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II
THE LAW OF
CLUB AND FANG
B
UCK'S
first day on the Dyea
beach was like a nightmare.
Every
hour
was filled with shock and
surprise. He had been
suddenly
jerked
from the heart of civilization
and flung into the heart
of
things
primordial. No lazy, sun-kissed life
was this, with nothing to
do
but
loaf and be bored. Here
was neither peace, nor
rest, nor a moment's
safety.
All was confusion and action,
and every moment life and
limb
were
in peril. There was imperative
need to be constantly alert;
for these
dogs
and men were not
town dogs and men. They
were savages, all of
them,
who knew no law but
the law of club and
fang.
He
had never seen dogs fight as
these wolfish creatures
fought, and
his
first experience taught him an
unforgetable lesson. It is true, it
was a
vicarious
experience, else he would not
have lived to profit by it.
Curly
was
the victim. They were
camped near the log
store, where she, in
her
friendly
way, made advances to a
husky dog the size of a
full-grown
wolf,
though not half so large as
she. There was no warning,
only a leap
in
like a flash, a metallic
clip of teeth, a leap out equally
swift, and
Curly's
face was ripped open
from eye to jaw.
It
was the wolf manner of
fighting, to strike and leap
away; but there
was
more to it than this. Thirty
or forty huskies ran to the
spot and
surrounded
the combatants in an intent
and silent circle. Buck
did not
comprehend
that silent intentness, nor
the eager way with
which they
were
licking their chops. Curly
rushed her antagonist, who struck
again
and
leaped aside. He met her
next rush with his
chest, in a peculiar
fashion
that tumbled her off
her feet. She never regained
them. This was
15
16
THE
CALL OF THE WILD
what
the onlooking huskies had
waited for. They closed in
upon her,
snarling
and yelping, and she
was buried, screaming with
agony, beneath
the
bristling mass of
bodies.
So
sudden was it, and so
unexpected, that Buck was
taken aback. He
saw
Spitz run out his scarlet
tongue in a way he had of
laughing; and he
saw
François, swinging an axe, spring
into the mess of dogs. Three
men
with
clubs were helping him to
scatter them. It did not
take long. Two
minutes
from the time Curly
went down, the last of her
assailants were
clubbed
off. But she lay there
limp and lifeless in the
bloody, trampled
snow,
almost literally torn to pieces,
the swart half-breed
standing over
her
and cursing horribly. The
scene often came back to
Buck to trouble
him
in his sleep. So that was
the way. No fairplay. Once
down, that was
the
end of you. Well, he would
see to it that he never went down.
Spitz
ran
out his tongue and laughed
again, and from that moment
Buck hated
him
with a bitter and deathless
hatred.
Before
he had recovered from the
shock caused by the tragic
passing
of
Curly, he received another shock. François
fastened upon him an
arrangement
of straps and buckles. It
was a harness, such as he had
seen
the
grooms put on the horses at
home. And as he had seen
horses work,
so
he was set to work, hauling
François on a sled to the forest
that
fringed
the valley, and returning
with a load of firewood.
Though his
dignity
was sorely hurt by thus
being made a draught animal,
he was too
wise
to rebel. He buckled down
with a will and did his
best, though it
was
all new and strange. François
was stern, demanding
instant
obedience,
and by virtue of his whip
receiving instant obedience;
while
Dave,
who was an experienced wheeler,
nipped Buck's hind
quarters
whenever
he was in error. Spitz was
the leader, likewise experienced,
and
while he could not always
get at Buck, he growled
sharp reproof
now
and again, or cunningly threw
his weight in the traces to
jerk Buck
into
the way he should go.
Buck learned easily, and
under the combined
tuition
of his two mates and
François made remarkable progress.
Ere
they
returned to camp he knew
enough to stop at "ho," to go
ahead at
"mush,"
to swing wide on the bends,
and to keep clear of the
wheeler
when
the loaded sled shot
downhill at their
heels.
THE
LAW OF CLUB AND FANG
17
"T'ree
vair' good dogs," François told
Perrault. "Dat Buck,
heem
pool
lak hell. I tich heem queek
as anyt'ing."
By
afternoon, Perrault, who was in a
hurry to be on the trail
with his
despatches,
returned with two more
dogs. "Billee" and "Joe" he
called
them,
two brothers, and true
huskies both. Sons of the
one mother
though
they were, they were as
different as day and night.
