Read Allan and the Ice Gods Online
Authors: H. Rider Haggard
thousands of winters ago perhaps, this man had been flying from the
ice and snow, when in an instant they rushed down and swallowed him
up, so that there he choked and died. He was no god, but just a poor
man, if indeed he were altogether a man, whom death had taken in this
fashion and whom the ice had preserved with his story written on his
hideous face and fleeing form.
Then, was the Sleeper a god, or was he some huge wild beast that lived
when the man lived and perished when the man perished, and in like
fashion roaring open-mouthed to the heavens for help? So much for the
gods! If they dwelt there in the glacier, as perhaps they dwelt
everywhere, it was not in the shapes of this enormous brute, or of the
man who also looked like a brute, for, as Wi had never seen an ape, he
did not know that this was what he really resembled.
Whatever their end may have been, as he stared at them a fancy, or a
vision, came to Wi. That man was himself—or all men, and the huge
brute behind was Death who pursued, and the ice around was Doom which
swallowed up both Life and Death. Vague thoughts of all this mystery
got hold of his untutored mind and overcame it, so that presently he
turned to creep shivering and terror-struck from these relics and
emblems of a tragedy he could not comprehend.
Coming to the beach again, Wi continued to walk eastward past the
smaller hills and ice-filled valleys, for he desired to visit a
certain bay beyond them, where the seals were wont to gather when they
arrived, hoping that he would see the first of them coming up from the
south to breed. Like the rest of the people, Wi thought more of seals
than he did of anything else, because these furnished the most of
their winter food and of the other things that they needed. On he went
till, turning a spur of cliff which here ran down to the sea to the
east of the glacier field, he came to the bay that was bordered by a
wide stretch of white sand and backed by a barren, rocky plain.
Ceasing to ponder upon the Sleeper and the man and the deeper things
that the sight of them had awakened in his heart, Wi searched the
shore with his keen hunter’s eyes, and the water of the bay and the
ridge of rock whereby at low tide it was almost enclosed, that ran at
some four spear-casts from the shore, but not one seal could he see.
“They are even later this spring than they were last year,” he
muttered to himself, and was about to make his way homeward when, on
the farther side of the ridge, where the waves broke, he caught sight
of some strange object that was stranded among the surf, a long thing
which seemed to be pointed at both ends. At first he thought that it
might be a dead animal of a sort new to him, washed up by the sea, and
was turning to go when the surf lifted the object and he saw that it
seemed to be hollow and that there lay in it what looked to him like a
human form.
Now Wi’s curiosity was awakened, and he wished that he could come
nearer. This, however, was impossible, for at each end of the ridge of
rocks was open water through which the tide raced swiftly. Or rather
it was not possible except by swimming out from the shore of the bay.
It is true that Wi was a great swimmer but the water was bitterly
cold, for in it still floated many lumps of drift ice, so cold that
there was much danger to a swimmer, who might, moreover, be cut or
bruised by the sharp edges of the ice. Also, the swim would be long,
for the ridge was far away. So again he thought that he would go home
and not give himself up to more fancies about someone who lay in that
hollow thing which was strange to him, for Wi had never seen a boat.
Indeed, he turned to do so and walked a few paces.
Then for a second time that day it seemed to him as though a rope were
drawing him, this time not to the glacier face but to the ridge of
rock and that which lay upon its farther side. Supposing that there
was a man—or woman—yonder? It seemed impossible because no other men
or women lived except those upon the beach of whom he was chief. What
he saw was some drift log splintered white by rolling upon stones, or
perhaps a great fish dead and rotten. And yet how could he say that
there were no other men and women, he who had just looked upon the
corpse of a man who must have lived thousands of years ago when the
ancient ice that wrapped him round was born in the womb of the distant
mountains whence it had flowed? How could he be sure that he and his
people were the only two-legged creatures on the earth, which perhaps
was bigger than they knew?
Oh! he would go to look, for if he did not he would be sorry all his
life. Should he be cramped in the cold water and drowned, or should
the pack ice strike him so that he sank, after all it would not matter
very much. Then, doubtless, Pag would become chief, or perhaps he
would make Moananga chief, which would please the people better, and
be the whisperer in his ear. Either of them would look after Foh, or
if they did not, Aaka would, especially when he was gone and she could
no more be jealous because the boy loved him better than he did her.
Probably, too, there at the bottom of the sea was peace without fears
or hopes, questionings, or disappointments. Also fate was always
behind them as the huge Sleeper was behind that wild, hairy creature
that was once a man.
So thought WI, and as he thought he threw off his cloak and laid it on
a rock, hiding the ax beneath it so that, if he returned no more, Pag
and the others might learn that the sea had taken him. Then he plunged
into the water very swiftly, lest his courage should desert him, and
struck out for the reef. At first that water was bitterly cold but, as
he swam with great strokes, stopping now and again to push aside the
blocks of floating ice or to feel them with his hand beneath the
surface lest on them should be sharp points that would cut him, he
grew warmer.
Also, the joy of the quest, the hope of adventure, caused his blood to
flow more quickly than it had done there upon the beach, where he was
filled with so many sad thoughts and haunted by the memory of the
strange and hideous man with whom he had come face to face in the ice
of the glacier. Now he felt as he had done when as a boy he had
climbed the mountain crag on which none had ever dared to set foot, to
rob the great eagle’s nest, and had brought down its young one in a
basket on his back, while the parent eagles screamed round him
striking at this head and tearing him, which young one he had pinioned
and kept for years, till at last the dogs killed it. Yes, once more he
was a fearless boy, untroubled by memories of yesterday or fears for
to-morrow, and seeking only what the hour might bring him.
