Read Allan and the Ice Gods Online
Authors: H. Rider Haggard
fashion, a knowledge of the code and of what happened to those who
broke it grew by degrees. Thus, when Turi the Food-Hoarder managed to
secure more than his share of the spread of stockfish by arriving
earlier than the others, his hoard was raided and most of it
distributed among the poor, after which he was more careful in the
hiding of his ill-gotten gains.
Again, when Rahi, the rich trader, was proved to have supplied bad
bone-fish hooks, broken at the point or weak in the shank, in exchange
for skins which had been received by him in advance, Moananga went
with some men, and digging beneath the floor of his hut, found scores
of hooks wrapped up in hide, which they took and distributed amongst
those of the tripe who had none. Great was the outcry of Rahi, but in
this case few joined in it, for all loved to see who battened on the
poor in the hour of their necessity forced to disgorge some of his
gain.
Moreover, although he offended many who murdered and plotted against
him on the whole, Wi gained great credit for these good laws of his.
For now the people knew that he who dwelt in the cave was no murderer
or robber, as Henga and other chiefs had been, but a man who, taking
from them as little as might be, was honest, and although often, as
they thought, foolish, one who strove for the good of all. Therefore,
by degrees, they came to obey his laws—some more and some less—and,
although they abused him openly, in private they spoke well of him and
hoped that his rule would continue.
Yet at last trouble came. It chanced that a certain sour-natured woman
named Ejji bore a female child, and, not wishing to be troubled with
it, forced her husband to lay it on a stone at the edge of the forest
where the wolves came every night, that it might be devoured by them.
But this woman was watched by other women—set about the business by
Pag, who knew her heart and suspected her—as was her husband, who was
seized when he had laid the child upon the stone at nightfall even as
he told his wife Ejji what he had done and received her thanks.
Next morning, both of them were brought before Wi, who sat dealing out
justice at the mouth of the cave. He asked them what had become of the
girl child that was born to them within a moon. Ejji answered boldly
that it had died and its body had been cast away according to custom.
Thereon Wi made a sign and a foster mother was led from the cave
bearing the child in her arms, for thither it had been taken, as Wi
had promised should be done in such cases. The woman Ejji denied that
it was her child, but the husband, taking it in his arms, said
otherwise and, on being pressed, admitted that what he had done was
against his will and for the sake of peace in his home.
Then, when the finding of the child had been proved, Wi, after
reciting the law, ordered that these two, who were rich and not driven
by need, should be taken at sunset and tied to trees by that stone
upon which they had exposed the child, that the wolves might devour
them. At this stern sentence there was much trouble among the tribe,
most of whom had thrown out female infants in their time, and threats
were made against Wi.
Yet he would not change his judgment, and at nightfall, amidst
lamentations from their relatives and friends, the pair were taken out
and tied to the trees, whereon they were abandoned by all as evildoers
who had been unlucky enough to be found out.
During the night, growlings and cries were heard rising from the
direction of the trees, which told the tribe that Ejji and her husband
had been devoured by the wolves which always wandered there at a
distance from the huts where, unless they were very hungry, they dared
not come, because of the fires and the pitfalls. The death of these
two made the people very angry, so much so that many of them ran up to
the cave to revile Wi by whose order it had been brought about,
shouting out that the killing of men and women because they wished to
be rid of a useless brat was not to be borne. Greatly were they
astonished when, there in the mouth of the cave, they saw three dead
wolves, and standing behind them, bound hand and foot, Ejji and her
husband.
Then waddled forth Pag, holding a red spear in his hand, who said:
“Listen! This pair were justly condemned to die by the death that they
would have given to their child. Yet went forth Wi the chief, and
Moananga his brother, and I, Pag, with some dogs and waited in the
night close by but where they could not see us. Came the wolves, six
or eight of them, and flew at these two. Then we loosed the dogs and,
at risk to ourselves, attacked the brutes, killing three and wounding
others so that they ran away. Afterward we unbound Ejji and her
husband and carried them here, for they were so frightened that they
could scarcely walk. Now, by the command of Wi, I set them free to
tell all that, if another girl is cast forth, those who do the deed
will be left to die and none will come to save them.”
So Ejji and her husband were loosed and crept away, covered with
shame; but for his dealings in this matter Wi gained great honour, as
Moananga and even Pag did also.
After this, no more girl children were thrown out to die or to be
devoured, but, on the other hand, several were brought to Wi because
their parents said they could not support them. These infants, as he
had promised he would do, he took into the cave, setting aside a part
of it near to the light and fires for their use, which, as the place
was large, could be done easily. Here the mothers must come to feed
them till they were old enough to be given into the charge of certain
women whom he chose to nurse them.
Now, all these changes caused much talk in the tribe, so that two
parties were formed, one of which was in favour of them and one
against them. However, as yet no one quarrelled with Wi, whom all knew
to be better and wiser than any chief told of in their tradition.
Moreover, the people had other things to think of, since now, in the
summer months, was the time when food must be stored for the long
winter.
At this business Wi and his Council made everyone work according to
his strength, even the children being used to collect the eggs of
seabirds and to spread out the cod and other fishes, after cleaning
them, to dry in the sun in a place, watched day and night, where the
wolves and foxes could not come to steal them. A tithe of all this
food went to the chief for his support and for that of those dependent
on him. Then half of what remained was stored against days of want,
either in the cave or, to keep it fresh, buried deep in ice at the
foot of the glaciers with great stones piled upon the top to make it
safe from the wolves and other beasts of prey.