Billee's one
fault
was his excessive good
nature, while Joe was
the very opposite,
sour
and introspective, with a
perpetual snarl and a
malignant eye. Buck
received
them in comradely fashion,
Dave ignored them, while
Spitz
proceeded
to thrash first one and
then the other. Billee
wagged his tail
appeasingly,
turned to run when he saw
that appeasement was of
no
avail,
and cried (still
appeasingly) when Spitz's
sharp teeth scored
his
flank.
But no matter how Spitz circled,
Joe whirled around on his
heels
to
face him, mane bristling,
ears laid back, lips
writhing and
snarling,
jaws
clipping together as fast as he could
snap, and eyes
diabolically
gleaming--the
incarnation of belligerent fear. So
terrible was his
appearance
that Spitz was forced to
forego disciplining him; but
to cover
his
own discomfiture he turned
upon the inoffensive and
wailing Billee
and
drove him to the confines of the
camp.
By
evening Perrault secured another
dog, an old husky, long
and
lean
and gaunt, with a battle-scarred
face and a single eye
which flashed
a
warning of prowess that
commanded respect. He was
called Sol-leks,
which
means the Angry One. Like
Dave, he asked nothing,
gave
nothing,
expected nothing; and when
he marched slowly and
deliberately
into their midst, even Spitz
left him alone. He had
one
peculiarity
which Buck was unlucky
enough to discover. He did not
like
to
be approached on his blind
side. Of this offence Buck
was unwittingly
guilty,
and the first knowledge he
had of his indiscretion was
when Sol-
leks
whirled upon him and
slashed his shoulder to the
bone for three
inches
up and down. Forever after Buck
avoided his blind side,
and to
the
last of their comradeship had no
more trouble. His only
apparent
ambition,
like Dave's, was to be left
alone; though, as Buck
was
afterward
to learn, each of them
possessed one other and even
more vital
ambition.
18
THE
CALL OF THE WILD
That
night Buck faced the
great problem of sleeping.
The tent,
illumined
by a candle, glowed warmly in
the midst of the white
plain;
and
when he, as a matter of course,
entered it, both Perrault
and François
bombarded
him with curses and
cooking utensils, till he recovered
from
his
consternation and fled ignominiously
into the outer cold. A
chill
wind
was blowing that nipped
him sharply and bit
with especial venom
into
his wounded shoulder. He lay
down on the snow and
attempted to
sleep,
but the frost soon drove him
shivering to his feet.
Miserable and
disconsolate,
he wandered about among the
many tents, only to find
that
one
place was as cold as
another. Here and there
savage dogs rushed
upon
him, but he bristled his
neck hair and snarled (for
he was learning
fast),
and they let him go
his way unmolested.
Finally
an idea came to him. He
would return and see how
his own
team-mates
were making out. To his
astonishment, they had
disappeared.
Again he wandered about through the
great camp, looking
for
them, and again he returned. Were
they in the tent? No, that
could
not
be, else he would not
have been driven out.
Then where could
they
possibly
be? With drooping tail
and shivering body, very
forlorn indeed,
he
aimlessly circled the tent.
Suddenly the snow gave
way beneath his
fore
legs and he sank down.
Something wriggled under his
feet. He
sprang
back, bristling and snarling,
fearful of the unseen and
unknown.
But
a friendly little yelp
reassured him, and he went
back to investigate.
A
whiff of warm air ascended
to his nostrils, and there,
curled up under
the
snow in a snug ball, lay
Billee. He whined placatingly,
squirmed and
wriggled
to show his good will and
intentions, and even
ventured, as a
bribe
for peace, to lick Buck's
face with his warm
wet tongue.
Another
lesson. So that was the
way they did it,
eh? Buck
confidently
selected a spot, and with
much fuss and waste
effort
proceeded
to dig a hole for himself.
In a trice the heat from
his body
filled
the confined space and he
was asleep. The day
had been long
and
arduous,
and he slept soundly and
comfortably, though he growled
and
barked
and wrestled with bad
dreams.
Nor
did he open his eyes till
roused by the noises of the
waking
camp.
At first he did not know
where he was. It had snowed
during the
night
and he was completely
buried. The snow walls
pressed him on
THE
LAW OF CLUB AND FANG
19
every
side, and a great surge of
fear swept through him--the
fear of the
wild
thing for the trap. It was a
token that he was harking
back through
his
own life to the lives of
his forebears; for he was a
civilized dog, an
unduly
civilized dog, and of his
own experience knew no trap and
so
could
not of himself fear it.