At length Wi reached the reef, uncramped and unhurt. Crawling onto it,
he shook himself as a dog does, then very cautiously picked his way
among its stones and peered down at the spot, where from the height of
the shore he had seen that strange, sharp-pointed thing in which a
figure seemed to be lying. It was gone! No, there it was right beneath
him, lifted up toward him by the send of the surf. It was something
made by man to float upon the water, much larger than he had thought,
for five or six people could have sat in it, hollowed it would seem
from a great tree, thicker than any that he knew, for there were ax
marks in the red-hued wood. Moreover, his eyes had not deceived him,
for, behold! within this shaped log lay a figure covered with a cloak
or blanket of white fur which hid it all, even the head that rested at
the raised end of the log. No, not quite all, for outside of the cloak
lay a tress of hair, long hair, yellow as the marsh flowers that came
in spring, also a white arm and hand, which hand grasped a wooden
implement, that from its shape, he guessed, must be used to drive the
hollowed log through the water.
Wi stared and stared, and while he stared became aware that this hand
was not that of a dead woman, for from its delicate shape he knew it
to be a woman’s, because, although blue with cold, presently the
little finger moved, bending itself inward. Noting this, he pondered
for a moment. What could he do? To swim to the beach bearing a
senseless woman was impossible; moreover, she would die in the icy
water. If she might be brought there at all, it must be in that in
which she lay. Yet to drag that heavy log across the reef was behind
his strength. Therefore there was but one thing to be done. It had
come ashore but a little distance from the western channel, by which
the sea flowed in and out of the bay. The tide had turned, he noted it
as he swam, and was now running shoreward. If he pushed the log to the
channel, it would float to the beach. He leapt into the surf and
thrust it forward; being light, it moved easily, and as it drew but
very little water, not more than four handbreadths, it would seem, he
could guide it through the surf and shallows out of reach of the
breaking waves.
Pushing it in front of him, presently he came to the lip of the race
down which the tide began to run strongly shoreward. Here he paused a
moment, proposing to take to the water once more and swim behind the
hollow tree, guiding it with his hand. Then he remembered that the
water was dreadfully cold—that the way was long and that, before he
covered it, cramp might seize him so that he would sink and go to find
out the truth about the gods and many other matters.
Perhaps this might be well for him, but if he were drowned, what would
happen to her who lay there? Without doubt, she, who must already be
near to death, would die also, for except to kill seals, of which as
yet there were not any, no one came to this lonely far-off bay, or if
perchance some did and saw a strange woman lying in a hollow tree,
they would run away, thinking that she was a witch of the sea, such as
was told of in legends. Or perhaps they would kill her lest she should
be the bearer of a curse.
Then he thought to himself, why should he not get into the log and
guide it ashore with that which lay in the stranger’s hand? Often when
the sea was calm and the weather warm he, like others of the tribe,
would bestride a piece of wood and paddle it by the help of a bough to
a certain sand bank that swarmed with fish, there to catch them on a
line. Therefore, he could guess the use of what she held and knew how
it should be handled.
Taking the paddle very gently from her hand, Wi entered the canoe, for
such it was, and seating himself at the woman’s feet, pushed it off
into the centre of the race. Here the tide took it and bore it
forward, so that all he need do, at any rate at first, was to keep the
bark straight and after they were out of the race and in the bay, with
gentle strokes of the paddle that he dipped into the water first on
one side and then on the other, as he was accustomed to do when out
fishing on a log, to drive it shoreward, avoiding the lumps of
floating ice.
Thus this naked savage man and the shrouded woman upon whose face he
had not yet dared to look, partly because he was naked and partly
because he feared what he might behold beneath that cloak—a sea-witch, perhaps, who would drag him into the deep water—came safely to
the shore. When a while before Wi had looked upon the sleeper in the
ice and the hairy one who seemed to flee in front of it, in his heart
he had compared these two to man being hunted of Fate in a most
fearful form. He did not know that Fate has many shapes and that some
of them are very fair. He did not guess that there stretched senseless
before him, lay his fate, a fate as deadly as the monstrous Sleeper
would have been to the hairy man who had lived and died thousands of
years ago.
Wi leapt to the beach, and seizing the canoe by a hide rope which was
attached to its prow, dragged it over the hard, wet sand, as, being
very strong, he could do easily enough, till it was well above high-water mark. Then he ran to the rock and clothed himself swiftly in his
girdle of dressed seal fur and his hooded cloak of gray wolfskin which
he wore when out hunting, slipping his hand through the loop of the
ax, for, after all, who knew what might lie beneath that covering?
Also, about his shoulders he hung the bag in which when he went abroad
he kept food for a day or two and his tools for making fire. Then he
returned to the canoe and, with a beating heart, for like all savages
he was frightened of the unknown, drew off the fur wrapping from her
who lay senseless, and stared down.
Next instant he staggered back, for never had he seen and never had he
dreamed of a woman so beautiful as this that the sea had brought to
him. Tall she was, and shapely. Young, too, and all about her hung the
matted masses of her yellow hair. Though somewhat blue with cold and
reddened where the weather had caught it, her skin was of the
whiteness of snow; her face was oval and her features were fine and