Thus did Wi work from dawn to dark, with Pag to help him, directing
all things, till often he was so tired that he fell asleep before he
could lie down; he who hitherto had spent most of his days hunting in
the open air. At night he would sometimes rest in Aaka’s hut, for she
kept her word and would not come into the cave while Pag was there.
Thus they lived in seeming agreement and talked together of small
matters of daily life, but no more of those over which they had
quarrelled.
The boy Foh, however, although he slept in his mother’s hut at night
as he was commanded to do, lived more and more with his father because
there he was so welcome. For Aaka was jealous even of Foh, and this
the lad knew—or felt.
The winter came on very early indeed that year; there was little
autumn. Of a sudden, on one calm day when a sun without heat shone,
Wi, who was walking on the shore with Urk the Aged, Moananga, and Pag,
for he was so busy that thus he was forced to take counsel with them,
heard a sound like thunder and saw the eiderduck rise in thousands,
wheel round, and fly off toward the south.
“What frightened them?” he asked, and Urk answered:
“Nothing, I think, but when I was a boy, over seventy summers gone, I
remember that they did just the same thing at about this time, after
which came the harshest and longest winter that had been known, when
it was so cold that many of the people died. Still, it may happen that
the fowl were frightened by something, such as a shaking of the earth
when the ice stirs farther north at the end of summer. If so, they
will return, but if not, we shall see them no more till next spring.”
The duck did not return, although they left so hurriedly that hundreds
of flappers which could scarcely fly remained behind and were hunted
down by the children of the tribe and stored in the ice for food. Also
the breeding seals that came up from the south and other creatures
went away with their young, as did most of the fish.
Next night there was a sharp frost, warned by which Wi set the tribe
to drag in firewood from the edge of the forest, where firs blown down
by storms lay in plenty. This was a slow and toilsome task, because
they had no saws with which to cut up the trees or rid them of the
branches, and could only hack them to pieces slowly with flint axes.
From long experience, they counted on a month of open weather for this
wood harvest before the snow began to fall, burying the dead trees so
that they could not come at them, for this fuel-dragging was their
last task ere winter set in.
That year, however, snow fell on the sixth day, although not thickly,
and the heavy sky showed that there was more to come. Noting this, Wi
set the whole tribe to work and, neglecting everything else, went out
with them to make sure that all did their share. Thus it came about
that, in fourteen more days, they had piled up a greater store of wood
than Urk had ever seen in all his life, and with it much moss for the
camp wicks and many heaps of seaweed left by the high tides, which, if
kept dry under earth, burned even better than did the wood.
The people grumbled at this incessant toil, carried on in sleet or
lightly falling snow. But Wi would not listen to their complaints, for
he was frightened of he knew not what, and made them work through all
the hours of the daylight, and even by that of the moon. Well was it
that he did so, for scarcely were the last trunks dragged home, the
boughs brought in and piled up by the boys and girls, and all the
heaps of seaweed earthed up, when a great snow began to fall which
continued for many days, burying the land several feet deep, so that
it would have been impossible to come to the fallen trees or to
collect the moss and seaweed. Then, after the snow, came frosts, great
frosts that continued for months.
Never had such a winter been known as that which began with this
snowfall, especially as the daylight seemed to be shorter than in the
past, though this they held was because of the continual snow clouds.
Before it was done, indeed, even the greatest grumbler in the tribe
blessed Wi, who had laid up such vast stores of food and fuel, without
which they must have perished. As it was, many who were old or weakly
died, as did some of the children; and because it was impossible to
bury them in the frozen earth, they were taken away and covered with
snow, whence presently the wolves dug them up.
As the months went on, these wolves became very terrible, for, being
unable to find food, they ravened boldly round the village, and even
rushed into the huts at night, dragging out some of their inmates,
while in the daytime they lay in wait to catch children. Then Wi
caused steep snow banks to be made as a protection, and at certain
places kept fires burning, doing all he could to scare the beasts.
Great white bears from the sea-borne ice appeared also, roaming round
and terrifying them, though these creatures seemed to be afraid of man
and did not kill any people. Drawn by its smell, however, they dug up
some of the buried stores of food and devoured them, which was a great
loss to the tribe.
At length the attacks of these wolves and other wild beasts grew so
fierce and constant that Wi, after consulting with Moananga and Pag,
determined that war must be waged against them before more people were
devoured. Now in the ice-topped hills behind the beach where the huts
stood was a certain high-cliffed hole from which there was no escape
and which could only be entered by a narrow gorge. This was the plan
of Wi, the cunning hunter—to drive all the wolves into that great
rock-surrounded hole, and to build a wall across its mouth over which
they could not climb and thus to be rid of them. First, however, he
must accustom them to enter that place, lest they should break back.
This he proposed to do in the following fashion.
At the beginning of the winter, a dying whale of which the tongue was
torn out by thresher sharks, had drifted ashore, or rather into
shallow water, and the tribe was set to work to cut it up when it was
dead for the sake of its blubber and meat. This they did, piling up