The muscles of his whole
body contracted
spasmodically
and instinctively, the hair
on his neck and shoulders
stood
on
end, and with a ferocious snarl he
bounded straight up into the
blinding
day, the snow flying
about him in a flashing
cloud. Ere he
landed
on his feet, he saw the
white camp spread out
before him and
knew
where he was and remembered
all that had passed
from the time
he
went for a stroll with
Manuel to the hole he had
dug for himself
the
night
before.
A
shout from François hailed his
appearance. "Wot I say?" the
dog-
driver
cried to Perrault. "Dat Buck
for sure learn queek as
anyt'ing."
Perrault
nodded gravely. As courier
for the Canadian Government,
bearing
important despatches, he was
anxious to secure the best
dogs,
and
he was particularly gladdened by the
possession of Buck.
Three
more huskies were added to
the team inside an hour,
making a
total
of nine, and before another
quarter of an hour had
passed they were
in
harness and swinging up the
trail toward the Dyea
Cañon. Buck was
glad
to be gone, and though the
work was hard he found he
did not
particularly
despise it. He was surprised at
the eagerness which
animated
the
whole team, and which was
communicated to him; but still
more
surprising
was the change wrought in
Dave and Sol-leks. They
were new
dogs,
utterly transformed by the harness. All
passiveness and
unconcern
had
dropped from them. They
were alert and active,
anxious that the
work
should go well, and fiercely
irritable with whatever, by
delay or
confusion,
retarded that work. The
toil of the traces seemed
the supreme
expression
of their being, and all
that they lived for
and the only thing
in
which
they took delight.
Dave
was wheeler or sled dog,
pulling in front of him was
Buck,
then
came Sol-leks; the rest of
the team was strung
out ahead, single
file,
to
the leader, which position
was filled by Spitz.
Buck
had been purposely placed between
Dave and Sol-leks so
that
he
might receive instruction.
Apt scholar that he was,
they were equally
20
THE
CALL OF THE WILD
apt
teachers, never allowing him to
linger long in error, and
enforcing
their
teaching with their sharp
teeth. Dave was fair and
very wise. He
never
nipped Buck without cause,
and he never failed to nip
him when
he
stood in need of it. As
François's whip backed him
up, Buck found it
to
be cheaper to mend his ways than to
retaliate. Once, during a
brief
halt,
when he got tangled in the
traces and delayed the
start, both Dave
and
Sol-leks flew at him and
administered a sound trouncing.
The
resulting
tangle was even worse,
but Buck took good
care to keep the
traces
clear thereafter; and ere
the day was done, so
well had he
mastered
his work, his mates
about ceased nagging him.
François's whip
snapped
less frequently, and
Perrault even honored Buck by
lifting up
his
feet and carefully examining
them.
It
was a hard day's run, up
the Cañon, through Sheep
Camp, past the
Scales
and the timber line,
across glaciers and snowdrifts
hundreds of
feet
deep, and over the
great Chilcoot Divide, which
stands between the
salt
water and the fresh and
guards forbiddingly the sad
and lonely
North.
They made good time
down the chain of lakes
which fills the
craters
of extinct volcanoes, and
late that night pulled
into the huge
camp
at the head of Lake Bennett,
where thousands of gold-seekers
were
building
boats against the breakup of
the ice in the spring. Buck
made
his
hole in the snow and slept
the sleep of the exhausted
just, but all
too
early
was routed out in the cold
darkness and harnessed with
his mates
to
the sled.
That
day they made forty
miles, the trail being
packed; but the next
day,
and for many days to
follow, they broke their
own trail, worked
harder,
and made poorer time. As a
rule, Perrault travelled
ahead of the
team,
packing the snow with
webbed shoes to make it
easier for them.
François,
guiding the sled at the
gee-pole, sometimes exchanged
places
with
him, but not often. Perrault
was in a hurry, and he
prided himself on
his
knowledge of ice, which knowledge
was indispensable, for the
fall
ice
was very thin, and
where there was swift water,
there was no ice at
all.
Day
after day, for days
unending, Buck toiled in the
traces. Always,
they
broke camp in the dark,
and the first gray of
dawn found them
hitting
the trail with fresh miles
reeled off behind them. And
always they
THE
LAW OF CLUB AND FANG
21
pitched
camp after dark, eating
their bit of fish, and
crawling to sleep
into
the snow. Buck was
ravenous. The pound and a
half of sun-dried
salmon,
which was his ration
for each day, seemed to go
nowhere. He
never
had enough, and suffered
from perpetual hunger pangs.
