Read Allan and the Ice Gods Online
Authors: H. Rider Haggard
people stirred at this hour when it was known to be abroad, a company
of them always went together. They reached the cave, and Moananga
asked what was the trouble. Aaka answered that she desired to know if
they had seen Wi, whom she could not find, or Pag, who doubtless was
with him, or if they knew where he had gone.
Moananga answered no, and spoke calm words to her, for she was much
disturbed, saying that Wi had many duties to attend of which he told
no one, and doubtless one of these had called him away. Or perhaps, he
added, he had gone to the glacier to make prayer to the Ice-gods or to
seek some sign of them.
While he was speaking thus, Foh pointed with his finger, and behold!
out of the morning mists appeared Wi, painted from head to heel with
blood and leaning upon the shoulder of Pag the dwarf, as a lame man
leans upon a stick.
“Not for nothing was I troubled,” said Aaka. “See, Wi is wounded, and
sorely.”
“Yet he walks well and his ax is as red as his skin,” answered
Moananga.
Then Wi came up to them and Aaka asked:
“Whose blood is that which covers you, Husband? Your own or another
man’s?”
“Neither, Wife,” answered Wi. “It is the blood of the great toothed
tiger which Pag and I have been fighting.”
“Yet Pag’s skin is white and yours is red, which is strange. But what
of the tiger, Husband?”
“The tiger is dead, Wife.”
Now they stared at him, then Aaka asked:
“Did you slay it?”
“Nay,” he answered, “I fought it, but I think Pag was its slayer. He
made the plan; he dug the trap; he set the bait, and it was his spear
that reached the brute’s heart at last ere my head was bitten off.”
“Go look at the tiger’s skull,” said Pag, “and see whether Wi’s ax
fits into the hole there. Look at its forearm also and judge what
weapon shattered it.”
“Pag! Always Pag! Is there nothing that you can do without Pag,
Husband?”
“Oh, yes,” answered Wi bitterly. “Perchance I might kiss a woman, if I
could find one who was fair and gentle-hearted.”
“Why don’t you?” mocked Aaka.
Then he went past her into the cave and called for water to wash
himself, while Pag sat down in front of it and told the tale of how Wi
had slain the tiger to all who would listen to him, but of his part in
that play saying nothing at all.
Led by Moananga, men went out, a score of them or more, and carried in
the beast, which they laid down in a place where it could be seen by
everyone. That day all who could stand upon their feet from the oldest
to the youngest of the tribe, came to stare at the dead monster which
had worked them so much mischief, while Pag sat by grinning, and
pointed out how the ax of Wi had shattered its skull and well-nigh
hewn off its great forepaw.
“But who gave the wound that pierced its heart?” asked one.
“Oh! Wi did that, too,” answered Pag. “When the beast charged him with
its last strength he leapt aside and thrust his spear through its
heart, after which it fell on top of him and tried to bite off his
head.”
“And what did you do all this time?” asked Tana, the wife of Moananga.
“I? Oh! I looked on. No, I forgot. I knelt down and prayed to the gods
that Wi might conquer.”
“You lie, Wolf-man,” said Tana, “for both your spears are buried in
the beast.”
“Perhaps,” answered Pag. “If so, it is an art I have learned from
women. If you have never lied, Tana, for good ends or bad, then
reproach me; but if you have, leave me alone.”
Then Tana was silent, for although she was sweet and loving, it was
well known that she did not always tell the truth.
After this, when he was recovered from his weariness and shaking and
his crushed ribs ceased to ache, all the people came up and worshipped
Wi who had rid them of the tiger, as he had rid them of the wolves,
declaring that he was one of the gods who had come out of the ice to
save them.
“So you say when things go well and danger passes. But when they go
ill and it hangs over your heads, then you tell another tale about
me,” answered Wi, smiling sadly. “Moreover, you give praise where it
is not due while you withhold it where it is due.”
Then, to be rid of all this clamour, he slipped away from them and
went out quite alone to walk upon the beach, while Pag stayed behind
to skin the tiger and to dress its hide. For now that the wolves were
dead and the tiger was dead, and Henga the murderer was dead, all
slain by Wi, man or woman or child might walk the beach in safety and
alone, especially as the bears seemed to have gone away, though
whether this was from fear of the tiger, or lack of food none knew.
The great gale from the south, which that spring had raged for very
many days, almost up to the night when Wi went out to fight the tiger,
had now quite blown itself out, leaving behind it a clear gray sky,
though of sun that spring there seemed to be even less than during the
year that was gone. Indeed, the air remained very cold, feeling as it
does when snow is about to fall, though this was not the time for
snow; the flowers which should have been making the woodlands and the
hillsides bright had not yet bloomed, nor had the seals and the birds
come in their wonted numbers. But though the wind was gone, there was
still a great swell upon the sea, and big waves upon which floated
blocks of ice broke sullenly upon the beach.
Wi walked toward the east. Presently he came to the mouth of the
glacier cleft, and though he had not purposed to go up to the face of
the ice or to look upon the shape of the Sleeper, something seemed to
lead him there; indeed, he felt as if an invisible cord was drawing
him toward this gloomy yet to him sacred spot, because in it dwelt the
only gods he knew. Moreover, he remembered that, during the mighty
frosts of the past winter, and especially at the time of the big gale,
great noises had been heard in the ice, which caused the people to
believe the gods were stirring.
