Far North Read online




  Far North

  Will Hobbs

  to the Dene of today and tomorrow

  Contents

  Map

  1

  THE FIRST I EVER heard of the Nahanni River and…

  2

  THE WIND BLEW COLD off the Great Slave Lake, even…

  3

  I THOUGHT WE’D HIT it off real well, but the…

  4

  WITH DAYLIGHT FALLING off by more than ten minutes a…

  5

  RAYMOND’S EYES TOOK in a glimpse of me, and then…

  6

  “THIS IS CESSNA 6–7-Z-RAY calling Fort Simpson. Do you read?

  7

  CLINT TRIED TO RESTART the engine. “Charge on the battery’s…

  8

  THE OLD MAN ALREADY had a fire going. It brought…

  9

  IN THE MORNING Johnny Raven built a larger fire outside…

  10

  WE WASTED NO MORE time talking; we never even agreed…

  11

  IT HAD BEEN ALL we could do to get the…

  12

  THE OLD MAN STOOD on the top of the bank,…

  13

  A HALF-CHINOOK SWEPT briefly into the valley, raising the temperature…

  14

  “‘MY NAME IS Mary Canadien,’” Raymond read aloud. “‘I am…

  15

  WE STAYED INSIDE the cabin the next day. I was…

  16

  IT WAS ONE HUNDRED and ten degrees warmer inside the…

  17

  THE RAM WAS STANDING amid the skulls and skeletons of…

  18

  A RAVEN SHOWED UP within minutes, then two, three, four…

  19

  “WINTER BEAR,” RAYMOND said, his voice hushed and awed. The…

  20

  AT LAST THE FIRE in the stove was backing off…

  21

  DON’T THINK ABOUT how far a hundred miles is, I…

  22

  MY FATHER AND I flew upstream over the frozen Liard…

  Author’s Note

  Reader’s Guide

  Discussion Questions

  About the Author

  Other Books by Will Hobbs

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Map

  1

  THE FIRST I EVER heard of the Nahanni River and Deadmen Valley was from the bush pilot who met my flight at Fort Nelson, way up at the top of British Columbia. Clint worked for an air charter service that was trading out a favor for my father by flying me on to Yellowknife, the capital of Canada’s Northwest Territories.

  “Gabe Rogers?” he asked doubtfully as I stepped off the plane.

  “Clint?” I asked just as doubtfully. “You’re the bush pilot?”

  This guy was about twenty-two, that’s the oldest I’d give him. Big grin, friendly as a puppy dog, big head of curly blond hair, and a square jaw with a dimple in it. He said, “You talk just like your dad—Texas accent and all. I was expecting you to be tall like your dad, too, eh?”

  “Nobody’s as tall as my dad,” I said. “That’s why they call him Tree.”

  A mischievous grin spread across the young bush pilot’s face. “Anybody ever call you Stump?”

  I had to laugh. “Not until now, but there’s a first time for everything.”

  “I’ve seen some big guys on those drilling rigs, but nothing like your dad, eh? Your shoulders sure remind me of his—wide as an ax handle. You wrestle?”

  “Wrestle and play football. I was a running back.”

  “Hockey’s my game—you ought to try it. Hey, guess what. Another pilot took off with my airplane—there’s a forest fire going on north of here, up in the Yukon.”

  “So how do we get to Yellowknife?”

  “Well, the company’s got a van stuck here at Fort Nelson, and now they figure I’m just the guy to drive it back to Yellowknife.”

  “How far’s that?”

  “Oh, only about six hundred miles.”

  We piled my gear into the van, an old Suburban armored with red dirt and a windshield that looked like it had been through a war. On a wide gravel road that stretched endlessly ahead through a forest of shaggy spruce trees, Clint buried the gas pedal, leaving behind a contrail of dust. It looked as if he intended to drive to Yellowknife in the same time it would have taken to fly there. I glanced nervously at the speedometer. He was already doing 115 kilometers per hour, whatever that was. It sure felt fast on the gravel, and I started to wonder if this guy was going to kill me, but I didn’t say anything. I tried to relax, figuring that was just the way people drove in Canada.

  “This road didn’t even exist ten years ago,” Clint said with pride. “The first thing you should know about the Northwest Territories is that it’s big. It stretches from the Yukon practically to within spitting distance of Greenland. The N.W.T. is twice as big as Alaska.”

  In that case, I thought, Texans have absolutely no bragging rights in the North. “That’s big,” I agreed, as my eye went back to the speedometer. He was up to 125 kilometers per hour.

  “See if you can picture this: only sixty thousand people live in the entire N.W.T., and almost a third of them live in the city of Yellowknife.”

  I was taking in the scale of one tiny corner of it in the green blur rushing by the passenger window, the big emptiness and the strangeness. For a kid from the Texas hill country, this world of the northern forest seemed like something you’d read about in a book and wonder if it could possibly be real. I felt good about my decision to come try it. It might be rugged up here, but I could already tell it wasn’t going to be boring.

