The Indians, with their bundles on their shoulders, filed ash.o.r.e, made their way to a hut the kindly Moravian missionary let them use, and sat in muddy, weary silence round the walls.
The Eskimo crowded into the doorway, their tongues hanging out, staring at these queer folk as if they had dropped from the moon.
But other Eskimo, kind-hearted and hospitable, were moved to show the strangers what sh.o.r.e life was like.
They got busy at the stove, boiled water, and presently handed about large cups of tea, with sugar and biscuit.
The Indians devoured the refreshments thankfully, for they were very hungry. The Northern Indians lead lives that are often sharpened with hunger for long periods together. You can see it in their lank frames and their gaunt faces. The southern Indians, nearer the flesh-pots, with kindly priests at work among them, look roly-poly, chubby and content.
It was a very silent party. The Indians who had been so bold as to come this far to the sea were probably homesick for the flat stones, the dwarf birches, the far-lying ponds and cold swirling streams, the hordes of mosquitoes and the caribou of their lone s.p.a.ces at Indian House Lake. The cl.u.s.ter of houses at Nain looked to them as New York would seem to one who had always dwelt in the heart of the Maine woods.
By morning, after a sound sleep on the floor, they were eager to begin trading.
A southern Indian translated.
They had brought deerskins chiefly. There are few valuable furs in their part of Labrador, but they did their best to make a brave showing with the few they were able to find.
You can imagine their people at home at Indian House Lake saying before the start of the expedition: "Oh, if we only had some beaver or marten skins! Wouldn"t it be nice, now, if we could get a silver or a cross fox? Those people down there at the coast know such a lot, and are so rich, and so particular! Nothing but the very best we have will do."
They held up a bearskin with great pride. They had a wolverine,--the only sort of fur on which snow will not freeze,--several wolf-skins, and moccasins, embroidered. The translator would point to what they wanted on the shelves. Then they would take the object in their hands and weigh it very carefully, thinking of all those portages on the homeward trail--probably twenty at least--over which every ounce must be carried on a man"s shoulders.
They bought lots of tea--one man getting as much as sixteen pounds.
They wanted gay prints. Other things to which they took a fancy were tobacco, cartridges, fish-hooks, matches, needles, and pearl b.u.t.tons.
First they handed over the skins, and received money in return: then they spent the money. Mouth-organs were much in demand, and they looked longingly at an accordeon and tried to play on it and were enchanted with the squawks that came out: but they were not rich enough to buy it. One boy bought a clay pipe, and spent all his time licking it. They were not allowed to smoke in the store, but they spat wherever they pleased.
Doctor and Mrs. Grenfell are out on the war-path against this disgusting custom, and they have had very hard work to persuade even the "liveyeres" that there is danger concealed in germs that cannot be seen, when saliva dries and the wind blows it about. In all this glorious fresh air it is mournful to think of the many who die of consumption, pneumonia and all sorts of lung-trouble, because of stifling houses and unclean habits.
The Indians at first were extremely shy. Then they waxed merry, and as they bought they laughed and chatted. In the party were three women.
One of them was young and good-looking, and she was showered with presents--kettles, cups and saucers, perfumed soap and cologne! A young man bought for her anything she wanted--and every time he made a purchase for the fair one the others laughed aloud. And each time he bestowed a gift, one of the other women turned to her husband and made him buy the same thing for her. Human nature is the same on the Labrador as on Coney Island.
It took two days for them to do their buying, and wrap up their purchases, and say farewell.
By this time Indians and Eskimo were sworn friends.
The Eskimo crowded to the end of the little pier, and knelt down to reach over and grasp the hands of the parting guests. There were shouts of "Yomai!" from the Indians, and various cries in answer from the Eskimo. Then, crouching on their heels, the Indians trimmed their sails to the breeze and were borne swiftly round the point to be seen no more.
How different is all this from the days of old, when the Eskimo were called "the most savage people in the world!"
IX
ALONE ON THE ICE
In April, 1908, Dr. Grenfell had the closest call of his life. Of course in April the ice and snow are still deep over the bays and forelands of Labrador and northern Newfoundland. There is not the slightest sign that spring with its flowers and mosquitoes is coming.
All travel save by dog-team is at a standstill, and only a life-and-death message--such as Dr. Grenfell is constantly getting--is a reason for facing the howling winds and the driving snows of the blizzards that the bravest seamen and the mightiest hunters have good reason to fear.
On Easter Sunday morning at his St. Anthony home Dr. Grenfell was walking back from the little church to his house after the morning service, thinking of the sermon, and of his mother in England.
Suddenly a boy came running after him from the hospital near by.
"Oh, Doctor, Doctor!"
The Doctor turned in his deep, floundering steps to see who it was that called him.
"Doctor," panted the small messenger, "I came to the hospital to fetch ye. There"s a man with dogs, from sixty mile away down to the south, and he says they must have a doctor come to "em, right off, or the boy"ll die."
The Doctor put his kind hand on the little fellow"s shoulder. "Who is it that is sick?"
"I dunno, Doctor, but he"s wonderful sick. He"ll die unless ye come."
