A Man's Woman eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 285 pages of information about A Man's Woman.

A Man's Woman eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 285 pages of information about A Man's Woman.

Every day the men grew weaker and weaker; their provisions dwindled.  Again and again one or another of them, worn out beyond human endurance, would go to sleep while marching and would fall to the ground.

Upon the third day of this overland march one of the dogs suddenly collapsed upon the ground, exhausted and dying.  Bennett had ordered such of the dogs that gave out cut up and their meat added to the store of the party’s provisions.  Ferriss and Muck Tu had started to pick up the dead dog when the other dogs, famished and savage, sprang upon their fallen mate.  The two men struck and kicked, all to no purpose; the dogs turned upon them snarling and snapping.  They, too, demanded to live; they, too, wanted to be fed.  It was a hideous business.  There in that half-night of the polar circle, lost and forgotten on a primordial shore, back into the stone age once more, men and animals fought one another for the privilege of eating a dead dog.

But their life was not all inhuman; Bennett at least could rise even above humanity, though his men must perforce be dragged so far below it.  At the end of the first week Hawes, the carpenter, died.  When they awoke in the morning he was found motionless and stiff in his sleeping-bag.  Some sort of grave was dug, the poor racked body lowered into it, and before it was filled with snow and broken ice Bennett, standing quietly in the midst of the bare-headed group, opened his prayer-book and began with the tremendous words, “I am the Resurrection and the Life—­”

It was the beginning of the end.  A week later the actual starvation began.  Slower and slower moved the expedition on its daily march, faltering, staggering, blinded and buffeted by the incessant northeast winds, cruel, merciless, keen as knife-blades.  Hope long since was dead; resolve wore thin under friction of disaster; like a rat, hunger gnawed at them hour after hour; the cold was one unending agony.  Still Bennett was unbroken, still he urged them forward.  For so long as they could move he would drive them on.

Toward four o’clock on the afternoon of one particularly hard day, word was passed forward to Bennett at the head of the line that something was wrong in the rear.

“It’s Adler; he’s down again and can’t get up; asks you to leave him.”

Bennett halted the line and went back some little distance to find Adler lying prone upon his back, his eyes half closed, breathing short and fast.  He shook him roughly by the shoulder.

“Up with you!”

Adler opened his eyes and shook his head.

“I—­I’m done for this time, sir; just leave me here—­please.”

“H’up!” shouted Bennett; “you’re not done for; I know better.”

“Really, sir, I—­I can’t.”

“H’up!”

“If you would only please—­for God’s sake, sir.  It’s more than I’m made for.”

Bennett kicked him in the side.

“H’up with you!”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
A Man's Woman from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.