  Clint was steering left-handed down a long straightaway with only a couple of fingers on the wheel, while his right hand was fiddling with a yellow fishing jig in a tackle box between us. A hundred and forty kilometers per hour, that’s what the speedometer was reading now. The van didn’t feel very attached to the gravel. It felt more like we were floating. Back in Texas, my grandparents drove so slow it made me crazy. That wasn’t a problem with Clint. “So how does kilometers per hour compare to miles per hour?” I asked him as casually as possible.

  “Ten kilometers is right around six miles.”

  I did the math in my head. The answer scared me, so I did it over. I was right the first time: eighty-four miles an hour. To get my mind off Clint’s driving, I asked, “What’s the deal with the trees turning gold and red already? It’s still August.”

  “Those are aspens and paper birch. Another eight or nine weeks, and the hammer comes down.”

  “The hammer?”

  “Winter! Welcome to the Northwest Territories!”

  “What’s that mean, ‘hammer’?”

  “Sledgehammer!” He laughed. “The cold and the darkness, that’s the hammer, and the land, that’s the anvil. There’s practically three hours less daylight now than there was a month ago.”

  “Too bad I missed summer.”

  “So you’re starting school in Yellowknife?”

  “Tenth grade.”

  “From what I hear, those residential schools are no picnic.”

  “I’ll make out all right. I wanted to be closer to my father.”

  “While he’s working the diamond boom and making the big bucks, eh? Your mother’s back in Texas?”

  “I’ve been living with my grandparents in San Antonio while my dad’s been up here. My mother’s dead.”

  “I didn’t know. I’m sorry.”

  “I was only seven. Car wreck—drunk driver.”

  For a couple of minutes Clint didn’t speak. Maybe he slowed down a little. Then he pointed off to our left. “That’s the southern edge of the Mackenzie Mountains. Ever hear of ’em?”

  “All I know about Canada I learned in the o
ld Bullwinkle cartoons.”

  “That’s the way of it, eh? We Canucks know you, but you Americans, all you think of when you think of Canada is moose, right?”

  “I guess so,” I agreed.

  “Well then,” Clint said thoughtfully, “just for the sake of argument, let’s say all of Canada is one big old moose. Then, what you Americans really know about us, that would compare to about the size of…a moose dropping.”

  “Interesting way to put it,” I said. I was trying to visualize a moose dropping, having never seen one before.

  “Anyway, I was going to tell you about the Mackenzie Mountains. In July I flew a couple of canoe parties back in there. They were going to paddle out of the mountains on the South Nahanni River.”

  “Did they make it?” I joked.

  “Hey, no guarantees…. It’s sometimes called the River of Mystery for all the strange things that have happened back there. And everything’s huge. The Nahanni’s got a waterfall on it twice as high as Niagara—”

  “You’re pulling my leg.”

  “Dead serious. They call it Virginia Falls. The whole river takes a three-hundred-eighty-five-foot drop. It’s quite a sight. Below the falls the river’s running in a deep canyon, like your Grand Canyon.”

  “That sure would be something to see.”

  “There’s a lot of history back in there—history and legends. The Nahanni country took a lot of lives when some of the Klondikers tried it as a shortcut to the goldfields over in the Yukon back in 1898. In 1908 a pair of brothers turned up dead up the Nahanni—minus their heads. According to the legend, the native people who lived back in there—the head-hunting Nahanies—had a white European queen. Their stronghold was a tropical valley complete with palm trees that grew right out of the permafrost.”

  “Sounds like great material for a movie.”

  “According to the story, there were even dinosaurs back in there that lived around some steaming hot pools.”

  “That’s even better.” I laughed. “Sounds like Texans have nothing on Canadians when it comes to tall tales.”

  “The place where the headless prospectors were found came to be known as the Valley of Vanishing Men and then Headless Valley and finally Deadmen Valley. That was just the beginning of it. There’ve been lots of strange deaths and disappearances since then.”

  “So what’s your theory about those guys’ heads?”

  Clint put his finger to his dimple, then stroked his chin thoughtfully. “I figure they starved to death back in there, in late winter or spring. Bears have an uncanny sense of smell, and they come out of hibernation looking for winterkill. It’s easy enough to picture bears knocking the heads loose from those skeletons, trying to get at the brains inside. After that, the skulls washed into the river or wolves carried ’em off.”

  “You paint a pretty picture, Clint.”

  “Listen to some of these names: the Sombre Mountains, the Funeral Range, the Headless Range, Crash Lake, Hellroaring Creek, Sunblood Mountain…”

  “Sounds like maybe you should stay out of there.”

  A grin played at his lips. “Bush pilots have a saying: ‘I wish I knew where I was going to die, for I would never go near the place.’”

  Two months later, Clint would be dead—on the Nahanni. And I would watch it happen.

  2

  THE WIND BLEW COLD off the Great Slave Lake, even at the end of August, and the first leaves were starting to fall from the birches outside my dorm room. It was still a week before school started, and the dorm was empty. I felt like I’d landed at the end of the earth, which was pretty much the case. My father was up somewhere between Yellowknife and the Arctic Ocean on a remote drill site, working seven days a week. Before long they’d be working by artificial light.

