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III
THE
DOMINANT PRIMORDIAL BEAST
T
HE
dominant primordial beast
was strong in Buck, and
under the
fierce
conditions of trail life it
grew and grew. Yet it was a
secret
growth.
His new-born cunning gave
him poise and control.
He
was
too busy adjusting himself
to the new life to feel at
ease, and not
only
did he not pick fights,
but he avoided them whenever
possible. A
certain
deliberateness characterized his
attitude. He was not prone
to
rashness
and precipitate action; and
in the bitter hatred between him
and
Spitz
he betrayed no impatience, shunned
all offensive acts.
On
the other hand, possibly
because he divined in Buck a
dangerous
rival,
Spitz never lost an opportunity of
showing his teeth. He even
went
out
of his way to bully Buck,
striving constantly to start
the fight which
could
end only in the death of
one or the other.
Early
in the trip this might
have taken place had it
not been for an
unwonted
accident. At the end of this
day they made a bleak
and
miserable
camp on the shore of Lake Le
Barge. Driving snow, a
wind
that
cut like a white-hot knife,
and darkness had forced
them to grope for
a
camping place. They could
hardly have fared worse. At
their backs
rose
a perpendicular wall of rock,
and Perrault and François
were
compelled
to make their fire and
spread their sleeping robes
on the ice of
the
lake itself. The tent
they had discarded at Dyea
in order to travel
light.
A few sticks of driftwood
furnished them with a fire
that thawed
down
through the ice and left
them to eat supper in the
dark.
Close
in under the sheltering rock
Buck made his nest. So
snug and
warm
was it, that he was
loath to leave it when François
distributed the
24
THE
DOMINANT PRIMORDIAL
BEAST
25
fish
which he had first thawed
over the fire. But when Buck
finished his
ration
and returned, he found his
nest occupied. A warning snarl
told
him
that the trespasser was
Spitz. Till now Buck had
avoided trouble
with
his enemy, but this
was too much. The
beast in him roared.
He
sprang
upon Spitz with a fury which
surprised them both, and
Spitz
particularly,
for his whole experience
with Buck had gone to
teach him
that
his rival was an unusually
timid dog, who managed to
hold his own
only
because of his great weight
and size.
François
was surprised, too, when
they shot out in a tangle
from the
disrupted
nest and he divined the
cause of the trouble.
"A-a-ah!" he cried
to
Buck. "Gif it to heem, by
Gar! Gif it to heem, the
dirty t'eef!"
Spitz
was equally willing. He was
crying with sheer rage
and
eagerness
as he circled back and forth
for a chance to spring in.
Buck
was
no less eager, and no less
cautious, as he likewise circled back
and
forth
for the advantage. But it
was then that the unexpected
happened,
the
thing which projected their
struggle for supremacy far
into the
future,
past many a weary mile of
trail and toil.
An
oath from Perrault, the
resounding impact of a club
upon a bony
frame,
and a shrill yelp of pain,
heralded the breaking forth
of
pandemonium.
The camp was suddenly
discovered to be alive
with
skulking
furry forms--starving huskies,
four or five score of them,
who
had
scented the camp from
some Indian village. They
had crept in while
Buck
and Spitz were fighting, and
when the two men sprang
among
them
with stout clubs they showed
their teeth and fought back.
They
were
crazed by the smell of the
food. Perrault found one
with head
buried
in the grub-box. His club
landed heavily on the gaunt
ribs, and
the
grub-box was capsized on the
ground. On the instant a
score of the
famished
brutes were scrambling for
the bread and bacon.
The clubs fell
upon
them unheeded. They yelped
and howled under the rain of
blows,
but
struggled none the less
madly till the last crumb
had been devoured.
In
the meantime the astonished
team-dogs had burst out of
their nests
only
to be set upon by the fierce
invaders. Never had Buck
seen such
dogs.
It seemed as though their
bones would burst through
their skins.
They
were mere skeletons, draped
loosely in draggled hides,
with
blazing
eyes and slavered fangs.
