breakfast cooked and eaten, John and Hugh were on the road to the summit. They were
already upon the mount
t; good thing we've got some dry socks and rubbers in our outfit at the summit. Another thing is, we're going to meet
ey could see the toilers coming, winding i
m all sides, made the use of smoke-glasses necessary; but the perspiration, dimming the glass, troubled their sight. The end of John
n they arrived there at one o'clock. It was half-past two before they had their feet
er which the trail will be clear, and we should arrive by ten. This trail will be migh
ee miles on the trail. There
h felt his cheek smitten by a gust o
. All we can do is to keep on as we are going, steadily. I guess we shall make Log Cabin, but not with this load. The soft snow makes a thousand pounds too much fo
cutting; then the wind veered, and down ca
re we won't be able to keep the trail in this storm; and if we do come out al
the storm will
under us; but we are liable to get off it-and once lost, there is no finding it again. Mind, the wind is blowing from the right, half to the rear
ed, harness was piled on top of the load. Then, with a great
scratched: "Cached sleigh on north side of trail by spruce tree, five miles from th
w where the grub is, for if we d
leading, and were
weather did not feel cold; in fact, both were comfortably warm. For an hour they plodded along. Occasionally one
e was nothing they could recognize in the boulders and
y plunged into soft snow. The trail seemed to have come to an end; but this could not be so. They retraced their steps and regained fi
ong a bank where the wind has packed the old sno
ve up," s
but we're lost. I won't giv
d we bet
e your hands get numb, or your mind weak. We're up against it hard! We will stay together, of course; but should we get separated, don't move too fast, or you will tire yourself out and go to sleep in the snow. Don't let sleep take hold of you
. It was easy enough to say "keep going down-hill," but, so far as John was concerned, he seeme
, the snowfall growing le
ush of gold-seekers over those terrible mountains and through the stormy passes. If he should die in that storm, and months afterwards she heard of his demise?... The thought drifted along to several loose ends. He must not sleep, or he would die; and it was his duty to live; but-oh! to sleep!... His father, and the
ter, till some blacks found him. He remembered, before going into unconsciousness with his back against a rock, that a
ring sand and heat, while abo
d was beginning to blow! The parka d
lake, with the cliff so steep they could not climb it. They followed the shore to the right, facing the storm. They crossed another lake, an
that they were surely now far from the proper trail, as he could re
that it came from the north. Hugh began now really
ind fell upon them. This new severe onslaught of nature aroused John, who called
it's easier walking
rly dead to notice that the going was good. Suddenly John fell into
" gasped John, with hi
t been on any t
ith you
call to their resources. Meanwhile their tired hearts and very weary bodies endured the bombardmen
en over the surface of the ice, gave a hard, grinding noise
the road. Hugh kicked at it; the singletree rattled; he recog
smelt smoke. Just for a second!-that creosotic odour was to them as
lantern loomed up before th
s the
ost," sa
here on Crater Lake, just ov
God!" s
tent warmed by a tin stove, on which was a pot of coffe
ep. Now that the great struggle against the elements, which force of personalit
at for them, he found Hugh removing his frien
sleep," s
tless. The bustling traffic, the interest of the shops, the passing of the people, could not keep her thought from a far
udden misfortune, and had been prompted by the news from the Klondike also to make a bid for fortune there, not as a gold-see
of restlessness in her blood, was full of hope. The soft air and the sunshine were conditio