<h3>CHAPTER IX</h3>
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">With</span> lucid intervals, during which he replenished
or rebuilt the fire, cooked the bear-meat,
and fed and dressed the wounds of the child, this
delirium lasted three days. His suffering was intense.
His arm, the seat of throbbing pain, had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</SPAN></span>
swollen to twice the natural size, while his side prevented
him taking a full breath, voluntarily. He
had paid no attention to his own hurts, and it was
either the vigor of a constitution that years of dissipation
had not impaired, or some anti-febrile property
of bear-meat, or the absence of the exciting
whisky that won the battle. He rekindled the fire
with his last match on the evening of the third day
and looked around the darkening horizon, sane, but
feeble in body and mind.</p>
<p>If a sail had appeared in the interim, he had not
seen it; nor was there one in sight now. Too weak
to climb the slope, he returned to the boat, where
the child, exhausted from fruitless crying, was now
sleeping. His unskillful and rather heroic manner
of wrapping it up to protect it from cold had, no
doubt, contributed largely to the closing of its
wounds by forcibly keeping it still, though it must
have added to its present sufferings. He looked for
a moment on the wan, tear-stained little face, with
its fringe of tangled curls peeping above the wrappings
of canvas, and stooping painfully down, kissed
it softly; but the kiss awakened it and it cried for its
mother. He could not soothe it, nor could he try;
and with a formless, wordless curse against destiny
welling up from his heart, he left it and sat down
on the wreckage at some distance away.</p>
<p>"We'll very likely get well," he mused, gloomily,
"unless I let the fire go out. What then? We can't
last longer than the berg, and not much longer than
the bear. We must be out of the tracks—we were
about nine hundred miles out when we struck; and
the current sticks to the fog-belt here—about west-sou'west—but
that's the surface water. These deep
fellows have currents of their own. There's no fog;
we must be to the southward of the belt—between the
Lanes. They'll run their boats in the other Lane<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</SPAN></span>
after this, I think—the money-grabbing wretches.
Curse them—if they've drowned her. Curse them,
with their water-tight compartments, and their logging
of the lookouts. Twenty-four boats for three
thousand people—lashed down with tarred gripe-lashings—thirty
men to clear them away, and not
an axe on the boat-deck or a sheath-knife on a man.
Could she have got away? If they got that boat
down, they might have taken her in from the steps;
and the mate knew I had her child—he would tell her.
Her name must be Myra, too; it was her voice I
heard in that dream. That was hasheesh. What did
they drug me for? But the whisky was all right.
It's all done with now, unless I get ashore—but will
I?"</p>
<p>The moon rose above the castellated structure to
the left, flooding the icy beach with ashen-gray light,
sparkling in a thousand points from the cascades,
streams, and rippling pools, throwing into blackest
shadow the gullies and hollows, and bringing to his
mind, in spite of the weird beauty of the scene, a
crushing sense of loneliness—of littleness—as though
the vast pile of inorganic desolation which held him
was of far greater importance than himself, and all
the hopes, plans, and fears of his lifetime. The child
had cried itself to sleep again, and he paced up and
down the ice.</p>
<p>"Up there," he said, moodily, looking into the
sky, where a few stars shone faintly in the flood from
the moon; "Up there—somewhere—they don't know
just where—but somewhere up above, is the Christians'
Heaven. Up there is their good God—who
has placed Myra's child here—their good God whom
they borrowed from the savage, bloodthirsty race
that invented him. And down below us—somewhere
again—is their hell and their bad god, whom they
invented themselves. And they give us our choice—Heaven<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</SPAN></span>
or hell. It is not so—not so. The great
mystery is not solved—the human heart is not helped
in this way. No good, merciful God created this
world or its conditions. Whatever may be the nature
of the causes at work beyond our mental vision, one
fact is indubitably proven—that the qualities of
mercy, goodness, justice, play no part in the governing
scheme. And yet, they say the core of all
religions on earth is the belief in this. Is it? Or is
it the cowardly, human fear of the unknown—that
impels the savage mother to throw her babe to a
crocodile—that impels the civilized man to endow
churches—that has kept in existence from the beginning
a class of soothsayers, medicine-men, priests,
and clergymen, all living on the hopes and fears excited
by themselves?</p>
<p>"And people pray—millions of them—and claim
they are answered. Are they? Was ever supplication
sent into that sky by troubled humanity answered,
or even heard? Who knows? They pray
for rain and sunshine, and both come in time. They
pray for health and success and both are but natural
in the marching of events. This is not evidence.
But they say that they know, by spiritual uplifting,
that they are heard, and comforted, and answered at
the moment. Is not this a physiological experiment?
Would they not feel equally tranquil if they
repeated the multiplication table, or boxed the
compass?</p>
<p>"Millions have believed this—that prayers are answered—and
these millions have prayed to different
gods. Were they all wrong or all right? Would
a tentative prayer be listened to? Admitting that
the Bibles, and Korans, and Vedas, are misleading
and unreliable, may there not be an unseen, unknown
Being, who knows my heart—who is watching me
now? If so, this Being gave me my reason, which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</SPAN></span>
doubts Him, and on Him is the responsibility. And
would this being, if he exists, overlook a defect for
which I am not to blame, and listen to a prayer from
me, based on the mere chance that I might be mistaken?
Can an unbeliever, in the full strength of his
reasoning powers, come to such trouble that he can
no longer stand alone, but must cry for help to an
imagined power? Can such time come to a sane
man—to me?" He looked at the dark line of vacant
horizon. It was seven miles away; New York was
nine hundred; the moon in the east over two hundred
thousand, and the stars above, any number of billions.
He was alone, with a sleeping child, a dead bear, and
the Unknown. He walked softly to the boat and
looked at the little one for a moment; then, raising
his head, he whispered: "For you, Myra."</p>
<p>Sinking to his knees the atheist lifted his eyes to
the heavens, and with his feeble voice and the fervor
born of helplessness, prayed to the God that he denied.
He begged for the life of the waif in his care—for
the safety of the mother, so needful to the little
one—and for courage and strength to do his part
and bring them together. But beyond the appeal for
help in the service of others, not one word or expressed
thought of his prayer included himself as a
beneficiary. So much for pride. As he rose to his
feet, the flying-jib of a bark appeared around the
corner of ice to the right of the beach, and a moment
later the whole moon-lit fabric came into view, wafted
along by the faint westerly air, not half a mile away.</p>
<p>He sprang to the fire, forgetting his pain, and
throwing on wood, made a blaze. He hailed, in a
frenzy of excitement: "Bark ahoy! Bark ahoy!
Take us off," and a deep-toned answer came across
the water.</p>
<p>"Wake up, Myra," he cried, as he lifted the child;
"wake up. We're going away."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"We goin' to mamma?" she asked, with no symptoms
of crying.</p>
<p>"Yes, we're going to mamma, now—that is," he
added to himself; "if that clause in the prayer is
considered."</p>
<p>Fifteen minutes later as he watched the approach
of a white quarter-boat, he muttered: "That bark
was there—half a mile back in this wind—before I
thought of praying. Is that prayer answered? Is
she safe?"</p>
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