But the hunger-madness made
them
26
THE
CALL OF THE WILD
terrifying,
irresistible. There was no opposing
them. The team-dogs
were
swept
back against the cliff at
the first onset. Buck
was beset by three
huskies,
and in a trice his head
and shoulders were ripped
and slashed.
The
din was frightful. Billee
was crying as usual. Dave
and Sol-leks,
dripping
blood from a score of
wounds, were fighting
bravely side by
side.
Joe was snapping like a
demon. Once his teeth
closed on the fore
leg
of a husky, and he crunched down
through the bone. Pike,
the
malingerer,
leaped upon the crippled
animal, breaking its neck
with a
quick
flash of teeth and a jerk,
Buck got a frothing
adversary by the
throat,
and was sprayed with
blood when his teeth sank
through the
jugular.
The warm taste of it in his
mouth goaded him to
greater
fierceness.
He flung himself upon
another, and at the same
time felt
teeth
sink into his own
throat. It was Spitz, treacherously
attacking from
the
side.
Perrault
and François, having cleaned
out their part of the
camp,
hurried
to save their sled-dogs. The
wild wave of famished beasts
rolled
back
before them, and Buck
shook himself free. But it
was only for a
moment.
The two men were compelled
to run back to save the
grub,
upon
which the huskies returned
to the attack on the team.
Billee,
terrified
into bravery, sprang through
the savage circle and
fled away
over
the ice. Pike and Dub
followed on his heels, with
the rest of the
team
behind. As Buck drew himself
together to spring after them, out
of
the
tail of his eye he saw Spitz
rush upon him with
the evident intention
of
overthrowing him. Once off
his feet and under
that mass of huskies,
there
was no hope for him.
But he braced himself to the
shock of Spitz's
charge,
then joined the flight
out on the lake.
Later,
the nine team-dogs gathered
together and sought shelter in
the
forest.
Though unpursued, they were
in a sorry plight. There was not
one
who
was not wounded in four or
five places, while some
were wounded
grievously.
Dub was badly injured in a
hind leg; Dolly, the last
husky
added
to the team at Dyea, had a
badly torn throat; Joe
had lost an eye;
while
Billee, the good-natured, with an
ear chewed and rent to
ribbons,
cried
and whimpered throughout the
night. At daybreak they
limped
warily
back to camp, to find the
marauders gone and the two
men in bad
tempers.
Fully half their grub
supply was gone. The
huskies had chewed
THE
DOMINANT PRIMORDIAL
BEAST
27
through
the sled lashings and
canvas coverings. In fact, nothing,
no
matter
how remotely eatable, had
escaped them. They had eaten
a pair of
Perrault's
moose-hide moccasins, chunks
out of the leather traces,
and
even
two feet of lash from
the end of François's whip.
He broke from a
mournful
contemplation of it to look over his
wounded dogs.
"Ah,
my frien's," he said softly,
"mebbe it mek you mad
dog, dose
many
bites. Mebbe all mad dog,
sacredam! Wot you t'ink,
eh, Perrault?"
The
courier shook his head
dubiously. With four hundred
miles of
trail
still between him and
Dawson, he could ill afford to
have madness
break
out among his dogs.
Two hours of cursing and
exertion got the
harnesses
into shape, and the
wound-stiffened team was
under way,
struggling
painfully over the hardest part of
the trail they had
yet
encountered,
and for that matter,
the hardest between them and
Dawson.
The
Thirty Mile River was
wide open. Its wild water
defied the frost,
and
it was in the eddies only
and in the quiet places
that the ice held at
all.
Six days of exhausting toil
were required to cover those
thirty
terrible
miles. And terrible they
were, for every foot of them
was
accomplished
at the risk of life to dog
and man. A dozen times,
Perrault,
nosing
the way, broke through the
ice bridges, being saved by the
long
pole
he carried, which he so held that it
fell each time across
the hole
made
by his body. But a cold
snap was on, the thermometer
registering
fifty
below zero, and each time he
broke through he was
compelled for
very
life to build a fire and
dry his garments.
