The Strategy of Were-Wolf Dog
This is a tale of the bleak, bitter Northland, where the frost is eternal and the snows
never melt, where the wide white plains stretch for miles and miles without a tree or
shrub, where the Heavens at night are made terribly beautiful by the trembling flashes of
the northern lights, and the green icebergs float in stately grandeur down the dark
currents of the hungry polar sea. It is a desolate region, where there is no spring, and
even in the short summers only a few stunted willows blossom and grow green along the
rocky channels through which the melting snow water runs clear and cold. The only cheerful
thing about all this country is that far up within the Arctic circle, just on the edge of
the boundless snow plains, there is a big house of gray stone, where the lights shine all
the year round from the windows, and the wide halls are warmed by blazing fires. For this
is the house of his beloved Saintship, Nicholas, whom the children the world over call
Santa Claus.
Now every child knows this house is beautiful, and beautiful it is, for it is one of
the most home-like places in the world. Just inside the front door is the big hall, where
every evening after his work is done Santa Claus sits by the roaring fire and chats with
his wife, Mamma Santa, and the White Bear. Then there is the dining room, and the room
where Papa and Mamma Santa sleep, and to the rear are the workshops, where all the
wonderful toys are made, and last of all the White Bear's sleeping room, for the White
Bear has to sleep in a bed of clean white snow every night, and so his room is away from
the heated part of the house.
But most boys and girls do not know much about the White Bear, for though he is really
a very important personage, he has been strangely neglected by the biographers of Santa
Claus. But that is often the way of the historians: they concentrate themselves upon a
single important figure of a place or time, and forget to mention at all other factors
quite as important. Then after a while some one takes up the people whom the historians
have left in the dark, and tries to do them long-delayed justice. Now I would consider it
quite a sufficient purpose in life and a very considerable accomplishment if I could set
the White Bear right with history, and convince the world of his importance. He is not at
all like the bears who carry off naughty children, and does not even belong to the same
family as the bears who ate up the forty children who mocked at the Prophet's bald head.
On the contrary, this bear is a most gentle and kindly fellow, and fonder of boys and
girls than any one else in the world, except Santa Claus himself. He has lived with Papa
Santa from time immemorial, helping him in his workshop, painting rocking horses, and
stretching drum heads, and gluing yellow wigs on doll babies. But his principal duty is to
care for the reindeer, those swift, strong, nervous little beasts, without whom the hobby
horses and dolls and red drums would never reach the little children in the world.
One evening, on the twenty-third of Decemberthe rest of the date does not
matterPapa Santa sat by the fire in the great hall, blowing the smoke from his
nostrils, until his ruddy round face shone through it like a full moon through the mist.
He was in a happier mood even than usual, for his long year's work in his shop was done,
the last nail had been driven and the last coat of paint had dried. All the vast array of
toys stood ready to go into the sealskin bags and be piled into the sleigh.
Opposite him sat Mamma Santa, putting the last dainty stitches on a doll dress for a
little sick girl somewhere down in the world. Mamma Santa never kept track of where the
different children lived; Papa Santa and the White Bear attended to the address book. It
was enough for her to know that they were children and good children, she didn't care to
know any more. By her chair sat the White Bear, eating his dog sausage. The White Bear was
always hungry between meals, and Mamma Santa always kept a plate of his favorite sausage
ready for him in the pantry, which, as there was no fire there, was a refrigerator as
well.
As Papa Santa bent to light his pipe again, he spoke to the White Bear:
"The reindeer are all in good shape, are they? You've seen them tonight?"
"I gave them their feed and rubbed them down an hour ago, and I never saw them
friskier. They ought to skim like birds tomorrow night. As I came away, though, I thought
I saw the Were-Wolf Dog hanging around, so I locked up the stable."
"That was right," said Papa Santa, approvingly. "He was there for no
good, depend on that. Last year he tampered with the harness and cut it so that four
traces broke before I reached Norway."
