The Gold Hunters eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 210 pages of information about The Gold Hunters.

The Gold Hunters eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 210 pages of information about The Gold Hunters.

Tirelessly, mile after mile, hour after hour, broken only by the short intervals of rest on the sledge, continued the race across Lake Nipigon.  The moon rose higher; the blood in it paled to the crimson glow of the moose flower, and silvered as it climbed into the sky, until the orb hung like a great golden-white disk.  In the splendor of it the solitude of ice and snow glistened without end.  There was no sound but the slipping of the sledge, the pattering of the dogs’ moccasined feet, and now and then a few breathless words spoken by Rod or his companions.  It was a little after eight o’clock by Rod’s watch when there came a change in the appearance of the lake ahead of them.  Wabi, who was on the sledge, was the first to notice it, and he shouted back his discovery to the white youth.

“The forest!  We’re across!”

The tired dogs seemed to leap into new life at his words, and the leader replied with a whining joyous cry as the odors of balsam and fir came to him.  The sharp pinnacles of the forest, reaching up into the night’s white glow, grew more and more distinct as the sledge sped on, and five minutes later the team drew up in a huddled, panting bunch on the shore.  That day the men and dogs from Wabinosh House had traveled sixty miles.

“We’ll camp here!” declared Wabi, as he dropped on the sledge.  “We’ll camp here—­unless you leave me behind!”

Mukoki, tireless to the last, had already found an ax.

“No rest now,” he warned, “Too tired!  You rest now—­build no camp.  Build camp—­then rest!”

“You’re right, Muky,” cried Wabi, jumping to his feet with forced enthusiasm.  “If I sit down for five minutes I’ll fall asleep.  Rod, you build a fire.  Muky and I will make the shelter.”

In less than half an hour the balsam bough shelter was complete, and in front of it roared a fire that sent its light and heat for twenty paces round.  From farther back in the forest the three dragged several small logs, and no sooner had they been added to the flames than both Mukoki and Wabigoon wrapped themselves in their furs and burrowed deep into the sweet-scented balsam under the shelter.  Rod’s experience that day had not been filled with the terrible hardships of his companions, and for some time after they had fallen asleep he sat close to the fire, thinking again of the strangeness with which his fortunes had changed, and watching the flickering firelight as it played in a thousand fanciful figures in the deeper and denser gloom of the forest.  The dogs had crept in close to the blazing logs and lay as still as though life no longer animated their tawny bodies.  From far away there came the lonely howl of a wolf; a great white man-owl fluttered close to the camp and chortled his crazy, half-human “hello, hello, hello;” the trees cracked with the tightening frost, but neither wolf howl nor frost nor the ghostly visitant’s insane voice aroused those who were sleeping.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Gold Hunters from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.