Nothing
daunted him. It was because
nothing daunted him that
he
had
been chosen for government
courier. He took all manner
of risks,
resolutely
thrusting his little
weazened face into the frost
and struggling
on
from dim dawn to dark. He
skirted the frowning shores
on rim ice
that
bent and crackled under foot
and upon which they
dared not halt.
Once,
the sled broke through,
with Dave and Buck, and
they were half-
frozen
and all but drowned by
the time they were
dragged out. The
usual
fire
was necessary to save them.
They were coated solidly
with ice, and
the
two men kept them on the
run around the fire,
sweating and thawing,
so
close that they were singed
by the flames.
At
another time Spitz went
through, dragging the whole
team after
him
up to Buck, who strained backward
with all his strength,
his fore
28
THE
CALL OF THE WILD
paws
on the slippery edge and the
ice quivering and snapping all
around.
But
behind him was Dave,
likewise straining backward,
and behind the
sled
was François, pulling till his
tendons cracked.
Again,
the rim ice broke away
before and behind, and there
was no
escape
except up the cliff. Perrault
scaled it by a miracle, while
François
prayed
for just that miracle;
and with every thong and
sled lashing and
the
last bit of harness rove
into a long rope, the
dogs were hoisted,
one
by
one, to the cliff crest.
François came up last, after the sled
and load.
Then
came the search for a
place to descend, which
descent was
ultimately
made by the aid of the
rope, and night found
them back on the
river
with a quarter of a mile to
the day's credit.
By
the time they made
the Hootalinqua and good
ice, Buck was
played
out. The rest of the dogs
were in like condition; but
Perrault, to
make
up lost time, pushed them
late and early. The
first day they
covered
thirty-five miles to the Big
Salmon; the next day
thirty-five
more
to the Little Salmon; the
third day forty miles,
which brought them
well
up toward the Five
Fingers.
Buck's
feet were not so compact
and hard as the feet of
the huskies.
His
had softened during the
many generations since the
day his last wild
ancestor
was tamed by a cave-dweller or
river man. All day long
he
limped
in agony, and camp once
made, lay down like a
dead dog.
Hungry
as he was, he would not move
to receive his ration of
fish,
which
François had to bring to him. Also,
the dog-driver rubbed
Buck's
feet
for half an hour each
night after supper, and sacrificed the
tops of
his
own moccasins to make four
moccasins for Buck. This
was a great
relief,
and Buck caused even
the weazened face of
Perrault to twist
itself
into
a grin one morning, when
François forgot the moccasins
and Buck
lay
on his back, his four feet
waving appealingly in the
air, and refused
to
budge without them. Later
his feet grew hard to
the trail, and
the
worn-out
foot-gear was thrown
away.
At
the Pelly one morning, as
they were harnessing up,
Dolly, who
had
never been conspicuous for
anything, went suddenly mad.
She
announced
her condition by a long,
heart-breaking wolf howl
that sent
every
dog bristling with fear,
then sprang straight for
Buck. He had
never
seen a dog go mad, nor
did he have any reason to
fear madness;
THE
DOMINANT PRIMORDIAL
BEAST
29
yet
he knew that here was
horror, and fled away
from it in a panic.
Straight
away he raced, with Dolly,
panting and frothing, one
leap
behind;
nor could she gain on
him, so great was his
terror, nor could he
leave
her, so great was her
madness. He plunged through
the wooded
breast
of the island, flew down to the
lower end, crossed a back
channel
filled
with rough ice to another
island, gained a third island,
curved back
to
the main river, and in
desperation started to cross
it. And all the
time,
though
he did not look, he could
hear her snarling just
one leap behind.
François
called to him a quarter of a
mile away and he doubled
back,
still
one leap ahead, gasping painfully
for air and putting
all his faith in
that
François would save him. The
dog-driver held the axe
poised in his
hand,
and as Buck shot past
him the axe crashed
down upon mad
Dolly's
head.
Buck
staggered over against the
sled, exhausted, sobbing for
breath,
helpless.
This was Spitz's
opportunity. He sprang upon
Buck, and twice
his
teeth sank into his
unresisting foe and ripped
and tore the flesh to
the
bone.