Yet the
other
dogs, because they weighed
less and were born to
the life, received
a
pound only of the fish and
managed to keep in good
condition.
He
swiftly lost the
fastidiousness which had
characterized his old
life.
A dainty eater, he found
that his mates, finishing
first, robbed him
of
his unfinished ration. There
was no defending it. While
he was
fighting
off two or three, it was disappearing
down the throats of
the
others.
To remedy this, he ate as fast as
they; and, so greatly did
hunger
compel
him, he was not above
taking what did not
belong to him. He
watched
and learned. When he saw
Pike, one of the new dogs, a
clever
malingerer
and thief, slyly steal a
slice of bacon when
Perrault's back
was
turned, he duplicated the performance
the following day,
getting
away
with the whole chunk. A
great uproar was raised,
but he was
unsuspected;
while Dub, an awkward
blunderer who was always
getting
caught,
was punished for Buck's
misdeed.
This
first theft marked Buck as
fit to survive in the
hostile Northland
environment.
It marked his adaptability,
his capacity to adjust himself
to
changing
conditions, the lack of
which would have meant
swift and
terrible
death. It marked, further,
the decay or going to pieces
of his
moral
nature, a vain thing and a
handicap in the ruthless struggle
for
existence.
It was all well enough in
the Southland, under the
law of love
and
fellowship, to respect private
property and personal feelings;
but in
the
Northland, under the law of
club and fang, whoso took
such things
into
account was a fool, and in so
far as he observed them he
would fail
to
prosper.
Not
that Buck reasoned it out.
He was fit, that was
all, and
unconsciously
he accommodated himself to the new
mode of life. All his
days,
no matter what the odds, he
had never run from a fight.
But the
club
of the man in the red
sweater had beaten into
him a more
fundamental
and primitive code.
Civilized, he could have
died for a
moral
consideration, say the defence of
Judge Miller's riding-whip;
but
the
completeness of his decivilization
was now evidenced by his
ability
22
THE
CALL OF THE WILD
to
flee from the defence of a
moral consideration and so save
his hide.
He
did not steal for
joy of it, but because of
the clamor of his
stomach.
He
did not rob openly, but
stole secretly and cunningly,
out of respect
for
club and fang. In short, the
things he did were done
because it was
easier
to do them than not to do
them.
His
development (or retrogression) was rapid.
His muscles became
hard
as iron, and he grew callous
to all ordinary pain. He
achieved an
internal
as well as external economy. He
could eat anything, no
matter
how
loathsome or indigestible; and, once
eaten, the juices of his
stomach
extracted
the last least particle of
nutriment; and his blood
carried it to
the
farthest reaches of his body,
building it into the
toughest and stoutest
of
tissues. Sight and scent
became remarkably keen, while
his hearing
developed
such acuteness that in his
sleep he heard the faintest
sound
and
knew whether it heralded peace or
peril. He learned to bite the
ice
out
with his teeth when it
collected between his toes;
and when he was
thirsty
and there was a thick scum of ice over
the water hole, he
would
break
it by rearing and striking it
with stiff fore legs. His
most
conspicuous
trait was an ability to
scent the wind and
forecast it a night
in
advance. No matter how breathless
the air when he dug
his nest by
tree
or bank, the wind that
later blew inevitably found
him to leeward,
sheltered
and snug.
And
not only did he learn by
experience, but instincts long
dead
became
alive again. The domesticated
generations fell from him.
In
vague
ways he remembered back to the youth of
the breed, to the
time
the
wild dogs ranged in packs
through the primeval forest
and killed
their
meat as they ran it down. It
was no task for him to
learn to fight
with
cut and slash and
the quick wolf snap. In
this manner had
fought
forgotten
ancestors. They quickened
the old life within
him, and the
old
tricks
which they had stamped
into the heredity of the
breed were his
tricks.
They came to him without
effort or discovery, as though
they had
been
his always. And when, on
the still cold nights, he
pointed his nose
at
a star and howled long
and wolf-like, it was his
ancestors, dead and
dust,
pointing nose at star and
howling down through the centuries
and
through
him. And his cadences
were their cadences, the
cadences which
THE
LAW OF CLUB AND FANG
23
voiced
their woe and what to them
was the meaning of the
stillness, and
the
cold, and dark.
Thus,
as token of what a puppet
thing life is, the ancient
song surged
through
him and he came into
his own again; and he
came because men
had
found a yellow metal in the
North, and because Manuel
was a
gardener's
helper whose wages did
not lap over the needs of
his wife
and
divers small copies of
himself.
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