like another, it was
apparent to Buck that
the
weather was steadily growing
colder. At last, one morning,
the
propeller
was quiet, and the
Narwhal
was
pervaded with an
atmosphere
of
excitement. He felt it, as
did the other dogs,
and knew that a
change
was
at hand. François leashed them
and brought them on deck. At
the
first
step upon the cold
surface, Buck's feet sank
into a white mushy
something
very like mud. He sprang
back with a snort. More of
this
white
stuff was falling through
the air. He shook himself,
but more of it
fell
upon him. He sniffed it
curiously, then licked some
up on his
tongue.
It bit like fire, and
the next instant was
gone. This puzzled
him.
He
tried it again, with the
same result. The onlookers
laughed
uproariously,
and he felt ashamed, he knew
not why, for it was
his first
snow.
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