A Daughter of the Snows eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 335 pages of information about A Daughter of the Snows.

A Daughter of the Snows eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 335 pages of information about A Daughter of the Snows.

What she said they did not hear, but she got him on his feet and led him forward.  He walked as a dead man might walk, and when he entered the open air gazed forth wonderingly upon the muddy sweep of the Yukon.  The crowd had formed by the bank, about a pine tree.  A boy, engaged in running a rope over one of the branches, finished his task and slid down the trunk to the ground.  He looked quickly at the palms of his hands and blew upon them, and a laugh went up.  A couple of wolf-dogs, on the outskirts, bristled up to each other and bared their fangs.  Men encouraged them.  They closed in and rolled over, but were kicked aside to make room for St. Vincent.

Corliss came up the bank to Frona.  “What’s up?” he whispered.  “Is it off?”

She tried to speak, but swallowed and nodded her head.

“This way, Gregory.”  She touched his arm and guided him to the box beneath the rope.

Corliss, keeping step with them, looked over the crowd speculatively and felt into his jacket-pocket.  “Can I do anything?” he asked, gnawing his under lip impatiently.  “Whatever you say goes, Frona.  I can stand them off.”

She looked at him, aware of pleasure in the sight.  She knew he would dare it, but she knew also that it would be unfair.  St. Vincent had had his chance, and it was not right that further sacrifice should be made.  “No, Vance.  It is too late.  Nothing can be done.”

“At least let me try,” he persisted.

“No; it is not our fault that our plan failed, and . . . and . . .”  Her eyes filled.  “Please do not ask it of me.”

“Then let me take you away.  You cannot remain here.”

“I must,” she answered, simply, and turned to St. Vincent, who seemed dreaming.

Blackey was tying the hangman’s knot in the rope’s end, preparatory to slipping the noose over St. Vincent’s head.

“Kiss me, Gregory,” she said, her hand on his arm.

He started at the touch, and saw all eager eyes centred upon him, and the yellow noose, just shaped, in the hands of the hangman.  He threw up his arms, as though to ward it off, and cried loudly, “No! no!  Let me confess!  Let me tell the truth, then you’ll believe me!”

Bill Brown and the chairman shoved Blackey back, and the crowd gathered in.  Cries and protestations rose from its midst.  “No, you don’t,” a boy’s shrill voice made itself heard.  “I’m not going to go.  I climbed the tree and made the rope fast, and I’ve got a right to stay.”  “You’re only a kid,” replied a man’s voice, “and it ain’t good for you.”  “I don’t care, and I’m not a kid.  I’m—­I’m used to such things.  And, anyway, I climbed the tree.  Look at my hands.”  “Of course he can stay,” other voices took up the trouble.  “Leave him alone, Curley.”  “You ain’t the whole thing.”  A laugh greeted this, and things quieted down.

“Silence!” the chairman called, and then to St. Vincent, “Go ahead, you, and don’t take all day about it.”

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Project Gutenberg
A Daughter of the Snows from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.