Джек Лондон

The Greatest Adventure Books of Jack London: Sea Novels, Gold Rush Thrillers, Tales of the South Seas and the Wild North & Animal Stories


Скачать книгу

impelling me to give service to Wolf Larsen as Wolf Larsen had once given service to another man. I lifted the end of the hatch cover and the canvas-shrouded body slipped feet first into the sea. The weight of iron dragged it down. It was gone.

      “Good-bye, Lucifer, proud spirit,” Maud whispered, so low that it was drowned by the shouting of the wind; but I saw the movement of her lips and knew.

      As we clung to the lee rail and worked our way aft, I happened to glance to leeward. The Ghost, at the moment, was uptossed on a sea, and I caught a clear view of a small steamship two or three miles away, rolling and pitching, head on to the sea, as it steamed toward us. It was painted black, and from the talk of the hunters of their poaching exploits I recognized it as a United States revenue cutter. I pointed it out to Maud and hurriedly led her aft to the safety of the poop.

      I started to rush below to the flag-locker, then remembered that in rigging the Ghost. I had forgotten to make provision for a flag-halyard.

      “We need no distress signal,” Maud said. “They have only to see us.”

      “We are saved,” I said, soberly and solemnly. And then, in an exuberance of joy, “I hardly know whether to be glad or not.”

      I looked at her. Our eyes were not loath to meet. We leaned toward each other, and before I knew it my arms were about her.

      “Need I?” I asked.

      And she answered, “There is no need, though the telling of it would be sweet, so sweet.”

      Her lips met the press of mine, and, by what strange trick of the imagination I know not, the scene in the cabin of the Ghost flashed upon me, when she had pressed her fingers lightly on my lips and said, “Hush, hush.”

      “My woman, my one small woman,” I said, my free hand petting her shoulder in the way all lovers know though never learn in school.

      “My man,” she said, looking at me for an instant with tremulous lids which fluttered down and veiled her eyes as she snuggled her head against my breast with a happy little sigh.

      I looked toward the cutter. It was very close. A boat was being lowered.

      “One kiss, dear love,” I whispered. “One kiss more before they come.”

      “And rescue us from ourselves,” she completed, with a most adorable smile, whimsical as I had never seen it, for it was whimsical with love.

      White Fang

       Table of Contents

       Part 1

       Chapter I. The Trail of the Meat

       Chapter II. The She-Wolf

       Chapter III. The Hunger Cry

       Part 2

       Chapter I. The Battle of the Fangs

       Chapter II. The Lair

       Chapter III. The Grey Cub

       Chapter IV. The Wall of the World

       Chapter V. The Law of Meat

       Part 3

       Chapter I. The Makers of Fire

       Chapter II. The Bondage

       Chapter III. The Outcast

       Chapter IV. The Trail of the Gods

       Chapter V. The Covenant

       Chapter VI. The Famine

       Part 4

       Chapter I. The Enemy of His Kind

       Chapter II. The Mad God

       Chapter III. The Reign of Hate

       Chapter IV. The Clinging Death

       Chapter V. The Indomitable

       Chapter VI. The Love-Master

       Part 5

       Chapter I. The Long Trail

       Chapter II. The Southland

       Chapter III. The God’s Domain

       Chapter IV. The Call of Kind

       Chapter V. The Sleeping Wolf

      Part 1

       Table of Contents

      Chapter I.

       The Trail of the Meat

       Table of Contents

      Dark spruce forest frowned on either side the frozen waterway. The trees had been stripped by a recent wind of their white covering of frost, and they seemed to lean towards each other, black and ominous, in the fading light. A vast silence reigned over the land. The land itself was a desolation, lifeless, without movement, so lone and cold that the spirit of it was not even that of sadness. There was a hint in it of laughter, but of a laughter more terrible than any sadness—a laughter that was mirthless as the smile of the sphinx, a laughter cold as the frost and partaking of the grimness of infallibility. It was the masterful and incommunicable wisdom of eternity laughing at the futility of life and the effort of life. It was the Wild, the savage, frozen-hearted Northland Wild.

      But there was life, abroad in the land and defiant. Down