Then François's lash
descended, and Buck had the
satisfaction of
watching
Spitz receive the worst
whipping as yet administered to any
of
the
team.
"One
devil, dat Spitz," remarked
Perrault. "Some dam day heem
keel
dat
Buck."
"Dat
Buck two devils," was
François's rejoinder. "All de tam
I
watch
dat Buck I know for
sure. Lissen: some dam
fine day heem
get
mad
lak hell an' den
heem chew dat Spitz all up
an' spit heem out on
de
snow.
Sure. I know."
From
then on it was war between
them. Spitz, as lead-dog and
acknowledged
master of the team, felt
his supremacy threatened by
this
strange
Southland dog. And strange
Buck was to him, for of
the many
Southland
dogs he had known, not
one had shown up worthily in
camp
and
on trail. They were all
too soft, dying under
the toil, the frost,
and
starvation.
Buck was the exception. He
alone endured and prospered,
matching
the husky in strength,
savagery, and cunning. Then
he was a
masterful
dog, and what made
him dangerous was the fact
that the club
of
the man in the red
sweater had knocked all
blind pluck and
rashness
30
THE
CALL OF THE WILD
out
of his desire for mastery. He
was preëminently cunning,
and could
bide
his time with a patience
that was nothing less
than primitive.
It
was inevitable that the
clash for leadership should come.
Buck
wanted
it. He wanted it because it
was his nature, because he
had been
gripped
tight by that nameless,
incomprehensible pride of the
trail and
trace--that
pride which holds dogs in
the toil to the last gasp,
which
lures
them to die joyfully in the
harness, and breaks their
hearts if they
are
cut out of the harness.
This was the pride of
Dave as wheel-dog, of
Sol-leks
as he pulled with all his
strength; the pride that
laid hold of
them
at break of camp, transforming them
from sour and sullen
brutes
into
straining, eager, ambitious
creatures; the pride that
spurred them on
all
day and dropped them at
pitch of camp at night,
letting them fall
back
into
gloomy unrest and uncontent.
This was the pride
that bore up Spitz
and
made him thrash the
sled-dogs who blundered and
shirked in the
traces
or hid away at harness-up
time in the morning.
Likewise it was
this
pride that made him
fear Buck as a possible lead-dog.
And this was
Buck's
pride, too.
He
openly threatened the
other's leadership. He came between
him
and
the shirks he should have
punished. And he did it
deliberately. One
night
there was a heavy snowfall, and in
the morning Pike,
the
malingerer,
did not appear. He was
securely hidden in his nest
under a
foot
of snow. François called him and sought
him in vain. Spitz was
wild
with
wrath. He raged through the
camp, smelling and digging
in every
likely
place, snarling so frightfully that
Pike heard and shivered in
his
hiding-place.
But
when he was at last unearthed, and Spitz
flew at him to punish
him,
Buck flew, with equal
rage, in between. So unexpected was it,
and
so
shrewdly managed, that Spitz
was hurled backward and
off his feet.
Pike,
who had been trembling
abjectly, took heart at this
open mutiny,
and
sprang upon his overthrown
leader. Buck, to whom fairplay
was a
forgotten
code, likewise sprang upon
Spitz. But François, chuckling at
the
incident while unswerving in
the administration of justice,
brought
his
lash down upon Buck
with all his might.
This failed to drive
Buck
from
his prostrate rival, and
the butt of the whip
was brought into
play.
Half-stunned
by the blow, Buck was
knocked backward and the
lash laid
THE
DOMINANT PRIMORDIAL
BEAST
31
upon
him again and again, while Spitz
soundly punished the many
times
offending
Pike.
In
the days that followed, as
Dawson grew closer and
closer, Buck
still
continued to interfere between Spitz and
the culprits; but he did
it
craftily,
when François was not around,
With the covert mutiny of
Buck,
a
general insubordination sprang up and
increased. Dave and
Sol-leks
were
unaffected, but the rest of the
team went from bad to
worse. Things
no
longer went right. There was
continual bickering and
jangling.
