They Mocked My Snow-Buried Tent Until Their Cabins Began Freezing From the Inside Out-Ginny

Marcus kept his palm against the snow wall as if he expected it to melt under his glove. It did not. The packed white surface held firm, dry on the inside, warm enough that the frost on his cuff turned to beads of water and ran down the leather. Behind him, the flap snapped, then fell shut, and the storm outside dropped to a muffled roar, like surf beating on a distant cliff.

The stove door ticked red at the seam. A kettle trembled on the iron ring, breathing steam into the canvas roof where no ice hung at all. Wet wool, woodsmoke, and green pine filled the tent so thick a man could taste it. Marcus looked from the stove to the vents, then to the floor of boughs and robes, and finally at me.

‘Tell me what this is,’ he said.

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I slid the poker back into its hook and nudged a log deeper into the firebox. ‘Sit down before your ears crack off,’ I said. ‘Then I’ll show you why you’re freezing in a house and I’m not in a tent.’

The three of them folded themselves onto my supply crates and rolled blankets, stiff at first, shoulders hunched like men expecting a joke at their expense. None came. Their boots steamed on the bough floor. Water dripped off the hem of Marcus’s coat and darkened the straw.

That was not the first winter timber had lied to me.

Two years earlier, I had spent $112 on a share of a log shack at Forty Mile Creek with a roof so low a tall man had to bow his head near the rafters. We chinked the cracks with mud and moss until our fingers went numb. Snow piled on the roof, smoke bled through the seams, and still the wind threaded in through every notch. By January the water bucket wore a skin of ice each morning, and the inside wall behind my bunk glittered white as a butcher’s window.

The stove devoured wood from dawn to dark. One man fed it while the others swung axes. We burned tamarack, spruce, green wood, driftwood, even broken crate boards that spat nails into the ash. Half our day went into keeping that room barely tolerable. Sleep came in scraps because every two hours somebody had to rise, curse, stir coals, and feed the mouth again.

Late in that season I saw a fox dive headfirst into a drift after dusk and disappear completely. The air was so hard it hurt to draw through the nose. By morning that same fox came up through a powder crust, shook white from its back, and trotted away with no stiffness in its legs. A week later I flushed ptarmigan from under a snowbank not twenty paces from camp. Their warmth had been in the drift the whole night while we sat in our proud wooden box feeding a fire like beggars throwing coins into a church basin.

After that, I started watching more than chopping. Wind patterns. Snow depth. Where drifts formed on the lee side of boulders. How cold settled low and slid through open spaces. How a small pocket stayed warm easier than a large one. Men in camp called it idling. I kept my mouth shut and watched the steam from my own breath.

By the second winter I had lost two toenails and a month’s pay to another cabin that leaked heat through every joint. The men who owned that one talked as if thicker logs solved everything. They slept in their coats by February. Their beards froze to the blanket edges. When spring came, the floorboards under the stove had charred black from all the extra firing, and one wall had settled enough to leave a crack wide as a thumb.

So when I reached this camp with only enough coin for canvas, iron, flour, and a mule load of odds and ends, I quit pretending I wanted what they had. Marcus’s cabin was the biggest on the ridge, and he made sure every man knew it. Notched spruce. New shingles. A window with real glass hauled up from Dawson at foolish cost. He offered me bunk space for a quarter share of anything I pulled from the stream and three evenings of chopping each week.

The smell of his pipe drifted across the snow while he made the offer. He leaned against the cabin post, warm as a banker, and looked at my rolled canvas like it was a burial cloth.

‘I could save you from a bad choice,’ he said.

The numbers were easy enough. Give up part of the claim, haul his wood, sleep beside his snoring stove, and spend the winter under another man’s roof. My thumb rubbed the last worn edge of a five-dollar bill in my pocket until the paper softened. Then I told him no.

After that, every shovel of snow I packed around my tent gave them one more reason to laugh.

The truth was, the tent had nearly beaten me before I beat the cold. The first week, I banked the snow too high against the roofline, and the lower edge froze hard enough to tug the canvas when the wind shifted. Condensation formed where warm air met cold cloth and rained back down on my blanket by dawn. Two nights later I moved the stove too close to the sidewall and woke to a hot smell sharp as scorched flax. A patch the size of my palm blackened before I tore it loose and sewed in a new square by lamplight.

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The worst mistake came with the vents. One still night I closed too much, trying to hold every degree. By midnight the air inside had gone thick and stale. The lamp flame shrank to a blue nub. Head pounding, tongue dry as felt, I crawled out on hands and knees and cut a second opening high near the lee side with a skinning knife while frost bit my wrists. After that I stopped guessing.

I carved saplings for a stronger ridge. Left the roof mostly clear so the canvas could shed moisture and the weight would not bear straight down. Built snow walls along the lower sides and across the windward end, thick as a man’s forearm in some places, thicker where the gusts hit hardest. Underfoot I laid boughs, then straw, then robes, so the earth could not drink the heat out of my bones. The stove sat just off center, pipe rising clean, with one low intake by the flap and two small vents high to pull air through without letting the wind own the room.

Snow was not the shelter. That was where men like Marcus went wrong. Snow was the coat.

He listened without blinking now, beard dripping onto his knees. One of the other prospectors, Owen Pike, pulled off a mitten and pressed his bare fingertips to the inner wall. He jerked them back and stared.

‘It isn’t even wet,’ he said.

‘Because the heat isn’t trying to escape through cracks the size of your little finger,’ I said. ‘And because this space is small enough to warm before morning comes.’

Marcus lifted his head. Pride still sat in him, but it had been pushed hard to one side by cold. ‘My stove’s bigger than yours.’

‘Exactly.’ I tapped the iron top with my knuckle. ‘You’re heating more room, more leaks, more roof, more draft. Every split log in that cabin is a road for the wind. Every time you open the door to clear smoke, you start over.’

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