"Doc Savage Adventure 1938-12 The Devil Genghis" - читать интересную книгу автора (Doc Savage Collection)THE spear Kummik carried was the short type of hunting spear called an oonapik. It was made up of a wood shaft - wood was very valuable here in the ice wastes - and a point of bone, which was not so valuable. The spear was used to harpoon ogiuk, the seal, was employed to stick nanook, the bear; and occasionally, it was used to give little innukr, the kids, a few chastising whacks. Kummik was using his spear to jab, stab and belabor the air over his head. Now Kummik had always been a sennayo. A sennayo is a good worker, a family man, an excellent provider. A sennayo is the equivalent of a good Missouri farmer who is on the school board. And Kummik was a sennayo. It was unusual for a fellow like Kummik to be stabbing at the air over his head with a spear. Moreover, there was nothing but air over his head. It was so strange that a legend was at once made up about it, and will probably go down through time to puzzle and awe future generations of little innuks. Kummik, the Eskimo, kept jumping around and wielding his spear. He fought a great battle right there among the igloos, surrounded by astounded Eskimos. He fought for hours. He seemed unaware of the other Eskimos, and he did not call on them for help. He went at it on his own. He would jab with his spear, leaping up. Then he would retreat, holding his spear ready, and suddenly stab again with all his might. It was comical; but nobody laughed. The expression on Kummik's face kept anyone from laughing. The expression was horrible. It consisted of rage, desperation and utter terror. Kummik's fight was so real, but nothing was there for him to fight. Kummik never uttered a word. There probably is not a primitive people who do not believe an invisible devil drops around to haunt them occasionally. In the case of these Eskimos, this undesired fellow was an evil spirit called Tongak. But here was a grown man fighting Tongak, the evil spirit. "What will we do about this?" Decision was simple. Only Kummik saw Tongak, so the spirit devil must be after Kummik alone. Better let him have Kummik. Better stop Kummik from fighting the devil, before the devil got aggravated about it. Better cooperate with the devil, and please him, in hopes he would go away. So the other Eskimos grabbed Kummik, tied him hand and foot, and left him. Sure enough, very soon the Tongak got Kummik's spirit, and went away to Eskimoland again. At any rate, Kummik died. An American doctor, skeptical about Tongak, would have said Kummik froze to death. AN American doctor would have done something with Kummik that was probably more terrible than what his fellow Eskimos did to him. An American doctor would have put Kummik in an insane asylum. Like the English doctors did to Fogarty-Smith, for example. Fogarty-Smith was an aviator, and a capable one, who had a reputation for brave flying, as well as being known as the man who at one time held the England to Australia speed flying record. He was a tall, quiet man, well-liked. It was Fogarty-Smith's job to fly supplies to the English weather observing station on the arctic ice pack in the far north. There was currently an international epidemic of arctic weather observing, and the ice pack station was England's contribution. Fogarty-Smith flew food and fan mail up to the meteorologists. One gloomy day, Fogarty-Smith took off from the ice pack weather station to fly back to England. He left in his plane. Fourteen hours later, Fogarty-Smith came back to the weather station - on foot. |
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