You are here
قراءة كتاب The Wolves of God, and Other Fey Stories
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"
THE WOLVES OF GOD
OTHER WORKS BY
ALGERNON BLACKWOOD
- JULIUS LE VALLON
- THE WAVE: An Egyptian Aftermath
- TEN-MINUTE STORIES
- DAY AND NIGHT STORIES
- THE PROMISE OF AIR
- THE GARDEN OF SURVIVAL
- THE LISTENER and Other Stories
- THE EMPTY HOUSE and Other Stories
- THE LOST VALLEY and Other Stories
- JOHN SILENCE: Physician Extraordinary
- With Violet Pearn
- KARMA: A Reincarnation Play
E. P. DUTTON & COMPANY
THE WOLVES OF GOD
And Other Fey Stories
BY
ALGERNON BLACKWOOD
Author of “The Wave,” “The Promise of Air,” etc
AND
WILFRED WILSON
NEW YORK
E. P. DUTTON & COMPANY
681 Fifth Avenue
Copyright, 1921
By E. P. DUTTON & COMPANY
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
TO THE MEMORY
OF
OUR CAMP-FIRES IN THE WILDERNESS
CONTENTS
CHAPTER | PAGE | |
I. | The Wolves of God | 1 |
II. | Chinese Magic | 27 |
III. | Running Wolf | 52 |
IV. | First Hate | 74 |
V. | The Tarn of Sacrifice | 86 |
VI. | The Valley of the Beasts | 113 |
VII. | The Call | 137 |
VIII. | Egyptian Sorcery | 151 |
IX. | The Decoy | 169 |
X. | The Man Who Found Out | 192 |
XI. | The Empty Sleeve | 211 |
XII. | Wireless Confusion | 230 |
XIII. | Confession | 237 |
XIV. | The Lane that ran East and West | 259 |
XV. | “Vengeance is Mine” | 279 |
THE WOLVES OF GOD
I
THE WOLVES OF GOD
1
As the little steamer entered the bay of Kettletoft in the Orkneys the beach at Sanday appeared so low that the houses almost seemed to be standing in the water; and to the big, dark man leaning over the rail of the upper deck the sight of them came with a pang of mingled pain and pleasure. The scene, to his eyes, had not changed. The houses, the low shore, the flat treeless country beyond, the vast open sky, all looked exactly the same as when he left the island thirty years ago to work for the Hudson Bay Company in distant N. W. Canada. A lad of eighteen then, he was now a man of forty-eight, old for his years, and this was the home-coming he had so often dreamed about in the lonely wilderness of trees where he had spent his life. Yet his grim face wore an anxious rather than a tender expression. The return was perhaps not quite as he had pictured it.
Jim Peace had not done too badly, however, in the Company’s service. For an islander, he would be a rich man now; he had not married, he had saved the greater part of his salary, and even in the far-away Post where he had spent so many years there had been occasional opportunities of the kind common to new, wild countries where life and law are in the making. He had not hesitated to take them. None of the big Company Posts, it was true, had come his way, nor had he risen very high in the service; in another two years his turn would have come, yet he had left of his own accord before those two years were up. His decision, judging by the strength in the features, was not due to impulse; the move had been deliberately weighed and calculated; he had renounced his opportunity after full reflection. A man with those steady eyes, with that square jaw and determined mouth, certainly did not act without good reason.
A curious expression now flickered over his weather-hardened face as he saw again his childhood’s home, and the return, so often dreamed