Mamma Santa sent her needle through the fine cambric she was stitching with an
indignant thrust, and spoke so emphatically that the little white curls under her cap
bobbed about her face. "I cannot understand the perverse wickedness of that animal,
nor what he has against you, that he should be forever troubling you, or against those
World-Children, poor little innocents, that he should be forever trying to defraud them of
their Christmas presents. He is certainly the meanest animal from here to the Pole."
"That he is," said Papa Santa, "and there is no reason for it at all.
But he hates everything that is not as mean as himself."
"I am sure, Papa, that he will never be at rest until he has brought about some
serious accident. Hadn't the Bear better look about the stables again?"
"I'll sleep there tonight and watch, if you say so," said the White Bear,
rapping the floor with his shaggy tail.
"O, there is no need of that, we must all get our sleep tonight, for we have hard
work and a long journey before us tomorrow. I can trust the reindeer pretty well to look
after themselves. Come, Mamma, come, we must get to bed." Papa Santa shook the ashes
out of his pipe and blew out the lights, and the White Bear went to stretch himself in his
clean white snow.
When all was quiet about the house, there stole from out the shadow of the wall a great
dog, shaggy and monstrous to look upon. His hair was red, and his eyes were bright, like
ominous fires. His teeth were long and projected from his mouth like tusks, and there was
always a little foam about his lips as though he were raging with some inward fury. He
carried his tail between his legs, for he was as cowardly as he was vicious. This was the
wicked Were-Wolf Dog who hated everything; the beasts and the birds and Santa Claus and
the White Bear, and most of all the little children of the world. Nothing made him so
angry as to think that there really are good children in the world, little children who
love each other, and are simple and gentle and fond of everything that lives, whether it
breathes or blooms. For years he had been trying in one way and another to delay Santa
Claus' journey so that the children would get no beautiful gifts from him at Christmas
time. For the Were-Wolf Dog hated Christmas too, incomprehensible as that may seem. He was
thoroughly wicked and evil, and Christmas time is the birthday of Goodness, and every year
on Christmas Eve the rage in his dark heart burned anew.
He stole softly to the window of the stable, and peered in where the swift, tiny
reindeer stood each in his warm little stall, pawing the ground impatiently. For on
glorious moonlight nights like that the reindeer never slept, they were always so homesick
for their freedom and their wide white snow plains.
"Little reindeer," called the Were-Wolf Dog, softly, and all the little
reindeer pricked up their ears. "Little reindeer, it is a lovely night," and all
the little reindeer sighed softly. They knew, ah, how well they knew!
"Little reindeer, the moon is shining as brightly as the sun does in the summer,
the North wind is blowing fresh and cold, driving the little clouds across the sky like
white sea birds. The snow is just hard enough to bear without breaking, and your brothers
are running like wild things over its white crust. And the stars, ah, the stars, little
brothers, they gleam like a million jewels, and glitter like icicles all over the face of
the sky."
The reindeer stamped impatiently in their little stalls. It was very hard.
"Come, little reindeer, let me tell you why all your brothers run toward the Polar
Sea tonight. It is because tonight the northern lights will flash as they never did
before, and the great streaks of red and purple and violet will shoot across the sky until
all the people of the world shall see them, who never saw before. Listen, little reindeer,
it is just the night for a run, a long free run, with no traces to tangle your feet and no
sledge to drag. Come, let us go, you will be back again by dawn and no one will ever
know."
Dunder stamped in his stall, it made him long to be gone, to hear what the Were-Wolf
Dog said. "No, no, we cannot, for tomorrow we must start with the toys for the little
children of the world."
"But you will be back tomorrow. Just when the dim light is touching the tops of
the icebergs and making the fresh snow red, you will be speeding home. Ah, it will be a
glorious run, and you will see the lights as they never shone before. Do you not pant to
feel the wind about you, little reindeer?"
Then Cupid and Blitzen could withstand his enticing words no longer, and begged,
"Come, Dunder, let us go tonight. It has been so long since we have seen the lights,
and we will be back tomorrow."
