The Greatest Works of James Oliver Curwood (Illustrated Edition). James Oliver Curwood

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way he returned to York Factory, and he knew that when this happened many years had passed, for his father and mother were dead, and there were strangers at the Post. At this time John Ball must have returned fully to his reason again. He remembered, faintly, leading several unsuccessful expeditions in search of the gold which he and the Frenchmen had discovered, and that once he went to a great city, which must have been Montreal, and that he stayed there a long time doing something for the Hudson Bay Company, and met a girl whom he married. When he spoke of the girl John Ball's eyes would glow feverishly and her name would fall from him in a moaning sob. For as yet returning reason had not placed the hand of age upon him. It was as if he was awakening from a deep sleep, and Dolores, his young wife, had been with him but a few hours before.

      There came another break in John Ball's life after this. He could not remember how, long they lived in Montreal, but he knew that after a time he returned with his wife into the far North, and that they were very happy, and one summer set off in a canoe to search for the lost chasm together. They found it. How or when he could not remember. After this John Ball's story was filled with wild visions of a great black world where there was neither sun nor moon nor stars, and they found gold and dug it by the light of fires. And one day the woman went a little way back in this world and never came back.

      It was then that the old madness returned. In his search for his lost wife John Ball never found the end of the great cavern. He saw strange people, he fought great beasts in this black world that were larger than the biggest moose in the forests, and he told of rushing torrents and thundering cataracts in the bowels of the earth. Even in his returning sanity the old man told these things as true.

      George Newsome, the factor, lost no time in writing to the Company at Montreal, inquiring about John Ball, and a month later he received word that a man by that name had worked as an inspector of raw furs during the years 1877 and 1878. He had left Montreal for the North thirty years before. In all probability he soon after went in search of the lost gold, and for more than a quarter of a century had lived as a wild man in the solitudes.

      It was at this time in the convalescence of the doctor's patient that Roderick's mother made a suggestion which took the Post by storm. It was that the factor and his family accompany her and Rod back to civilization for a few weeks' visit. To the astonishment of all, and especially to Minnetaki and the princess mother, the factor fell in heartily with the scheme, with the stipulation that the Drews return with them early in the autumn. An agent from the head office of the Company had come up for a month's fishing and he cheerfully expressed his willingness to take charge of affairs at the Post during their absence.

      The happiness of Rod and Wabi was complete when Mukoki was compelled to give his promise to go with them. For several days the old warrior withstood their combined assaults, but at last he surrendered when Minnetaki put her arms around his neck and nestled her soft cheek against his leathery face, with the avowal that she would not move a step unless he went with her.

      So it happened, one beautiful summer morning, that three big canoes put out into the lake from Wabinosh House and headed into the South, and only Mukoki, of all the seven who were going down into civilization, felt something that was not joy as the forests slipped behind them. For Mukoki was to get a glimpse of a new world, a world far from the land of his fathers, and the loyal heart inside his caribou-skin coat quickened its pulse a little as he thought of the wonderful journey.

      Thus began the journey to civilization.

       Table of Contents

       Chapter I. The Miracle

       Chapter II. Into The North

       Chapter III. McCready Pays The Debt

       Chapter IV. Free From Bonds

       Chapter V. The Fight In The Snow

       Chapter VI. Joan

       Chapter VII. Out Of The Blizzard

       Chapter VIII. The Great Change

       Chapter IX. The Tragedy On Sun Rock

       Chapter X. The Days Of Fire

       Chapter XI. Always Two By Two

       Chapter XII. The Red Death

       Chapter XIII. The Trail Of Hunger

       Chapter XIV. The Right Of Fang

       Chapter XV. A Fight Under The Stars

       Chapter XVI. The Call

       Chapter XVII. His Son

       Chapter XVIII. The Education Of Ba-Ree

       Chapter XIX. The Usurpers

       Chapter XX. A Feud In The Wilderness

       Chapter XXI. A Shot On The Sand-Bar

       Chapter XXII. Sandy'S Method

       Chapter XXIII. Professor McGill

       Chapter XXIV. Alone In Darkness

       Chapter XXV. The Last Of McTrigger

       Chapter XXVI. An Empty World

      

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