Trouble
was always afoot, and at the
bottom of it was Buck. He
kept
François
busy, for the dog-driver
was in constant apprehension of
the
life-and-death
struggle between the two
which he knew must take
place
sooner
or later; and on more than
one night the sounds of
quarrelling and
strife
among the other dogs turned
him out of his sleeping
robe, fearful
that
Buck and Spitz were at
it.
But
the opportunity did not
present itself, and they
pulled into
Dawson
one dreary afternoon with the
great fight still to come.
Here
were
many men, and countless dogs,
and Buck found them
all at work. It
seemed
the ordained order of things that
dogs should work. All day
they
swung
up and down the main
street in long teams, and in
the night their
jingling
bells still went by.
They hauled cabin logs and
firewood,
freighted
up to the mines, and did all
manner of work that horses
did in
the
Santa Clara Valley. Here
and there Buck met Southland
dogs, but in
the
main they were the wild
wolf husky breed. Every
night, regularly, at
nine,
at twelve, at three, they lifted a
nocturnal song, a weird and
eerie
chant,
in which it was Buck's
delight to join.
With
the aurora borealis flaming
coldly overhead, or the
stars
leaping
in the frost dance, and the
land numb and frozen under
its pall of
snow,
this song of the huskies
might have been the
defiance of life,
only
it
was pitched in minor key,
with long-drawn wailings and
half-sobs, and
was
more the pleading of life,
the articulate travail of existence. It
was
an
old song, old as the
breed itself--one of the
first songs of the
younger
world
in a day when songs were
sad. It was invested with
the woe of
unnumbered
generations, this plaint by
which Buck was so
strangely
stirred.
When he moaned and sobbed,
it was with the pain of
living that
was
of old the pain of his wild
fathers, and the fear
and mystery of the
32
THE
CALL OF THE WILD
cold
and dark that was to
them fear and mystery. And
that he should be
stirred
by it marked the completeness
with which he harked
back
through
the ages of fire and roof to
the raw beginnings of life
in the
howling
ages.
Seven
days from the time
they pulled into Dawson,
they dropped
down
the steep bank by the
Barracks to the Yukon Trail,
and pulled for
Dyea
and Salt Water. Perrault was
carrying despatches if anything
more
urgent
than those he had brought
in; also, the travel
pride had gripped
him,
and he purposed to make the
record trip of the year.
Several things
favored
him in this. The week's
rest had recuperated the
dogs and put
them
in thorough trim. The trail
they had broken into
the country was
packed
hard by later journeyers.
And further, the police
had arranged in
two
or three places deposits of grub
for dog and man, and he
was
travelling
light.
They
made Sixty Mile, which is a
fifty-mile run, on the first
day; and
the
second day saw them
booming up the Yukon well on
their way to
Pelly.
But such splendid running
was achieved not without
great trouble
and
vexation on the part of François. The
insidious revolt led by
Buck
had
destroyed the solidarity of
the team. It no longer was
as one dog
leaping
in the traces. The
encouragement Buck gave the
rebels led them
into
all kinds of petty
misdemeanors. No more was Spitz a leader
greatly
to
be feared. The old awe
departed, and they grew
equal to challenging
his
authority. Pike robbed him
of half a fish one night,
and gulped it
down
under the protection of
Buck. Another night Dub
and Joe fought
Spitz
and made him forego
the punishment they
deserved. And even
Billee,
the good-natured, was less good-natured,
and whined not half
so
placatingly
as in former days. Buck never
came near Spitz
without
snarling
and bristling menacingly. In fact,
his conduct approached
that
of
a bully, and he was given to
swaggering up and down
before Spitz's
very
nose.
The
breaking down of discipline
likewise affected the dogs
in their
relations
with one another. They
quarrelled and bickered more
than ever
among
themselves, till at times the camp
was a howling bedlam.
Dave
and
Sol-leks alone were unaltered,
though they were made
irritable by
the
unending squabbling. François swore
strange barbarous oaths,
and
THE
DOMINANT PRIMORDIAL
BEAST
33
stamped
the snow in futile rage,
and tore his hair.