Now the reindeer knew well enough they ought not to go, but reindeer are not like
people, and sometimes the things they want most awfully to do are the very things that
they ought not to do. The thought of the fresh winds and their dear lights of the North
and the moonlit snow drove them wild, for the reindeer love their freedom more than any
other animal, and swift motion, and the free winds.
So the dog pried open the door, with the help of the reindeer forcing it from within,
and they all dashed out into the clear moonlight and scurried away toward the North like
gleeful rabbits. "We will be back by morning," said Cupid. "We will be
back," said Dunder. And, poor little reindeer, they loved the snow so well that it
scarcely seemed wrong to go.
O, how fine it was to feel that wind in their fur again! They tossed their antlers in
the fresh wind, and their tiny hoofs rang on the hard snow as they ran. They ran for miles
and miles without growing tired, or losing their first pleasure in it. Their nostrils were
distended and their eyes were bright.
"Slower, slower, little reindeer, for I must lead the way. You will not find the
place where all the beasts are assembled," called the Were-Wolf Dog.
The little reindeer could no more go slowly than a boy can when the fire engines dash
by. So they got the Were-Wolf Dog in the center of the pack and fairly bore him on with
them. On they ran over those vast plains of snow that sparkled as brightly as the sky did
above, and Dasher and Prancer bellowed aloud with glee. At last there lay before them the
boundless stretch of the Polar Sea. Dark and silent it was, as mysterious as the strange
secret of the Pole which it guards forever. Here and there where the ice floes had parted
showed a crevice of black water, and the great walls of ice glittered like flame when the
northern lights flung their red banners across the sky, and tipped the icebergs with fire.
There the reindeer paused a moment for very joy, and the Were-Wolf Dog fell behind.
"Is the ice safe, old Dog?" asked Vixen.
"To the right it is, off and away, little reindeer. It is growing late," said
the Were-Wolf Dog, shouting hoarsely.
And the heedless little reindeer dashed on, never noticing that the wicked Were-Wolf
Dog stayed behind on the shore. Now when they were out a good way upon the sea they heard
a frightful cracking, grinding sound, such as the ice makes when it breaks up.
"To the shore, little brothers, to the shore!" cried Dunder, but it was too
late. The wicked Were-Wolf Dog where he stood on the land saw the treacherous ice break
and part, and the head of every little reindeer go down under the black water. Then he
turned and fled over the snow, with his tail tighter between his legs than ever, for he
was too cowardly to look upon his own evil work.
As for the reindeer, the black current caught them and whirled them down under the ice,
all but Dunder and Dasher and Prancer, who at last rose to the surface and lifted their
heads above the water.
"Swim, little brothers, we may yet make the shore," cried Dunder. So among
the cakes of broken ice that cut them at every stroke, the three brave little beasts began
to struggle toward the shore that seemed so far away. A great chunk of ice struck Prancer
in the breast, and he groaned and sank. Then Dasher began to breathe heavily and fell
behind, and when Dunder stayed to help him he said, "No, no, little brother, I cannot
make it. You must not try to help me, or we will both go down. Go tell it all to the White
Bear. Goodbye, little brother, we will skim the white snow fields no more together."
And with that he, too, sank down into the black water, and Dunder struggled on alone.
When at last he dragged himself wearily upon the shore he was exhausted and cruelly cut
and bleeding. But there was no time to be lost. Spent and suffering as he was, he set out
across the plains.
Late in the night the White Bear heard some one tapping against his window and saw poor
Dunder standing there all covered with ice and blood.
"Come out, brother," he gasped, "the others are all dead and drowned,
only I am left. For this night the treacherous Were-Wolf Dog came to us and with enticing
words lured us to go with him toward the Pole, promising to show us the northern lights
brighter than we had ever seen them before. But black Death he showed us, and the bottom
of the Polar Sea."
Then the White Bear hastened out in his nightcap, and Dunder told him all about the
cruel treachery of the Were-Wolf Dog.
