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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Call Of The Wild by Jack London
you’re travelling on a Pullman?’ And so it went, the inexorable
elimination of the superfluous. Mercedes cried when her clothes-
bags were dumped on the ground and article after article was
thrown out. She cried in general, and she cried in particular over
each discarded thing. She clasped hands about knees, rocking back
and forth broken-heartedly.

She averred she would not go an inch, not for a dozen Charleses.
She appealed to everybody and to everything, finally wiping her
eyes and proceeding to cast out even articles of apparel that were
imperative necessities. And in her zeal, when she had finished with
her own, she attacked the belongings of her men and went through
them like a tornado.

This accomplished, the outfit, though cut in half, was still a
formidable bulk.

Charles and Hal went out in the evening and bought six Outside
dogs. These, added to the six of the original team, and Teek and
Koona, the huskies obtained at the Rink Rapids on the record trip,
brought the team up to fourteen. But the Out-side dogs, though
practically broken in since their landing, did not amount to much.
Three were short-haired pointers, one was a Newfoundland, and
the other two were mongrels of indeterminate breed. They did not
seem to know anything, these newcomers. Buck and his comrades
looked upon them with disgust, and though he speedily taught
them their places and what not to do, he could not teach them what
to do. They did not take kindly to trace and trail. With the
exception of the two mongrels they were bewildered and spirit-
broken by the strange savage environment in which they found
themselves and by the ill-treatment they had received. The two
mongrels were without spirit at all; bones were the only things
breakable about them.

With the newcomers hopeless and forlorn, and the old team worn
out by twenty-five hundred miles of continuous trail, the outlook
was anything but bright. The two men, however, were quite
cheerful. And they were proud, too.

They were doing the thing in style, with fourteen dogs. They had
seen other sleds depart over the Pass for Dawson, or come in from
Dawson, but never had they seen a sled with so many as fourteen
dogs. In the nature of Arctic travel there was a reason why fourteen
dogs should not drag one sled, and that was that one sled could
not carry the food for fourteen dogs. But Charles and Hal did not
know this. They had worked the trip out with a pencil, so much to
a dog, so many dogs, so many days, Q.E.D. Mercedes looked over
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Call Of The Wild by Jack London



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