His lash was
always
singing
among the dogs, but it
was of small avail. Directly
his back was
turned
they were at it again. He backed up Spitz
with his whip,
while
Buck
backed up the remainder of
the team. François knew he
was
behind
all the trouble, and
Buck knew he knew; but
Buck was too
clever
ever
again to be caught red-handed. He worked
faithfully in the
harness,
for
the toil had become a
delight to him; yet it was a
greater delight slyly
to
precipitate a fight amongst
his mates and tangle
the traces.
At
the mouth of the Tahkeena,
one night after supper, Dub
turned up
a
snowshoe rabbit, blundered
it, and missed. In a second
the whole team
was
in full cry. A hundred yards
away was a camp of the
Northwest
Police,
with fifty dogs, huskies
all, who joined the
chase. The rabbit
sped
down the river, turned
off into a small creek, up
the frozen bed of
which
it held steadily. It ran
lightly on the surface of the
snow, while the
dogs
ploughed through by main
strength. Buck led the pack,
sixty
strong,
around bend after bend, but he
could not gain. He lay
down low
to
the race, whining eagerly,
his splendid body flashing
forward, leap by
leap,
in the wan white moonlight.
And leap by leap, like some pale
frost
wraith,
the snowshoe rabbit flashed on
ahead.
All
that stirring of old
instincts which at stated
periods drives men
out
from the sounding cities to
forest and plain to kill
things by
chemically
propelled leaden pellets, the
blood lust, the joy to
kill--all
this
was Buck's, only it was
infinitely more intimate. He
was ranging at
the
head of the pack, running
the wild thing down, the
living meat, to
kill
with his own teeth and wash
his muzzle to the eyes in
warm blood.
There
is an ecstasy that marks the
summit of life, and beyond
which
life
cannot rise. And such is the paradox of
living, this ecstasy
comes
when
one is most alive, and it
comes as a complete forgetfulness
that
one
is alive. This ecstasy, this
forgetfulness of living, comes to
the artist,
caught
up and out of himself in a
sheet of flame; it comes to
the soldier,
war-mad
on a stricken field and
refusing quarter; and it
came to Buck,
leading
the pack, sounding the old
wolf-cry, straining after the
food that
was
alive and that fled
swiftly before him through
the moonlight. He
was
sounding the deeps of his
nature, and of the parts of
his nature that
were
deeper than he, going back
into the womb of Time. He
was
34
THE
CALL OF THE WILD
mastered
by the sheer surging of
life, the tidal wave of
being, the perfect
joy
of each separate muscle,
joint, and sinew in that it
was everything
that
was not death, that it
was aglow and rampant, expressing
itself in
movement,
flying exultantly under the
stars and over the face of
dead
matter
that did not
move.
But
Spitz, cold and calculating
even in his supreme moods,
left the
pack
and cut across a narrow
neck of land where the
creek made a long
bend
around. Buck did not know of
this, and as he rounded the bend,
the
frost
wraith of a rabbit still
flitting before him, he saw
another and larger
frost
wraith leap from the
overhanging bank into the
immediate path of
the
rabbit. It was Spitz. The
rabbit could not turn,
and as the white
teeth
broke
its back in mid air it
shrieked as loudly as a stricken man
may
shriek.
At sound of this, the cry of
Life plunging down from
Life's apex
in
the grip of Death, the full pack at
Buck's heels raised a hell's
chorus
of
delight.
Buck
did not cry out. He
did not check himself,
but drove in upon
Spitz,
shoulder to shoulder, so hard
that he missed the throat.
They
rolled
over and over in the powdery
snow. Spitz gained his feet
almost
as
though he had not been
overthrown, slashing Buck
down the shoulder
and
leaping clear. Twice his
teeth clipped together, like
the steel jaws of
a
trap, as he backed away for better
footing, with lean and
lifting lips
that
writhed and snarled.
In
a flash Buck knew it.
The time had come. It
was to the death. As
they
circled about, snarling,
ears laid back, keenly
watchful for the
advantage,
the scene came to Buck
with a sense of familiarity.