He reached the head of the cleft, and there, poor savage that he was,
covered his eyes with his hands and, kneeling down, prayed after his
fashion. He thanked the gods because they had delivered him and the
people in his charge from great peril, giving him strength to kill the
evil Henga and, by the help of Pag, to do away with the most of the
wolves and with the awful tiger that the tribe believed contained the
spirit of Henga still lingering upon earth. He prayed also that the
laws which he had made might prosper; that there might be plenty of
food; that Foh his son might grow and be strong, ceasing to cough;
that Aaka might be gentle toward him who felt so lonely and
companionless and who by the law that he had made was forbidden to
seek any other wife. Lastly, he prayed that the sun might shine and
the weather become warm.
Then, as had happened to him before in this spot, something seemed to
speak in his heart, reminding him that he had brought no offering,
also that it was too late to find one, especially now that the wolves
were gone and he could not slay a beast as he had done before and set
its head upon a stone that the gods might smell blood.
Well, if so, what did it matter? How could the blood of wolves be of
any service to gods, and if it were so, was it good to worship beings
who rejoiced in blood and suffering? If they lived and had power, must
they not desire a very different sacrifice? What sacrifice? A thought
came to him. Surely that of the heart, that of repentance for past
evil, that of promise to do better. A gust of passion seized him. He
flung himself upon his face, muttering:
“O Gods, let me be the sacrifice. Give me strength to see and
understand, to bring blessing upon the heads of all, to protect and
nurture all, if only for a little while, and then, if you will, take
my life in payment for your gifts.”
Thus prayed poor Wi, and for a moment thought that he was better than
those among whom he lived, since he knew that not in the heart of one
of them would this prayer have been born, except perhaps in that of
Pag, if Pag had believed in anything, which he did not. For even then
Wi understood that he who does not believe cannot pray. A boy, so long
as he thinks he sees something or smells it, or hears it move, will
throw stones in the hope that he may hit it; but when he is certain
that there is nothing beneath the water or in the tree, for how long
will he go on throwing the stones? Now this was the difference between
them; although he could not see it, Wi thought that there was
something beneath the water or in the tree, and therefore continued to
throw his stones of prayer; whereas Pag was sure that there was
nothing at all, and therefore kept his stones and saved his strength.
Then Wi remembered that, after all, he had no cause to boast himself.
He prayed for the people. But why did he do so? Oh! the answer was
plain: it was not for the people and their woes that he was sorry, but
for his own, in which he saw theirs reflected by the mirror of his
heart, as images are seen in clear water. His little daughter had been
taken from him in a cruel fashion. He had avenged her death upon the
murderer, thinking thus to satisfy his soul. Yet it was not satisfied,
for he had learned that there is no comfort in vengeance. What he
needed was his daughter, not the blood of her butcher. Therefore he
hoped that some land unseen lay beyond that of life, where he might
find her and others whom he had loved, which was why he prayed to the
gods. He was sorry for others who had lost their children, because he
could measure something of their suffering by his own, but at bottom
he was most sorry for himself. So it was with everything. By his own
unhappiness he measured that of others, and when he feared for them,
really he feared for himself and those he loved, feeling for all with
the ache of his own heart and seeing all by the light of his own eyes.
These thoughts crushed Wi, who by help of them now understood that
even the sacrifice which he offered for others was full of
selfishness, because he desired to escape from trouble and at the same
time to earn merit and to leave a hallowed name behind him, he who did
not know that than this no higher measure is given to man, for if it
were he would cease to be man and become a god.
Of a sudden Wi abandoned prayer. He had thrown the spear of his mind
at the skies, and lo! it stood there fixed in the ground before his
feet. Since he could never get away from himself, what was the use of
praying? Let him do those things that lay to his hand as best he might
and bear his burdens as far as he could and cease from importuning
help from he knew not whence. He who in this bitter moment of
understanding for a while became sure that man could not hunt the
gods, since it was they who hunted him, paying no more heed to his
petitions than he, Wi, did to the groanings of any seal that he
pursued as it strove impotently to struggle to the sea where it would
be safe.
He rose from the ground to look at the face of the glacier and
discover how far it had moved forward during the fierce winter that
was gone. He stared at it and started back, for there in hideous
imagery stood his own thought portrayed. In that clear ice he had been
accustomed to see the dim form of the Sleeper and behind it, rather to
one side, a yet dimmer form, thought to be that of a man who pursued
the Sleeper, or perchance of one of the gods taking his rest with it.
Now, behold! all this was changed. There stood the Sleeper as before,
but by magic, or perhaps by some convulsion of the ice, the figure
that had been behind was now in front. Yes, there it stood, with not
more than once pace length of ice between Wi himself and it, a weird
and awful thing.
It was a man, of that there could be no doubt, but such a man as Wi
had never seen, for his limbs were covered with hair, his forehead
sloped backwards, and his great jaw stood out beyond the line of his
flat nose. His arms were very long, his legs were bowed, and in one of
his hands he held a short, rough staff of wood. For the rest, his sunk
but open eyes seemed to be small and his teeth large and prominent,
while his head was covered with coarse and matted hair and from his
shoulder hung a cloak, the skin of some animal of which the forepaws
were knotted about his neck.
On this strange and hideous creature’s face there was stamped a look
of the wildest terror, telling Wi that he had died suddenly and that,
when he died, he was very much afraid. Of what had he been afraid? Wi
wondered. Not of the Sleeper, he thought, because until some movement
of the glacier had thrust him forward during the past winter, he had
been behind the Sleeper, as though he were pursuing it. No, it was
something else that he feared.
Suddenly Wi guessed what it was. Long, long ago this forefather of the
tribe, for knowing no other men, Wi thought that so he must be,