  Every fourth week my father would have his time off, and that’s when I’d see him. He was used to that life, from the rigs in the Gulf of Mexico and the North Sea, and he had the stamina to keep up with it. So what was I doing here? I was asking myself. How much chance was there that I was going to get to see the real North my father had been writing me about, and telling me about on his visits back to Texas? I was going to be stuck in this boarding school in the only city in the whole Northwest Territories.

  I’ve done this to myself, I thought. Now I’m just going to be alone in a place where I don’t know anybody.

  I decided to get out and walk, at least see Yellowknife. I spent a couple of days taking a good look at this boomtown that was the capital of the Northwest Territories. Yellowknife was sure-enough bustling. It looked modern—lots of steel, concrete, and glass, lots of government buildings, lots of bars.

  I spotted my first moose droppings in downtown Yellowknife. They were encased in the clear plastic of a tabletop at the Mooseburger Café. They were about like a deer’s, only a whole lot bigger. I thought of Clint.

  I hoped I’d get some chances to see the real Northwest Territories while I was up here. That’s what I came for, I was telling myself. Walking around and looking at buildings had never been very high on my list. I could just imagine flying over all that wild country, like those bush pilots get to do. Unfortunately, I didn’t have a bush plane at my disposal. I settled instead for holing up in my room with a Zane Grey novel about the Navajos. I go through a book every three or four days—westerns, mysteries, science fiction. I brought quite a few with me.

  Most of the students had checked in, but I was still waiting for my roommate to arrive. This much I knew about him: he was born on the twenty-first of December, same as me. They gave out the room assignments by pairing new kids with birthdays closest together, and you can’t get much closer than being born on the same day, same year. The lady at the housing office told me that my roommate was a “Dih-nay,” that it was his first year at the school, too, that his name was Raymond Providence, and that he was from a remote village.

  “What’s a ‘Dih-nay’?” I asked her.

  “It’s spelled D-e-n-e,” she said. “They’re native people. You’re probably used to calling them Indians back where you come from. They speak an Athabaskan dialect called Slavey.”

  I wondered if my roommate would speak much English. This was going to be interesting.

  I was starting my third paperback when Raymond finally showed up, the evening before classes started. He came through the door lugging a huge duffel bag, a hockey stick, and a bright red electric guitar. He was wearing jeans and a plaid Pendleton shirt. A little taller than me, he was a handsome kid with light brown skin and thick black hair down on his collar. He took a quick look at me, but his face was completely without expression, his dark brown eyes guarded and remote.

  Now what? I thought. As he set his guitar down on his bed, I said, “Are you a rock star by any chance?”

  It was a dumb thing to say; I guess I was uncomfortable. I was wondering what he was thinking about having a roommate with blue eyes and dirty blond hair. I hoped he could see I was just trying to be friendly.

  “Not hardly,” he said quietly, standing the hockey stick in the corner by the sink, then sitting on his bed and looking around at the confines of our room. Well, at least he speaks English, I thought. I might as well try again. Glancing at his hockey stick, I said, “I don’t know much about hockey—football’s the big thing where I come from. I have heard of Wayne Gretzky, though, how they call him the Great One. Are you a pretty good hockey player?”

  “Pretty good, yeah.”

  That got a smile out of him. But even while he was smiling, his eyes stayed remote and cautious. Maybe he was a kid who’d never been away from home before. I gave him some space and went back to the book I was reading. He started unpacking.

  After a while he was back sitting on the edge of his bed, looking around. I could see his eyes go to the picture over on my desk, the one of my dad and me standing beside a raft down in the canyons of the Rio Grande in west Texas. “That’s my dad,” I said. “He’s up here working.”

  “Oh,” Raymond said. “Is he o
n the drilling rigs?”

  “All the time. He’s hoping to save up enough money so we can get some land back in Texas—we want to build a house. So how ’bout you? That’s a nice-looking guitar you got there. Are you in a rock band back home?”

  “Yeah, sort of.”

  “Maybe you can get a band together here.”

  “They already told me I can’t play my guitar.”

  “You mean not in the dorm?”

  “Not anywhere at this school, I guess.”

  “Could you switch to acoustic?”

  From the look on his face, it was like I’d asked him to take up the harpsichord. I said, “They got a lot of rules and regulations here, that’s for sure. I’ve never been in a school like this. I guess it’s kind of like being in the army. So where are you from?”

  “Nahanni Butte.”

  “Nahanni…,” I repeated. “Hey, I heard that name before…. Is it anywhere close to the Nahanni River?”

  “It’s right where the Nahanni River meets the Liard River.”

  “I got it now,” I said. “Famous for headless men? And dinosaurs?”

  He laughed. “Those headless guys must be world-famous.”

  I was pleased to see him relax a little.

  “I never heard the part about the dinosaurs before,” Raymond added with a smile. “Are you from Texas?”

  “How’d you know that?”

  He shrugged. “The way you talk.”

  “I guess I must talk funny. Sounds normal to me. I grew up in the hill country near the Guadalupe River.”

  “I’ve heard that name before, Guadalupe River. Isn’t it a little river that people float down on inner tubes?”

  “How’d you ever hear that?” I asked in amazement.