He
seemed
to remember it all,--the white
woods, and earth, and
moonlight,
and
the thrill of battle. Over
the whiteness and silence
brooded a ghostly
calm.
There was not the faintest
whisper of air--nothing moved,
not a
leaf
quivered, the visible
breaths of the dogs rising
slowly and lingering
in
the frosty air. They
had made short work of the
snowshoe rabbit,
these
dogs
that were ill-tamed wolves;
and they were now drawn up
in an
expectant
circle. They, too, were
silent, their eyes only
gleaming and
their
breaths drifting slowly
upward. To Buck it was
nothing new or
strange,
this scene of old time. It
was as though it had always
been, the
wonted
way of things.
THE
DOMINANT PRIMORDIAL
BEAST
35
Spitz
was a practised fighter.
From Spitzbergen through the
Arctic,
and
across Canada and the
Barrens, he had held his own
with all manner
of
dogs and achieved to mastery
over them. Bitter rage was
his, but
never
blind rage. In passion to
rend and destroy, he never forgot
that his
enemy
was in like passion to rend
and destroy. He never rushed till he
was
prepared to receive a rush; never
attacked till he had first
defended
that
attack.
In
vain Buck strove to sink
his teeth in the neck of
the big white
dog.
Wherever
his fangs struck for
the softer flesh, they
were countered by
the
fangs of Spitz. Fang clashed fang,
and lips were cut
and bleeding,
but
Buck could not penetrate
his enemy's guard. Then he
warmed up
and
enveloped Spitz in a whirlwind of rushes.
Time and time again he
tried
for the snow-white throat,
where life bubbled near to
the surface,
and
each time and every time
Spitz slashed him and
got away. Then
Buck
took to rushing, as though
for the throat, when,
suddenly drawing
back
his head and curving in
from the side, he would
drive his shoulder
at
the shoulder of Spitz, as a ram by
which to overthrow him.
But
instead,
Buck's shoulder was slashed
down each time as Spitz
leaped
lightly
away.
Spitz
was untouched, while Buck
was streaming with blood
and
panting
hard. The fight was
growing desperate. And all
the while the
silent
and wolfish circle waited to
finish off whichever dog
went down.
As
Buck grew winded, Spitz took
to rushing, and he kept him
staggering
for
footing. Once Buck went
over, and the whole
circle of sixty dogs
started
up; but he recovered
himself, almost in mid air,
and the circle
sank
down again and
waited.
But
Buck possessed a quality
that made for
greatness--imagination.
He
fought by instinct, but he
could fight by head as well.
He rushed, as
though
attempting the old shoulder
trick, but at the last
instant swept low
to
the snow and in.
His teeth closed on Spitz's
left fore leg. There was
a
crunch
of breaking bone, and the
white dog faced him on three
legs.
Thrice
he tried to knock him over,
then repeated the trick
and broke the
right
fore leg. Despite the pain
and helplessness, Spitz struggled
madly
to
keep up. He saw the
silent circle, with gleaming
eyes, lolling
tongues,
and
silvery breaths drifting
upward, closing in upon him
as he had seen
36
THE
CALL OF THE WILD
similar
circles close in upon beaten
antagonists in the past. Only
this
time
he was the one who
was beaten.
There
was no hope for him.
Buck was inexorable. Mercy
was a thing
reserved
for gentler climes. He manoeuvred
for the final rush.
The circle
had
tightened till he could feel
the breaths of the huskies
on his flanks.
He
could see them, beyond Spitz and to
either side, half crouching
for
the
spring, their eyes fixed
upon him. A pause seemed to
fall. Every
animal
was motionless as though turned to
stone. Only Spitz
quivered
and
bristled as he staggered back and
forth, snarling with
horrible
menace,
as though to frighten off
impending death. Then Buck
sprang in
and
out; but while he was
in, shoulder had at last
squarely met
shoulder.
The
dark circle became a dot on
the moon-flooded snow as Spitz
disappeared
from view. Buck stood
and looked on, the
successful
champion,
the dominant primordial
beast who had made
his kill and
found
it good.
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