Read Allan and the Ice Gods Online
Authors: H. Rider Haggard
whenever they sank a little, snow fell till it was piled up in great
drifts out of which in places only the tops of the firs appeared,
drifts that almost swallowed up the huts, so that men must throw aside
the snow from day to day to come to each other. The sea, too, was more
frozen than ever it had been before, and through the pack ice moved
great bergs like mountains, crashing their road southward, on which
bergs might be seen numbers of terrible white bears that scrambled
from them to the shore, seeking what they might devour. For if any of
the seals on which they lived were left, these were hidden beneath the
ice where the bears could not come at them.
From month to month, the people lived upon such food as Wi in his
wisdom had stored up for them, though now and again, led by him and
Moananga, they must go out against the bears that, made mad by hunger,
even strove to tear a way through the sides and roofs of the huts. In
these fights a number of them perished, being mauled by the bears, or
dying of the cold while they waited for them. Also, many of the old
people and young children died of this same cold, especially in those
huts where, notwithstanding Wi’s orders, enough wood and dried seaweed
had not been stored. For now no seaweed could be got, and because of
the snowdrifts and the blizzards, it was impossible to go to the
forest and thence to bring more wood.
During all this time of suffering and of terror, Wi went to and fro
with a smiling face, doing the best he could to help even the
humblest, sheltering them in the cave, sharing the chief’s food with
them, and even the fuel of which he had gathered so great a store.
Laleela, too, cherished the outcast babes and wept as one by one they
died of the bitter frosts that poured into the open mouth of the cave
and struck them through their wrappings.
At last the black winter months passed away, giving place to those of
spring. Yet no spring came. The snow, it is true, ceased to fall, and
the pack ice off the shore grew thinner, also the rivers began to run
turbidly, filled with brine rather than water, and the trees of the
woods appeared again out of their white beds, blackened and dead, for
the most part. But there was no green where there should have been
grass, no spring flowers bloomed, the fir buds did not burst, no seals
or birds appeared, while the cold remained like to that of a winter
when Wi was a lad.
Great murmuring went up from the tribe. Tales had gone from mouth to
mouth.
“The curse has come upon us,” said these tales; “a curse brought by
the fair Witch-of-the-Sea.”
Moreover, there spread a rumour that Wi, their chief, had deserted the
Ice-gods whom all had worshipped since the days of Urk’s grandfather’s
great-grandfather, and perhaps even earlier; that now he bent to the
knee to some other god, that of the Witch-of-the-Sea. As Aaka would
say nothing—although perchance already she had said too much—and as
they dared not ask the truth of Wi, he who had slain Henga and the
great toothed tiger and the bull of bulls and was therefore more than
a man, chosen ones from among the people waylaid Pag, who was Wi’s
chief counsellor, and questioned him. He listened grimly, wrapped up
in his skin rugs, and watching them with his one eye, then answered:
“I know nothing of this matter of gods, I who put no faith in any
gods. All I know is that the weather has changed for the worse; also
that, as for the oath which Wi swore, he has kept it well, seeing that
although a very fair one lay to his hand, he has taken no other wife—
which he might have done—for she whom he has does not treat him
kindly. For the rest, if you are not content to die quietly, as it
seems that we must do, and would find out what is the will of the
gods, go and ask it of those who dwell in the ice yonder. Aye, let all
those who complain gather themselves together, and let Wi and those
who cling to him, of whom I am one, gather themselves together also.
Then let us go up and stand before the Ice-gods in whom you put faith
and make sacrifice to them, if there be anything left to offer, and
ask them for an oracle.”
Thus spoke Pag in his bitterness and mockery, never guessing that
those poor tortured and bewildered folk would pay heed to his words.
Yet this they did, for these seemed to them a tree to cling to as they
were swept away by the flood of misery. Surely the gods to whom their
fathers had bent the knee from the beginning must exist; surely they
would listen if the people appeared before them and offered them
sacrifice, and would cause the ice to melt and the spring to come.
The people took counsel together, and at last sent some of their
number to the mouth of the cave to speak with Wi, N’gae, he who made
charms, the Priest of the Ice-gods, and Pitokiti and Hou and Whaka,
among them. So they went up to the cave, having chosen Hotoa the Slow-speeched, and Urk the Ancient as their spokesmen, and at the mouth of
the cave Wini-wini the Shudderer blew three blasts upon his horn
according to the old custom when the people desired to talk with the
chief.
Wi came forth wearing his robe that was made of the hide of the long-toothed tiger which he had killed, and saw the spokesmen standing
before him, shame-faced and with downcast eyes, while behind them
gathered upon the meeting place where he had fought Henga, the mass of
the people, or those who were left of them, were huddled together
miserably.
“What would you with me?” he asked.
“Chief,” mumbled Urk, “we are sent to say that the people can no
longer bear the curse which has fallen upon them. We hear that the
Witch-from-the-Sea, who brought the curse, has changed your heart, so
that you have ceased to worship the ancient gods who dwell in the ice,
and have set up some other god in your heart, wherefore the Ice-dwellers are angry. We ask you if this be true.”
“It is true,” answered Wi steadfastly. “No longer do I worship the
Ice-gods, because there are no such gods. Those that dwell in the ice
are but a great beast and a man, both of whom have been dead from the
beginning.”
Now the messengers looked at each other and shivered, for to them
these words were horrible, while N’gae the priest waved his hands and
muttered prayers or spells. Then Urk went on:
“We feared that this was so. Hearken, Chief. It has been handed down
to me from my forefathers that once, when the people were starving
because of bad seasons, the chief offered up his son as a sacrifice to
the Ice-gods. Yes, he killed his son before them; whereon the gods
were appeased, the seasons changed, the seals and the fish returned in
plenty, and all was well.”
