The Scarlet Plague | Page 2

Jack London

The old man shook his head.
"They get thicker every day," he complained in, a'thin, undependable falsetto. "Who'd
have thought I'd live to see the time when a man would be afraid of his life on the way to
the Cliff House? When I was a boy, Edwin, men and women and little babies used to
come out here from San Francisco by tens of thousands on a nice day. And there weren't
any bears then. No, sir. They used to pay money to look at them in cages, they were that
rare."
"What is money, Granser?"
Before the old man could answer, the boy recollected and triumphantly shoved his hand
into a pouch under his bearskin and pulled forth a battered and tarnished silver dollar.
The old man's eyes glistened, as he held the coin close to them.
"I can't see," he muttered. "You look and see if you can make out the date, Edwin."
The boy laughed.
"You're a great Granser," he cried delightedly, "always making believe them little marks
mean something."
The old man manifested an accustomed chagrin as he brought the coin back again close
to his own eyes.
"2012," he shrilled, and then fell to cackling grotesquely. "That was the year Morgan the
Fifth was appointed President of the United States by the Board of Magnates. It must

have been one of the last coins minted, for the Scarlet Death came in 2013. Lord!
Lord!--think of it! Sixty years ago, and I am the only person alive to-day that lived in
those times. Where did you find it, Edwin?"
The boy, who had been regarding him with the tolerant curiousness one accords to the
prattlings of the feeble-minded, answered promptly.
"I got it off of Hoo-Hoo. He found it when we was herdin' goats down near San Jose last
spring. Hoo-Hoo said it was money. Ain't you hungry, Granser?"
The ancient caught his staff in a tighter grip and urged along the trail, his old eyes shining
greedily.
"I hope Hare-Lip's found a crab... or two," he mumbled. "They're good eating, crabs,
mighty good eating when you've no more teeth and you've got grandsons that love their
old grandsire and make a point of catching crabs for him. When I was a boy--"
But Edwin, suddenly stopped by what he saw, was drawing the bowstring on a fitted
arrow. He had paused on the brink of a crevasse in the embankment. An ancient culvert
had here washed out, and the stream, no longer confined, had cut a passage through the
fill. On the opposite side, the end of a rail projected and overhung. It showed rustily
through the creeping vines which overran it. Beyond, crouching by a bush, a rabbit
looked across at him in trembling hesitancy. Fully fifty feet was the distance, but the
arrow flashed true; and the transfixed rabbit, crying out in sudden fright and hurt,
struggled painfully away into the brush. The boy himself was a flash of brown skin and
flying fur as he bounded down the steep wall of the gap and up the other side. His lean
muscles were springs of steel that released into graceful and efficient action. A hundred
feet beyond, in a tangle of bushes, he overtook the wounded creature, knocked its head on
a convenient tree-trunk, and turned it over to Granser to carry.
"Rabbit is good, very good," the ancient quavered, "but when it comes to a toothsome
delicacy I prefer crab. When I was a boy--"
"Why do you say so much that ain't got no sense?" Edwin impatiently interrupted the
other's threatened garrulousness.
The boy did not exactly utter these words, but something that remotely resembled them
and that was more guttural and explosive and economical of qualifying phrases. His
speech showed distant kinship with that of the old man, and the latter's speech was
approximately an English that had gone through a bath of corrupt usage.
"What I want to know," Edwin continued, "is why you call crab 'toothsome delicacy'?
Crab is crab, ain't it? No one I never heard calls it such funny things."
The old man sighed but did not answer, and they moved on in silence.
The surf grew suddenly louder, as they emerged from the forest upon a stretch of sand
dunes bordering the sea. A few goats were browsing among the sandy hillocks, and a

skin-clad boy, aided by a wolfish-looking dog that was only faintly reminiscent of a
collie, was watching them. Mingled with the roar of the surf was a continuous,
deep-throated barking or bellowing, which came from a cluster of jagged rocks a hundred
yards out from shore. Here huge sea-lions hauled themselves up to lie in the sun or battle
with one another. In the immediate foreground arose the smoke of a fire,
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