The Doctor thought a moment--then he remembered. It was a young man on whom he had operated two weeks before, for a bone disease that was eating away his thigh.
Those who had tried to help him had closed up the wound--the worst thing to do. The poison had collected, and probably the leg would have to be taken off.
The Doctor knew that every minute counted. He went to his kennels in the snow and picked out his st.u.r.diest dog-team. They whined and pawed and jumped up and down, eager to be chosen. The real "husky" hates to loaf, except when he has come in from a long, hard run late at night and has had his meal of fish. He wants to be at work all the time, and when the sled is loaded the dogs must be tied up tight or they will dart away at breakneck speed and perhaps upset everything. This sleigh was heavy-laden with instruments, drugs and dressings. A second team was to follow, with the messengers.
Dr. Grenfell loved, as with a personal affection, every one of the five beasts that were taking him on this long haul to save a boy"s life.
First came "Brin," by common consent the surest leader anywhere on the coast. The strongest dog of the team--big and affectionate and playful--was "Doc." A black and white dog whose muscles were like small wire ropes, was "Spy," and "Moody," now in his third year, was a black-and-tan named for Dr. Grenfell"s friend Will Moody, son of the evangelist. "Moody" had the reputation of never looking behind him: he was eager to go on to the bitter end.
The youngest dog of the team, named "Watch," had beautiful soft eyes, a Gordon setter coat, and long legs capable of carrying him over the frozen crust at a tremendous rate of speed. Then there was "Sue," the most wolf-like of the lot--black as jet, her pointed ears the standing question-marks for further orders. "Jerry" was a perfect lady, quick on her feet as a dancer, and so fond of play and so demonstrative that she often tipped the Doctor over when he had a boxing-bout with her, and sent him sprawling on his back in the snow.
"Jack," a black dog with the looks and the ways of a retriever, had "Moody"s" good habit of going straight on without turning to see who followed, and he was put in the position of trust nearest the sledge.
He liked to run with his nose close to the ground, and nothing that the trail or the snow-crust could tell any wise "husky" dog was a secret to the busy nose of this gentle-natured fellow.
Do you wonder that Dr. Grenfell was proud and fond of these four-legged helpers, and that he gave them the tender care one bestows on children? It would have grieved him to the heart to think of any accident happening to any of them. He looked on them just as a Captain Scott or a Sir Ernest Shackleton regarded his mates on a Polar expedition. They were his friends and helpers. Some of them had stood by him in many a hard tussle with the cold and the stinging hail, with the rotten ice threatening to let them down into the river or the sea.
With their bushy tails thrown over them like fur wraps, they had slept in the snow-drift round his camp-fires. They seemed to him like human beings, his little brothers. As he is fond of saying, "Dogs are much nicer than a Ford car. A Ford car can"t come and kiss you good-night."
Since it was late April, and the melting ice might mean a soaking any moment, Grenfell carried a spare outfit--a change of clothes, an oilskin suit, snowshoes, an axe, a rifle, a compa.s.s. He knew there was no place to stop and get any of these things if he should lose them.
The most daring skipper of a boat or driver of a sled along the coast, the Doctor takes no chances when it comes to his equipment.
Though the messengers had broken the trail on the up journey, they preferred to fall in behind the Doctor on the down trip. They knew that he would want to travel like the wind. They felt a certain security and comfort in letting him take the lead. It relieved them of a lot of responsibility for setting the course. There are always people traveling in Grenfell"s wake who are willing to let him make the hard choices and take the daring chances. But a good reason for Grenfell"s going first this time was that his picked team of young, strong, spry dogs were hustlers, whom it would be impossible to hold back, and the other dogs were heavier and slower.
Although Grenfell in the twenty miles before nightfall twice called a halt, the slower team behind him was unable to catch up. He reached a small hamlet and had given his eager dogs their supper of two fish apiece, and was gathering the people together for prayers when the second team overtook him.
In the night the weather changed. The wind began to blow from the northeast; a fog set in, with rain. The snow became mushy, to make hard going, and out in the bay the sea was ugly, with the water heaving the ice-pans about. The plan for the coming day was to make a run of forty miles, the first ten miles a short cut across a bay, over the salt-water ice.
Grenfell did not want to get too far from his convoy, and so he let the second team start on ahead, with a lead of two hours.
He told them just where to call a halt and wait for him. There was a log hut, or "tilt," at the half-way point. Since there was no one living on that part of the very lonely coast-line, this hut was a refuge fitted out with anything that a shipwrecked mariner or a benighted traveler by land might need--dry clothes, food, and medicines.
"You go to the hut and wait there till I come," were the Doctor"s final orders.
The rain began to fall, and when Grenfell got under way it was such treacherous going that he couldn"t cut straight across the bay as he wished, but had to keep closer to the land. The sea had risen in its wrath and thrown the pans of ice about, so that there were wide s.p.a.ces between, and half a mile out from the sh.o.r.e it was clear water.
But far out from the sh.o.r.e there was an island, and by a daring series of jumps across the cracks,--the dogs as buoyant as their master, hauling the sled as though it were a load of feathers,--Grenfell reached the island, and made the dogs rest--a hard thing to do--while he looked about him to see where the next lap of the journey would take him and them.