The vast, stark canvas of the Alaskan North Slope stretches endlessly, a formidable realm where the thirteen-year-old Miyax, also known as Julie, finds herself utterly alone and adrift. Having fled an unhappy arranged marriage to Daniel and a suffocating life in Barrow, her only beacon of hope is the distant, imagined world of San Francisco and her pen pal, Amy. But the tundra is unforgiving, and hunger gnaws at her, a constant, chilling companion. Her survival hinges on the ancient wisdom her father, Kapugen, had instilled in her - the ways of the land, the animals, and the subtle language of the wild.
Desperate, Miyax turns her gaze to a nearby wolf pack, remembering her father's tales of their generosity. She observes them with a keen, unwavering focus, studying their movements, their calls, their intricate social order. Slowly, painstakingly, she begins to mimic their gestures, to understand their subtle communications. The pack's leader, Amaroq, a magnificent black wolf, eventually accepts her, allowing her to share in their kills, particularly a playful pup she names Kapu, after her own father. Through this profound connection, she finds not just sustenance, but a sense of belonging, a familial warmth in the harsh cold.
Her memories drift back to a time before the tundra claimed her, to her childhood with Kapugen. She recalls the seal camp, the rhythm of traditional Inuit life, and the deep lessons her father taught her about respecting nature and living in harmony with it. But then came the decree that she must attend school, sending her to live with her stern Aunt Martha in Mekoryuk. It was there that the news arrived - Kapugen, lost on a seal hunt, presumed dead. The world shifted beneath her feet, and the promise of a marriage to Daniel, though unwelcome, offered an escape from Aunt Martha's cold house. Yet, the marriage proved worse than any loneliness, driving her back to the wild, back to the lessons of her father and the hope of San Francisco.
As the seasons turn, Miyax thrives within the pack, her bond with Amaroq and Kapu deepening. She learns the intricate dance of predator and prey, the delicate balance of the Arctic ecosystem. She even encounters Tornait, a lost golden plover, finding a fleeting, comforting companionship in the small bird. But the modern world, which she sought to escape, intrudes violently upon her sanctuary. An airplane, a symbol of the encroaching gussak culture, streaks across the sky, and from its belly, shots ring out. Amaroq, her protector, her leader, falls dead, and Kapu is wounded.
The senseless act of violence shatters Miyax's dreams of San Francisco, replacing them with a renewed resolve to embrace her Inuit heritage. She nurses Kapu back to health, ensuring the pack's survival, and then, with a heavy heart, bids them farewell. Her journey continues, no longer westward, but towards the faint glimmers of human presence. She stumbles upon a small camp, where an Inuit woman, Uma, speaks of a master hunter named Kapugen in a nearby village called Kangik. Hope, fragile yet persistent, stirs within her.
Miyax reaches Kangik, her heart pounding with anticipation. She finds her father, Kapugen, alive. But the reunion is bittersweet, tinged with a profound sense of loss. Kapugen has changed; he has married a white woman, Ellen, and has embraced the modern ways, leaving behind the traditions he once cherished. The clash between the old world and the new, between the wild and civilization, manifests in her own father. Though initially heartbroken and contemplating a return to the wilderness, the sudden death of her companion, Tornait, solidifies a new path. She buries the bird, singing a lament for the fading spirits of the animals and the passing of the old Inuit ways. Reclaiming her name, Julie, she chooses to stay with her father, accepting the complexities of a world caught between tradition and assimilation, now determined to navigate it on her own terms.