“Do you demand that I should sacrifice my son?” asked Wi.
“Chief, N’gae the priest of the Ice-gods like his father before him,
the weaver of spells, and Taren his wife, the seeress, have made
divination and wisdom has come upon them. Yes, a Voice has spoken to
them from the roof of their hut in the dead of night.”
“And what said the Voice?” asked Wi, leaning on his ax and looking at
N’gae. “Tell me, you to whom it spoke.”
Then the lank, evil-faced N’gae piped an answer in his thin voice.
“Chief, the voice said that the Ice-gods must have their sacrifice and
that this sacrifice must walk upon two legs.”
“Did it name the sacrifice, N’gae?”
“Nay. Yet it said that it must be chosen by the chief from the chief’s
household, and thereafter be offered with his own hand, yonder in the
holy place before the face of the gods.”
“Name my household,” said Wi.
“Chief, there are but three of them. Aaka your wife, Foh your son, and
the Witch-from-the-Sea who is your second wife.”
“I have no second wife,” answered Wi. “In that matter, as in all
others, I have kept the oath which I made to the people.”
“We hold that she is your second wife; also that she has brought the
curse upon us, as she brought the Red Wanderers,” replied N’gae
stubbornly, while the others nodded their heads in assent. “We
demand,” he went on, “that you choose one of these three to be offered
to the Ice-dwellers at sunset on the night of full moon, which is the
appointed hour of sacrifice when the sun and the moon look at each
other across the sky.”
“And if I refuse?” said Wi quietly.
Now N’gae looked at Urk, and Urk answered:
“If you refuse, Chief, this is the decree of the people—this is their
message to you: They will kill all these three, Aaka your wife, Foh
your son, and the Witch-from-the-Sea, your second wife, so that they
may be sure that the one dies who should have been chosen. This they
will do, however, whenever and wherever they can catch them, by day or
by night, waking or sleeping, walking or eating, and having slain
them, they will take their bodies and lay them as an offering on the
threshold of the Dwellers in the Ice.”
“Why not kill me?” asked Wi.
“Chief—because you are the Chief, who may only be slain by one who is
stronger than he, as you slew Henga, and who is there that is stronger
than you are or who dare stand before you?”
“So, like wolves, you would kill the weak and let the mighty be,” said
Wi with scorn. “Well, Messengers, well, Voices of the People, go back
to them and say that Wi the Chief will take counsel with himself as to
this matter which you have brought before him. To-morrow, at this same
hour of midday, return to me and I shall speak my heart to you and to
the people, so that to-morrow night, at the setting of the sun, the
sacrifice, if sacrifice there must be, may be accomplished, when the
sun and the full moon look at each other across the skies.”
Then they went, shrinking before his eyes, which seemed to burn them
like fire.
Now of this talk Wi said nothing to any—no, not even to Aaka or Pag
or Laleela, though perchance they all knew it, for when they met him
they looked upon him strangely, as did even Foh his son, or so it
seemed to him. That afternoon, going to the mouth of the cave, he saw
that a large fire had been lit down among the huts and that round it
many were gathered as though at a feast.
“Perhaps they have found a dead seal and cook it,” said Wi to himself.
As he stood there wondering, Pag and Moananga came up, and he noted
that Moananga was bruised as though he had been fighting.
“What passes yonder?” asked Wi.
“This, Brother,” answered Moananga, and there was horror in his voice.
“Those of the people who have eaten all their store and to whom by
your orders no more may be given till after the night of the full
moon, and who are therefore starving, have slaughtered two girl
children and cook and devour them. I tried to stay them but they
felled me with clubs, for they are fierce as wolves and more savage.”
“Is it so?” said Wi in a low voice, for his heart was sick in him.
“Shall we gather men and fall on them and kill them?” asked Moananga.
“Of what use to shed more blood?” answered Wi. “They are starving
brutes, and such will fill themselves. Hearken. I go out to think. Let
none follow me, for I would be alone. Fear not, I shall return. Yet,
keep watch over the other children, for there are many famished
yonder.”
So Wi went along the base of the hills that this spring were covered
with thick ice, such as had never been seen upon them before. This
ice, indeed, had crept down from the glaciers above almost to the
seashore, and he noted that where it ended its thickness was that of
the height of three spears tied one to another, and wondered what it
might be in the clefts farther up the slope of the hills. Wi came to
the valley that was called the Home of the Ice-gods and went up to it.
Lo! the great glacier had moved forward, for the last wand that he had
set to measure its advance was covered and the rocks that the ice had
pushed in front of it were piled into a heap or ridge that separated
the valley into two parts, a larger part to the left as he faced the
glacier in front of the Sleeper and a smaller part to the right where
the ice was not so steep. Wi looked at the Sleeper and the man. It
seemed to him that they were nearer than ever they had been before,
for he could see them both more clearly, although they were also
higher up in the ice.
“These gods travel,” he said to himself. Then he crossed the ridge of
piled-up stones and sat himself down upon a rock to think, as more
than once he had done before. Then he had come thither because the
place was holy to him. Now it was no longer holy, but he sought it
because he knew that he would be alone, for none dared enter it at
nightfall. Wi watched the edge of the sun sinking toward the west and
the edge of the moon rising in the east, and began to pray.
“O That which Laleela worships and has taught me to worship, hear me,”
he prayed. “Behold! I am helpless. Those poor, starving folk seek to
kill the ones I love and say to me, ‘Choose the victim,’ and if I
choose not they will kill them. They say that the Ice-gods demand a