"Alas," cried the White Bear, "and who shall tell Santa of this, and who
will drag his sleigh tomorrow to carry the gifts to the little children of the world?
Empty will their stockings hang on Christmas morning, and Santa's heart will be
broken."
Then poor Dunder sank down in the snow and wept.
"Do not despair, Dunder. We must go tonight to the ice hummock where the beasts
meet to begin their Christmas revels. Can you run a little longer, poor reindeer?"
"I will run until I die," said Dunder, bravely. "Get on my back and we
will go."
So reluctantly the White Bear got on Dunder's back, for bears cannot run themselves,
and they sped away to the great ice hummock where the animals of the North all gather to
keep their Christmas.
The ice hummock is a great pile of ice and snow right under the North Star, and all the
animals were there drinking punches and wishing each other a Merry Christmas. There were
seals, and fur otters, and white ermines, and whales, and bears, and many strange birds,
and the tawny Lapland dogs that are as strong as horses. But the Were-Wolf Dog was not
there. The White Bear paid no heed to any of them, but climbed up to the very top of the
huge ice hummock. Then he stood up and cried out:
"Animals of the North, listen to me!" and all the animals ceased from their
merrymaking and looked up to the ice hummock where the White Bear stood, looking very
strange up there, all alone in the starlight, with his nightcap still on.
"Listen to me," thundered the White Bear, "and I will tell you such a
tale of wickedness and treachery as never came up among us before. This night the wicked
Were-Wolf Dog, who is ever raging in his black heart against the innocent World-Children,
came to the reindeer of Santa Claus and with enticing words lured them northward,
promising to show them the great lights as they never shone before. But black Death he
showed them, and the bottom of the Polar Sea." Then he showed them poor bleeding
Dunder, and told how all the tiny reindeer had been drowned and all the treachery of the
Were-Wolf Dog. And all the animals were very indignant and ashamed that one of their
number should be guilty of such a thing. And the big whale flapped his tail, and all the
bears growled.
"Now, O animals," the White Bear went on, "who among you will go back
with me and draw the sleigh full of presents down to the little World-Children, for a
shame would it be to all of us if they should awaken and find themselves forgotten and
their stockings empty."
But none of the animals replied, for though they felt sorry enough for what had been
done, they all loved their freedom and to race over the star-lit snow, and were loath to
give it up even for the snug, warm stables of Santa Claus.
"What," cried the White Bear. "Is there not one of you who will take
this reproach from us and go back with me to the stables of Santa Claus and take the place
of our brothers who are dead? A warm stable shall each of you have, and your fill of clean
dry moss-feed, and snow water to drink."
But the animals all thought of the wide plains and the stinging North wind and their
scampers of old, and hung their heads and were silent. Poor Dunder groaned aloud, and even
the White Bear had begun to despair, when there spoke up a poor old seal with but one fin,
for he had fallen into the seal fishers' hands and been maimed. He had been drinking too
much punch, and he spoke thickly, but he had a good heart, that old crippled seal.
"It wrings my heart, brothers, that you should be silent to such a call as this, when
for the first time since Christmas began it seems that the little children of the world
will not get their presents. I am only an old seal who have been twice wounded by the
hunters, and am a cripple, but lo, I myself will go with the White Bear, and though I can
travel but a mile a day at best, yet will I hobble on my tail and my one fin until I have
dragged the sleigh full of presents to the World-Children."
Then the animals were all ashamed of themselves, and the reindeer all sprang forward
and cried, "We will go, take us!"
So the next day, a little later than usual, Santa Claus wrapped himself in his fur lap
robes, and seven new reindeer, headed by Dunder, flew like the winged wind toward the
coast of Norway. And if any of you remember getting your presents a little late that year,
it was because the new reindeer were not used to their work yet, though they tried hard
enough.
First published in Home Monthly, VI (December, 1896), 13-14, 24.
Reproduced from Virginia Faulkner, ed, Willa Cather's Collected Short Fiction
1892-1912.
Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1970, 441-48.
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